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What Is Wrong with Performance Appraisals?

Guest post by: Leslie Allan

Article Overview: How effective are organizations at driving superior performance from their employees? If we are to believe human resources professionals, the answer is that our performance management systems are failing to make the grade. This is the sobering conclusion from Sibson Consulting\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\'s worldwide survey.

Free Download - How Top Management Views Performance Appraisal Systems By Leslie Allan
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What Is Wrong with Performance Appraisals?

Needs Improvement

Below Expectations

Unacceptable

As an employee, you would be mortified to see these ratings on your performance evaluation. Yet year after year, those are the words often used to describe performance reviews at organizations around the world. Any employee with such ratings would have managed outlong ago.

How badly are employee performance evaluations failing? Take a look at the conclusions of a global survey conducted by Sibson Consulting:

  • Less than 50% of HR professionals see performance reviews as helping their organizations achieve their strategic objectives. These are the people who are often driving the process.
  • Only 46% of respondents see talent developmentas a goal of appraisals, while 54% identified greaterindividual accountability.Two-thirds (67%) identified the distribution of pay raises and other rewards as the goal of their appraisal system.
  • Only half of the respondents say their companies use goal settingin their performance evaluations, and only half of those use quantitative metrics in evaluations.
  • Only 56% of respondents said their organizations train managers to use the performance-management system.
  • 55% reported delivering appraisals on time.
  • More than a quarter of respondents (28%) felt that performance evaluations were an exercise in filling out forms rather than an opportunity to have quality conversations with employees.
These results aren\'t limited to a single industry or a single country. The survey, conducted in mid-2010 with the HR association WorldatWork, drew more than 750 responses from a variety of industries and countries. Responding organizations ranged in size from fewer than 100 employees to more than 500,000.

Nine out of 10 respondents said their organization has a formal system in place to evaluate employees. They\'re usually in place to rate each employee, reward excellence and motivate improvements. In theory, a performance-management system should help keep the workforce aligned with the overall strategies, goals and priorities of the organization. Such systems have been around for 40 years with continuous tinkering around the edges by HR professionals and consultants. By now, you\'d expect perfection.

The Sibson study paints a completely different picture from a variety of perspectives:

  • Employees are believed by respondents to largely distrust the appraisal process that is confrontational, subjective and too infrequently incorporates their input. Only a third of respondents said they believed employees trusted the process.
  • Managers are often not trained in how to use the system and frequently turn in late or incomplete evaluations. Nearly two-thirds of HR professionals cite a lack of courage among managers to have difficult conversations as the primary roadblock to having an effective performance-management system.
  • Senior leadership often supports the performance-management system, but words are not translated into actions. Only a third of respondents reported that their senior executivesstronglyormostly considerthe evaluation to be business-critical. Another third reported that top leadership viewed the process asmostlyadministrative.


In future articles, I will dive more deeply into the causes of the dissatisfaction and what can be done to improve the sorry state of performance management at organizations around the world.

The first step in every recovery program is to admit that you have a problem. Business owners, we have a problem. The Sibson results, along with feedback from employees and managers alike, paint a sobering picture. Now is the time to look more closely at the source of the problems. Only then, we can think about fixing it.

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Article Tags: appraisal, employee, HR, human resources, incentive, management, manager, organization, performance, process, rating, reward, survey, system
Referred by: http://www.businessperform.com

About the Author: Leslie Allan
RSS for Leslie's articles - Visit Leslie's website

Leslie Allan is Managing Director of Business Performance Pty Ltd; a management consulting firm specializing in people and process capability. He has been assisting organizations for over 20 years, contributing in various roles as project manager, consultant and trainer for organizations large and small.

Mr. Allan is a prolific writer on business issues, with many journal and web articles to his credit. He is also the author of five books on employee capability, training and change management. Mr. Allan currently serves as Divisional Council Member for the Australian Institute of Training and Development and is a member of the Australian Institute of Management, the Graduate Management Association of Australia and the American Society for Quality.

His company's Business Performance web site is a rich source of information, advice and tools in a variety of management areas. Visit today to download trial versions of products, free templates and introductory chapters. While you are there, subscribe to their informative monthly newsletter and join the blog discussion




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