Performance Appraisal and Feedback - What are Today's Management Expectations?
Performance Appraisal and Feedback is an important part of the talent management process. However, the "equation" is different today than it has been in the past.
I'd like to share with you some ideas on current thinking about:
- Supervisors’ Accountability For Employee Performance
- The Supervisor As Coach
- What Does The Company Need From The Employment Relationship?
- What Do Employees Really Want From The Employment Relationship?
The Supervisors’ Accountability For Employee Performance
Traditionally, management has meant performing the functions of:
Planning
- Define Goals for Future Performance
- Determine Tasks Needed to Meet Goals
- Determine Available Resources
Organizing
- Assign Identified Tasks
- Allocate Needed Resources
Leading
- Inspire Employees to Achieve Goals
Controlling
- Monitor Employee Activities to Assure Progress
Over time, this role has transformed to include an awareness of :
- Decentralized Decision Making
- Flexible, Skilled & Involved Workforce
- Increased Sensitivity in Work Relationships
The Supervisors’ Job Description has thus evolved as a Supervisor of the Work of Other Employees to include :
- Setting Objectives
- Hiring Employees
- Training Employees
- Assigning Tasks to Employees (Delegation)
- Measuring Performance of Employees
- Rewarding/Disciplining Employees
Accordingly, the Supervisor is accountable to the business to
- Meet Their Own Performance Objectives
- Maintain Accurate and Timely Records of Employee Performance Throughout the Appraisal Period
- Complete the Forms Used in Appraising Employees and Return Them to HR on time
- Maintain Their Knowledge and Understanding of the Performance Appraisal Process,, and
- Review Appraisals Together With Employees
In other words, from the Company's perspective, they are looking for the Performance Appraisal and Feedback process to help
- Maximize Employee Productivity
- Employees Focus on Organization’s Objectives
- Employees Take On Responsibility for Their Performance
- Management Understand How to Manage Performance Effectively
- Facilitate Coaching, Counseling and/or Discipline for Poor Performers
- Provide protection From Legal Liability
- Establish an Objective Basis for Development, Compensation and Rewards
The Supervisor As Coach
Management is so 20th Century! This "old" view of things looks at Management as a often one-way process whereas coaching is two-way, with the coach and the employee constantly giving and receiving feedback.
Coaching then, instead of “Managing” or “Supervising” is a key concept for achieving top organizational performance. Supervisors become coaches when they use feedback on a continuous basis to reinforce positive behavior or counsel employees to correct actions that do not further the organization’s goals.
What does Coaching involve?
- Being there for them
- Giving them what they really want
- Rewarding them with "ownership" of their part of the business
According to a study conducted by Mercer management Consulting for the Council of Communications Management, 75% of respondents in a study of employee communications indicated that internal communication has a positive influence on employee performance.
The supervisor is the critical link between top management and employees. Keeping employee communications “up front” and honest helps to build employee morale, contribute to company loyalty, and increase productivity.
What kinds of things are important for your employees to be aware of?
What Does The Company Need From The Employment Relationship?
Employee engagement is more important today than ever. Business leaders need to encourage activities that make employees feel more participative in the business. You also need to reward people who learn more about their jobs, new trends, solve problems, and are willing to make changes. Employees who feel empowered are far less likely to become chronically absent or quit.
What Do Employees Really Want From The Employment Relationship?
According to a 2001 Randstad North American Employee Review study looking at how employees define success in the workplace, the following dimensions were most frequently cited:
- Being trusted to get the job done
- Opportunity to do the type of work i want
- Power to make decisions that affect their own work
- Finding a company where i want to work a long time
- Getting raises
- Having flexibility
- Many different job options & opportunities
- Getting promotions
- Getting praise & recognition
- Managing (leading) other people
- Gaining seniority
But it gets even more interesting.
- Mature workers (aged 61-75) workers view themselves as "contributors," while viewing their employers as a "benevolent master." Their greatest psychological need is "respect" and their overriding workplace characteristic is "dedication." Having power to make decisions that affect the whole organization is important to them.
- Baby Boomers (now aged 42-60) are "adaptable" and in need of "appreciation." They view employers as "partners" while striving to be "recognized employees.”
- Gen X'ers (new age 27-42) are "realists" in need of "security." The volatile nature of the new economy drives them to perceive employers as "terminators," while they view themselves as "employees with a future."
- And Gen Y (26 and younger) see themselves as "entrepreneurs" and their employers as "providers." They are in need of "attention" while remaining "cautiously optimistic" about the future.
But for all employees, the most important corporate value cited was TRUST…even more than money or title. A well thought out Performance Review and Feedback system can be a unique experience that can help
- Make employees feel like members of the “Club”
- Facilitate their ideas, suggestions for problem-solving
- Challenge them with new tasks, assignments, projects
- Involve them in setting performance criteria
- Encourage self-evaluation of their performance
- Work together to set performance objectives
Why then, does the Performance Appraisal process often evoke discomfort versus a sense of discovery? Perhaps that's because often the program is representative of
- Inadequately defined standards of performance
- Sketchy or ambiguous performance documentation
- Inadequate time allotment for the discussion
- Supervisor bias in judging performance
- Reliance on gut feelings; lack of objectivity
- Lack of timeliness of performance reviews
- Lack of employee involvement
So are they still relevant? YOU BET !
Your workforce wants to do the right thing, BUT
- They may not know the rules
- They may not have clear goals
- They may lack confidence
- They may have limited ability
- They may be poorly trained
- They may not have the right equipment
- They may have limited communication
- They may be distracted by personal problems
Today more than ever, a well conceived and properly executed program can be used
- To let employees know where they stand and to give them feedback
- As A basis for compensation and rewards
- As A basis for individual training and performance improvement
- As A basis for career planning
- As A basis for business planning
- To document HR decisions, placement,promotions and discipline
Is this your experience? How about sharing your "success" stories as well as "horror" stories with our readers.
