CHAPTER 10 PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND FEEDBACK PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved Performance Management and Feedback • Organizations need broader performance measures to insure that: – Performance deficiencies are addressed in a timely manner through employee development programs. – Employee behaviors are being channeled in the appropriate direction toward performance of specific objectives. – Employees are provided with appropriate and specific feedback to assist with their career development. Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–2 Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–3 Training and Development Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–4 Who Evaluates? • Problems with immediate supervisors conducting performance evaluations: – Lacking appropriate information to provide informed feedback on employee performance. – Insufficient observation of the employee’s day-to-day work to validly assess performance. – Lack of knowledge about the technical dimensions of a subordinate’s work. – Lack of training or appreciation for the evaluation process. – Perceptual errors by supervisors that create bias or lack of subjectivity in evaluations. Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–5 Perceptual Errors of Raters • Halo Effect – Rater allows a single trait, outcome or consideration to influence other measures of performance. • Stereotyping – Rater makes performance judgments based on employee’s personal characteristics rather than the employee’s actual performance. • Recency Error – Recent events and behaviors of the employee bias the rater’s evaluation of the employee’s overall performance. Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–6 Perceptual Errors of Raters (cont’d) • Central Tendency Error – Evaluator avoids higher and lower ends of performance assessment rating in favor of placing all employees at or near the middle of the scales. • Leniency or Strictness Errors – Evaluator’s tendency is to rate all employees either above (leniency) or below (strictness) their actual performance level. • Personal Biases and Organizational Politics – Have a significant impact on the ratings employees receive from their supervisors. Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–7 What to Evaluate? • Traits Measures – Are an assessment of how the employee fits with the organization’s culture, not what the employee actually does. • Behavior-based measures – Focus on what an employee does correctly and what the employee should do differently. • Results-based measures – Focus is on accomplishments or outcomes that can be measured objectively. Problems occur when results measures are difficult to obtain, outside employee control, or ignore the means by which the results were obtained. Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–8 How to Evaluate? • Absolute Measurement – Employees are all measured strictly by absolute performance requirements or standards of their jobs. • Relative Assessment – Employees are measured against other employees and ranked on their distance from the next higher to the next lower performing employee. – Ranking allows for comparison of employees but does not shed light on the distribution of employee performance. Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–9 Measures of Evaluation • Graphic Rating Scales • Weighted Checklists • Behaviorally Anchored Rating Scales (BARS) • Behavioral Observation Scales (BOS) • Critical Incident Method • Management By Objectives (MBO) Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–10 Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–11 Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–12 Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–13 Behavioral Observation Scale (BOS) Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–14 Performance Management Systems Guidelines • Feedback to employees must be specific rather than general. • Feedback should come only from credible, trustworthy sources. • Feedback should be provided as soon as possible for maximum benefit. • Performance measures must be based on clear, measurable goals. • The performance system must involve a dialogue between the employee and the manager. Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–15 Reading 10.1: Has 360 Degree Feedback Gone Amok? • Purposes of 360 Degree feedback systems: – Furthering management and leadership development. – Facilitating organizational change and improvement initiatives that allow the organization to become more open and participative. – Expand the formal appraisal system by making feedback evaluative and linking it more with a manager’s or employee’s formal performance appraisal. Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–16 Reading 10.1: Has 360 Degree Feedback Gone Amok? • Recommendations for increasing the likelihood that 360 feedback will benefit the organization: – Assign an internal consultant or champion to oversee the process and hold that individual accountable for results. – Initial implementation should be on a limited basis to allow for an evaluation of the process using a pre-post test control group test design. – Create a focus group to clearly identify effectiveness criteria measures that the organization values most highly and that will be used in the measurement process. – Train all raters to avoid systematic rater errors. Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved. 10–17
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