Chapter 8 HR Performance Management
Chapter 8 HR Performance Management
Chapter 8 HR Performance Management
process
Performance appraisals:
manager evaluates an employees performance relatives to the requirements
of their job
Uses the information to show the person where improvements are needed
and why
360-degree appraisal
Ensure anonymity
Make respondents accountable
Prevent gaming of the system
Use statistical procedures
Identify and quantify biases
Results methods
- Productivity measures: appraisals based on quantitative measures
- Management by objectives
- Figure 8.7 pg 306-307
- Balanced scorecard
TEXTBOOK NOTES
Performance appraisal
programs
Focal performance
appraisal: An appraisal
system in which all of an
organization’s
employees are reviewed
at the same time of the
year rather than on the
anniversaries of the
individual hire dates
Problems with performance appraisals
1. There is little face-to-face discussion between the manager and the employee being
appraised.
2. The relationship between the employee’s job description and the criteria on the appraisal
form is not clear.
3. Managers feel that little or no benefit will be derived from the time and energy they
spend on the process or are concerned only with bad performances.
4. Managers dislike the face-to-face confrontation of appraisal interviews.
5. Managers are not sufficiently adept at rating employees or providing them with appraisal
feedback.
6. The judgmental role of appraisal conflicts with the helping role of developing employees.
7. The appraisal is just a once-a-year event, and there is little follow-up afterward.
Customer appraisal: Performance appraisal that, like team appraisals, is based on total
quality management concepts and seeks evaluation from both external and internal
customers
360-Degree appraisal
360-degree feedback is intended to provide employees with as accurate a view of their
performance as possible by getting input from all angles, such as from supervisors, peers,
subordinates, and customers. What is involved in 360 appraisals?
Ensure anonymity. Make certain that no employee ever knows how any evaluation
team member responded.
Make respondents accountable. Supervisors should discuss each evaluation team
member’s input
Prevent “gaming” of the system. Some individuals may try to help or hurt an
employee by giving either too high or too low an evaluation.
Use statistical procedures. Use weighted averages or other quantitative
approaches to combining evaluations.
Identify and quantify biases. Check for prejudices or preferences related to age,
gender, ethnicity, or other group factors.
TRAIT METHOD
Graphic rating scale method: A trait approach to performance appraisal whereby each
employee is rated according to a scale of characteristics
Forced-choice method: A trait approach to performance appraisal that requires the rater
to choose from statements designed to distinguish between successful and unsuccessful
performance
Essay method: A trait approach to performance appraisal that requires the rater to
compose a statement describing employee behavior
BEHAVIOURAL METHODS
Critical incident: An unusual event that denotes superior or inferior employee
performance in some part of the job
RESULTS METHOD
Productivity measures: Each measure directly links what employees accomplish and the
results that benefit the organization. In this way, results appraisals can directly align
employee and organizational goals.
Tell-and-Sell interview: The skills required in the tell-and-sell interview include the ability
to persuade an employee to change in a prescribed manner.
Tell-and-Listen interview: the skills required include the ability to communicate the
strong and weak points of an employee’s job performance during the first part of the
interview. During the second part of the interview, the employee’s feelings about the
appraisal are thoroughly explored. The tell-and-listen method gives both managers and
employees the opportunity to release any feelings of frustration they might have.
This method is better than an appraisal Follow Up Day to Day: As you have learned,
feedback is most useful when it is immediate and specific to a particular situation.
Improving performance:
Identifying Sources of ineffective performance
Performance Diagnosis
Managing Ineffective Performance