Performance Management Gone Haywire
- Date: 2007-03-29 - Word Count: 772
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When you ask employees about their impressions of Performance Management processes, the answer is invariably negative or neutral. It's not often that the process is positively endorsed by those who use it. So where are we going wrong?
As managers, we know we need a management system of some kind for all the components of performance:
• getting people to work on things that will help the business achieve it's goals
• identifying and overcoming obstacles that might prevent success
• understand and checking our progress regularly
• giving people a forum for talking about what they are doing and how it's going
• providing the appropriate checks and balances
• recognising and rewarding performance
I believe there are 5 fundamental reasons why Performance Management is not viewed positively.
1. Reviewers don't have the skills or confidence to give feedback appropriately
Giving feedback constructively is a learned skill. Unfortunately for their team members, many managers haven't had any training or support in learning this critical skill. So when it comes to review time, feedback is either:
1. blunt and delivered with no thought for the impact or consequence,
2. not provided at all because the manager wants to avoid disagreement or conflict, or
3. is given in such a wishy washy way that the reviewee actually misses the fact they are being given feedback!
This is one of the most critical capabilities a manager can have, with far-reaching positive or negative consequences. Providing ongoing coaching and support should be part of the approach to managing performance.
2. Employees don't see Performance Management (PM) as a 2 way street
Is PM something that is 'done' to employees, or is it jointly owned with equal responsibility between the reviewer and the reviewee?
Imagine a review session where the employee turns up having evaluated their own performance, provided examples of how and when they achieved each objective, had references from other people about their attitude and behaviour, and already had drafted some challenges they wanted to work on in the next 12 months. When ownership for the process lies with the employee, this is the result.
Getting to this stage takes time. The business needs to consistently communicate expectations and help the manager's adapt to the new positioning. Instead of PM being viewed a bureaucratic process over which they have no control, employees own their own performance and contribute equally to the discussion about performance levels and results achieved.
3. The annual review is the prime focus
If PM consists only of an annual or bi-annual review, the business is really missing the point. Reviews are useful checkpoints, but PM occurs 365 days a year. When review time comes around there should be no surprises. And I mean none. If there is, the manager is not doing their job effectively. Any performance issues, or comments about achievement, need to be given as they arise, not saved up for discussion 3 months later in a review.
On this basis, the review becomes more of a confirmation of what each party already knows. This shouldn't take long to go through, leaving plenty of time to discuss development needs and new opportunities (see next point).
4. Not enough attention is given to the future
In many cases the entire review is spent dissecting the previous 12 months. Objectives and goals do need to be valuated and measured - don't get me wrong - but the real value of a review lies in the discussion about the future.
What skills will the employee need to develop to become even more effective in their job? What work-related challenges can they get involved in that will grow them beyond where they are today? How can the business utilize their strengths in other areas? What gaols do they want to set themselves over the next 12 months? How can the manager help them achieve these things?
It's this focus on future development and opportunities that energizes people, makes them feel valued and keeps them engaged with the business.
In an ideal world, reviewing past performance and discussing future skills and opportunities will take equal time in a review.
5. There is no follow-up
This is the credibility killer. All throughout the performance year, managers will make commitments to take actions and follow-up. If this doesn't happen, the whole process loses integrity. Once employees experience this firsthand, it's a long road back.
Commitments must be upheld, and managers and employees equally need to be accountable for their part in this.
Getting employees to think about Performance Management as a positive process that adds value is the goal. This only happens when the managers have the right skills, the business adopts an ongoing approach that consists of much more than annual reviews, when commitments are made and kept, and when employees own the process equally with managers.
As managers, we know we need a management system of some kind for all the components of performance:
• getting people to work on things that will help the business achieve it's goals
• identifying and overcoming obstacles that might prevent success
• understand and checking our progress regularly
• giving people a forum for talking about what they are doing and how it's going
• providing the appropriate checks and balances
• recognising and rewarding performance
I believe there are 5 fundamental reasons why Performance Management is not viewed positively.
1. Reviewers don't have the skills or confidence to give feedback appropriately
Giving feedback constructively is a learned skill. Unfortunately for their team members, many managers haven't had any training or support in learning this critical skill. So when it comes to review time, feedback is either:
1. blunt and delivered with no thought for the impact or consequence,
2. not provided at all because the manager wants to avoid disagreement or conflict, or
3. is given in such a wishy washy way that the reviewee actually misses the fact they are being given feedback!
This is one of the most critical capabilities a manager can have, with far-reaching positive or negative consequences. Providing ongoing coaching and support should be part of the approach to managing performance.
2. Employees don't see Performance Management (PM) as a 2 way street
Is PM something that is 'done' to employees, or is it jointly owned with equal responsibility between the reviewer and the reviewee?
Imagine a review session where the employee turns up having evaluated their own performance, provided examples of how and when they achieved each objective, had references from other people about their attitude and behaviour, and already had drafted some challenges they wanted to work on in the next 12 months. When ownership for the process lies with the employee, this is the result.
Getting to this stage takes time. The business needs to consistently communicate expectations and help the manager's adapt to the new positioning. Instead of PM being viewed a bureaucratic process over which they have no control, employees own their own performance and contribute equally to the discussion about performance levels and results achieved.
3. The annual review is the prime focus
If PM consists only of an annual or bi-annual review, the business is really missing the point. Reviews are useful checkpoints, but PM occurs 365 days a year. When review time comes around there should be no surprises. And I mean none. If there is, the manager is not doing their job effectively. Any performance issues, or comments about achievement, need to be given as they arise, not saved up for discussion 3 months later in a review.
On this basis, the review becomes more of a confirmation of what each party already knows. This shouldn't take long to go through, leaving plenty of time to discuss development needs and new opportunities (see next point).
4. Not enough attention is given to the future
In many cases the entire review is spent dissecting the previous 12 months. Objectives and goals do need to be valuated and measured - don't get me wrong - but the real value of a review lies in the discussion about the future.
What skills will the employee need to develop to become even more effective in their job? What work-related challenges can they get involved in that will grow them beyond where they are today? How can the business utilize their strengths in other areas? What gaols do they want to set themselves over the next 12 months? How can the manager help them achieve these things?
It's this focus on future development and opportunities that energizes people, makes them feel valued and keeps them engaged with the business.
In an ideal world, reviewing past performance and discussing future skills and opportunities will take equal time in a review.
5. There is no follow-up
This is the credibility killer. All throughout the performance year, managers will make commitments to take actions and follow-up. If this doesn't happen, the whole process loses integrity. Once employees experience this firsthand, it's a long road back.
Commitments must be upheld, and managers and employees equally need to be accountable for their part in this.
Getting employees to think about Performance Management as a positive process that adds value is the goal. This only happens when the managers have the right skills, the business adopts an ongoing approach that consists of much more than annual reviews, when commitments are made and kept, and when employees own the process equally with managers.
Related Tags: management, skills, performance, progress, review, negative, opportunities, credibility, obstacles, impressions, identifying, neutral, positively
Megan Tough is director of complete potential, a leadership and HR consultancy based in Sydney, Australia. At complete potential we understand people - what engages them, what encourages them to perform, and what drives them away. With over 20 years experience working on HR issues in business, our job is to help you make the most of your investment in people. To learn more visit www.completepotential.com Your Article Search Directory : Find in Articles
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