Title: Unit 2, Lecture 4: Performance Appraisal PERFORMANCE
1Performance Appraisal Concepts
- Prof. John Kammeyer-Mueller
- MGT 4301
2Where we are, where were going
- Where we are
- Understand the basics of training and development
- Where we want to be
- Why measure performance?
- How can you measure performance?
- How well know how were doing
- Identify the four ways performance can be
measured - Identify and describe three major dimensions of
performance - Results-oriented performance appraisal
- Behaviorally Anchored Rating Scales (BARS)
- Comparative approach to performance appraisal
- Team-based approach to performance appraisal
3How could you establish a pay-for-performance
plan?
- How would you establish pay for performance for
the following jobs - College football coach
- A physician in a large hospital
- Waiter or waitress
- A person who manufactures computer motherboards
- A call center operator
- What are the advantages and disadvantages of pay
for performance in these jobs?
4What Will I Measure?
- What is incentive compensation?
- Providing rewards for specific behaviors
- Linking compensation to some indicator of
employee competence - What are the expected effects of incentives?
- Task performance
- Organizational citizenship
- Deviant behavior
- Turnover
5Three Major Questions to Ask in Performance
Management
- How will I administer the program?
- What will I measure?
- How often will I measure?
- What rewards am I going to offer?
- Cash?
- Non-cash benefits?
- Recognition?
- At what level will the reward be offered?
- Individual?
- Group?
- Whole organization?
6Legal issues with performance appraisal
- Performance appraisals are reflected in,
compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges
of employment they are covered by discrimination
laws - Legal precedents
- Albemarle paper company v. Moody
- Evaluating performance based on which employees
were better than others is too subjective - Hopkins v. Price Waterhouse
- Evaluations containing discriminatory language
(Ms. Hopkins was told to act less macho and to
walk, talk, and dress more like a woman) provide
evidence of disparate treatment
7Monitoring and Incentives
- Incentives are difficult to administer
- Performance cant always be monitored cheaply
- Lock in to old standards
- If you define a specific objective its difficult
to change incentives - Need to change production programs can slow
things down as incentives are recalibrated
8Choosing Measurement Methods
9What do we measure in performance appraisal?
- Describe a great co-worker at your current job
- List three ways youd describe the behavior of
the best people you see on the job. - List three ways youd describe the behavior of
the worst people you see on the job.
10Rotundo Sackett Relative Importance of Task,
Citizenship Counterproductive Performance
- Performance
- Behaviors under the control of the individual
that contribute to organizational outcomes - Effects of behavior are not performance because
they are not necessarily under individual
control, and therefore will be difficult to
predict with selection tools - They want to find a generic group of behaviors
that is comparable across organizations - Generally, it is best if the behaviors are linked
to a job analysis so that job relatedness can be
demonstrated
11Rotundo Sackett Relative Importance of Task,
Citizenship Counterproductive Performance
- Key concepts
- Task performance
- Behaviors that contribute to the production of
goods and services - Need not be part of a formal job description
- Citizenship
- Behavior that contributes to the social and
psychological environment of the organization - Counterproductivity
- Behavior that actively damages the organization
12Which dimensions of productivity matter most?
- Supervisors rated the performance of hypothetical
employees, with levels of task, citizenship, and
counter-productivity manipulated - While task performance dominates, the non-task
elements, when added together, are nearly as
important as task performance - (Rotundo Sackett, 2002)
13What Difference Does This Dimensions Stuff Make?
- Many organizations primarily measure task
performance and forget other aspects - Failing to measure citizenship can discourage
employees from helping one another - There are many examples of a person who is
outstanding at his or her job but made everyone
else hate showing up to work - There is increasing focus from managers on
bullying/harassing employees
14What is Preferred by Employers
- Our theory of compensation says we most desire to
have a system that - creates maximum effort
- makes employees part owners in outcomes
- Therefore, economic theory basically suggests
that individual output based pay is optimal - Think about why you might not want to have all of
your compensation based entirely on your own
individual outputs in some jobs
15The results approach
- Management by objectives
- Sales goals
- Objective increase sales 10 during 2002
- Performance increased sales 8 during 2002
- Injury/accident rates
- Objective decrease from 5 to 2 accidents per
year - Performance decreased to 1 accidents
- Management goals
- Objective decrease turnover rate to 5 this year
- Performance increased turnover of 10 this year
- A class analogy is test performance
16What is Preferred by Employers
- Some practical problems with individual output
based pay - Output is difficult to measure for most jobs,
especially managerial jobs or for collaborate
work - May lead to perverse incentives (e.g., computer
programmers paid by the line write too much code,
doctors who emphasize number of patients over
quality of care)
17Another take on results oriented performance
appraisal
18Behavioral MeasuresEvaluative Ratings Scale
- Like open-ended essays or papers
19Behavioral observation system
- More like multiple choice exams
20Behaviorally anchored rating scales
- Most BARS have 20-30 questions for a job
- Developed by watching a high performing employee
and rating if employees do as well as him or her
21Evidence Regarding Potential Bias in Performance
Appraisals
- Interrater reliability for performance appraisals
is not very good - More variance is due to the person doing the
rating than to the person being rated - This means that any biased manager can create a
legal problem for an organization - Ecological fallacy note although most evidence
shows limited support for major systematic
discrimination in performance appraisal, that
doesnt mean that there arent cases where it
occurs
22Cognitive Problems with Perceiving Performance
- Primacy effects
- People tend to remember the first things on a
list - First impressions
- Recency effects
- People tend to remember the last things on a list
- People reconstruct their memories for events
based on whats happened lately - Contrast effects
- People notice differences across candidates
- Individuals are invariably compared to others
23Social Problems with Perceiving Performance
- Similarity-attraction
- People see others who are like themselves as more
varied, unique, individual - People tend to see those who are similar to
themselves as better on dimensions like morals
and values - Supported by research on liking and performance
appraisal - Often termed similar-to-me bias
24Social Problems with Perceiving Performance
- Influence tactics
- Flattering the boss
- Doing personal favors not related to work, etc.
- Illegal favors and sexual harassment?
- Giving bad ratings to employees who have good
ideas that conflict with the boss
- Political manipulation of consequences
- Good ratings so people will like you
- Good ratings for favors later on
- Good ratings to people you dont like so they get
promoted away from you
25This is probably how performance is distributed
- Few at the top
- Few at the bottom
- Lots in the middle
- Why?
- Abilities are normally distributed
- Random variance is normal as well
26Leniency problems
- Lots of top performers
- Few poor performers
- Why would we see ratings like this?
27Why measurement errors matter
- So what if there are social biases?
- Anything that makes evaluations arbitrary weakens
their relevance in court - Poorly done evaluations can be frustrating for
employees - So what if there are distributional errors?
- Hard to justify personnel decisions in court if
ratings are the same - Restriction of range hurts ability to validate
- Overpayment or underpayment if pay is determined
by skewed ratings - Can be very de-motivating (why try harder?)
28Stauffer BuckleyRacial Bias in Supervisor
Ratings
- White supervisors tend to give the same ratings
to white employees as black supervisors - White supervisors tend to give lower ratings to
black employees than do black supervisors - The size of these effects is often very small
29Behavior Based Examples for Class Performance
- Rating based on a standard for how a person
should do a project - is the project in the right format?
- is the project of the appropriate length?
- Ratings based on attendance, completion, and
participation
30Standards-Based Approaches
- Rewards provided for exceeding an absolute
standard - For example, all employees who receive superior
ratings will receive bonuses - Compensation is based on an absolute percentage
of sales or output
31Comparative approaches
- A simple ranking
- Best performers name________________
- Second best performers name_______________
- A forced distribution like a strict curve can be
used
32Which Approach is Better?
- Performance is directly linked to rewards
- Cooperation can increase rewards
- Goals can be specific
- Difficult to control costs, especially with
supervisor review
- Performance-reward relationship is based on the
effort of others - Cooperation usually hurts your own rewards
- Goals are not specific
- More control over budgeting
- Tournament theory
33Wrap Up
- Where we are
- Understand the basics of training and development
- Where we want to be
- Why measure performance?
- How can you measure performance?
- How well know how were doing
- What four reasons do organizations have for doing
performance appraisal? - Identify and describe three major dimensions of
performance - Open-ended narrative performance appraisal
- Results-oriented performance appraisal
- Comparative approach to performance appraisal
- Behaviorally Anchored Rating Scales (BARS)