Beyond the Performance Review to Motivation and Performance



Similar documents
Performance Reviews: Moving from Painful to Productive

Blueprints 3. Adapted From Step 6 of Workitect s Building Competency Models and HR Applications workshop

Completing Your Employee s Performance Appraisal July, 2013

Strategic Human Resource Management. MIT Sloan School of Management

St. John Fisher College Performance Review Instructions and Procedures Comprehensive Version For the Review Period June 1, 2014 through May 31, 2015

Career Development and Succession Planning. Changing Landscape of HR 2012 Conference

Successful Practices for Conducting Performance Appraisals

Managing Performance An Introduction/Refresher. March 15, 2000

Interview Training Module

Guide to Effective Staff Performance Evaluations

From Performance Management to Leading Performance. Kati Vilkki and Esther Derby

CORPORATE LEADERSHIP COUNCIL PAGE 2 THE USE OF COMPETENCIES IN PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT PROGRAMS

BUILDING A BETTER PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM QUARTER

Making the Transition to Management

Performance Appraisal Training. Get Back to Basics

Setting Expectations, Coaching, and Performance Evaluation

EFFECTIVE PERFORMANCE APPRAISALS

Prepared for: Your Company Month/Year

A Practical Guide to Performance Calibration: A Step-by-Step Guide to Increasing the Fairness and Accuracy of Performance Appraisal

APPENDIX I. Best Practices: Ten design Principles for Performance Management 1 1) Reflect your company's performance values.

360 Feedback Assessment RATER Guide

Getting Started with the Engagement Cards and Retention Cards

Never confuse effort for results. If you're measuring effort as progress, you're not measuring the right thing

Diploma in Human Resource Management (Level 4) Course Structure & Contents

MANAGING & EVALUATING EMPLOYEE PERFORMANCE. A Guide to Classified Employee Performance Management & Evaluation

PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT PROCESS

Employee engagement is promoted by a myriad of

1 Executive Onboarding Reward vs. Risk

8 APPRAISING AND IMPROVING PERFORMANCE

Performance Management

GUIDE TO EFFECTIVE STAFF PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS

Preparing for the Performance Review Process

Performance Management Consultancy

Employee Performance Management Training

Performance planning:

Guide to Effective Staff Performance Evaluations

Performance Management: A Tool For Employee Success

PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL (An Action System)

A REPORT BY HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW ANALYTIC SERVICES The Age of Modern HR. Sponsored by

Supervisor s Performance Management Guide

CHAPTER 8 PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL CHAPTER DESCRIPTION

Talent management strategy template

Supervisor s Guide to Staff Compensation

Part One: Recruiting & Hiring Training Session

Using the TREC Performance Review Template

Leadership Pulse.

North Dakota Human Resource Management Services Performance Evaluation

Modern Performance Management and Next-Generation Recognition and Rewards

How To Rate A Subordinate

Performance Management. Office of Human Resources

UMUC Business and Executive Programs Podcasts Executive MBA Education in a Global World

Performance Review Process Guidelines Nova Southeastern University

CONDUCTING EMPLOYEE PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENTS

Contact Center LeaderPro. Candidate Feedback

your people are our business Performance Management

9/21/15. Research Educa4on Solu4ons A NEW LANGUAGE FOR LEADERSHIP TRANSFORMING PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT: AN ELI LILLY CASE STUDY

9Lenses: Human Resources Suite

Employee Engagement Survey

PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM MANAGERS TRAINING PROGRAM. Administrative Manual

Sales Compensation and Incentives

Cable s Rapid Reinvention

Performance Management Toolkit for Leadership

SWU Performance Evaluation Training

PERFORMANCE & PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME Launched: April 2010

What Do You Know About Performance Appraisals?(cont.)

Tips for Performance Review and Goal Setting

EVP The foundation of a strong Employer Brand. HR Swiss Congress 2014, Bern

From Performance Appraisal to Performance Excellence

Performance Factors and Campuswide Standards Guidelines. With Behavioral Indicators

Clive W Pack Managing Principal Louis A Allen Associates (Aust) Pty Ltd. March 1990.

Sales Coaching Achieves Superior Sales Results

OFFICE ANGELS. Office Angels Employers guide office-angels.com

EMPLOYER OF CHOICE RECOGNITION PROGRAM

Question # Multiple Choice True/False

2016 Survey on Leadership Development. Copyright Borderless -

Succession Planning Process

Two dollars and 85 cents. That s

LINKING PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND PAY- FOR-PERFORMANCE. Sandrine Bardot CompensationInsider.com

Performance Appraisal Handbook For Supervisors. For the evaluation of Non-Instructional Academic Staff (NIAS) and University Staff

Strategic Planning & Goal Setting

Strategic human resource management toolkit

Oregon University System

Effective Performance Appraisals

Strategies to Optimize Call Center Performance

FY15. EHE Manager s Guide to the Annual Performance Management System

Performance-based Incentive Compensation Plan

Performance Appraisal Handbook

Master s Certificate in Public Sector Management

How to launch new employees to success

Establishing Goals. How to Establish Clear Expectations. References: Excellence in Supervision, Rick Conlow, Thomson Learning, 2001

Transcription:

Beyond the Performance Review to Motivation and Performance Message It is possible to conduct performance reviews that are not de-moralizing and demotivating and that actually increase motivation and improve performance. Performance reviews are bad 87% of managers and non-managers say that performance reviews are not useful or effective. Only 30% of performance reviews lead to an increase in performance. 30% of performance reviews actually decrease performance. (source: analysis of employee feedback studies) W. Edwards Deming, quality guru: In practice, annual ratings are a disease, annihilating long-term planning, demobilizing teamwork, nourishing rivalry and politics, leaving people bitter, crushed, bruised, battered, desolate, despondent, unfit for work for weeks after receipt of rating, unable to comprehend why they are inferior. [my emphasis] Samuel Culbert, professor of management at UCLA and author of Get Rid of the Performance Review: This corporate sham is one of the most insidious, most damaging, and yet most ubiquitous of corporate activities. Everybody does it, and almost everyone who's evaluated hates it. It's a pretentious, bogus practice that produces absolutely nothing that any thinking executive should call a corporate plus. What makes reviews bad? Bad system design. Almost 60% of HR executives grade their own performance management systems C or lower. Bad execution by managers - Lack of discipline. - Afraid of candor. - Treat the review as a paperwork assignment. - Don't talk to workers about performance, then they surprise them with the review. - Ask workers to write their own reviews. - View their role more as directors and judges than as talent managers and coaches. - Are not good coaches. Negative response to ratings and labels Inaccurate and unfair and perceived that way even when they are not Rick Marolt Practical Management 608 251-8419 rick@onesharedplanet.org 1015 Lawrence Street / Madison, WI 53715-2040

The way reviews are often conducted seems to run counter to human nature and our needs and motivators. Why are reviews inaccurate and unfair, or perceived that way? Often the opinion of just one person, who may not have observed much of the work Self-enhancement bias: we over-rate ourselves, are disappointed by a lower rating from our manager, compare our ratings to others rating, become disappointed by other people s higher ratings and dissatisfied with our pay for performance Primacy effect: managers weight the first impression too heavily Recency effect: managers weight recent work too heavily Stereotypes, prejudice, bias Contrast effect: Employee B may be adequate, but gets an undeservedly low rating after the manager evaluates the work of superstar Employee A Like-me bias: managers give higher ratings to people who are like them I-hired-you bias: managers give higher ratings to people whom they hired Halo effect: managers overlook the bad work of people who seem unable, in their eyes, to do any wrong Horns effect: managers overlook the good work of people who seem unable, in their eyes, to do any right Central tendency error: managers avoid giving very low and very high ratings Leniency effect: managers give undeservedly high ratings in general (grade inflation) First-stage improvement ideas Hire, promote, and develop good managers, then train them in rating issues, discipline, candor, and coaching. And hold them accountable for good performance management. Use ratings to differentiate at the top and the bottom. Reduce the opportunities for comparisons in the middle by differentiating less there, i.e., put most people in the "average" category. Use a flattering category for "average". - But people want to know where they stand, and they don t want to be average. - So this approach may not help much. page 2 of 6

Rank, don t rate. And use peer review, not manager s review. See W. L. Gore. Fair? Objective? But note the power of broad, peer-based accountability. Rely on employees own evaluations and peer review of them. See Morning Star. How accurate are self-assessments? People are hard or easy on themselves. People may exaggerate their achievements. How much can we expect from a compensation committee? But how can we increase motivation? What motivates us? The job itself and the match between the person and the job Goals - Goal theory: Increase motivation by setting specific and difficult goals collaboratively with the employee, creating competition (as long as it does not interfere with teamwork), and giving people feedback as they work toward their goals. SMART goals: specific, measurable, aggressive, realistic, time-bound - Note that SMART leaves out important elements of goal theory. Needs, e.g., achievement, affiliation Confidence - How can managers help people feel more confident? The situation: relationships, working conditions, mission of the organization, et cet. Praise and recognition Autonomy (related to self-management) - Examples: Google, The Gap, Best Buy, Morning Star, W. L. Gore - Increase workers ownership of their goals. - Get feedback from more people. - Speed up the feedback cycle. - Use software such as Rypple to do some of these things. Mastery - Examples: Google, W. L. Gore Purpose beyond profits - Example: Zappos Financial incentives? page 3 of 6

- Not nearly as motivating as people seem to believe - Can actually cause a decrease in performance Challenges with pay for performance The self-enhancement bias and social comparisons set people up to perceive unfairness. Because people feel entitled to merit pay, raises and bonuses have even less effect on motivation over time. And lower-than-usual merit pay can de-motivate people. The problem of effort - We want to be rewarded for effort, which is in our control, but pay for performance is about results. - If we distribute rewards only to high performers, others will be de-motivated. - If distribute rewards more equally, high performers may be de-motivated. So some organizations, e.g., Zappos, Netflix, and Atlassian, do not pay for performance. Zappos rewards for skill development (mastery!) instead, which reinforces their core value of growth and learning. Case study: Atlassian Their old system - Managers focused on ratings and people s weaknesses. - 80% of the conversation was spent on people s weaknesses. - Wanted performance reviews to be more stimulating, positive, and encouraging. - The self-enhancement bias was prevalent. - Merit pay was accepted as an entitlement. Weekly one-on-one meetings between manager and staff. Ongoing conversation! Eight times per year, one of those meetings is spend on a particular coaching topic such as what people like and dislike about their jobs, 360 feedback, strengths, weaknesses, and career planning. Manager and staff determine how to help the staff person spend two more hours per week on what they love to do and two fewer hours per week on what they do not like to do. Regular refinement of the person-job match! Staff give the manager feedback too. page 4 of 6

Monthly, one-hour "performance check-in" about how a worker can improve and leverage strengths "Snappy" semi-annual "check-ins" replace performance reviews No numerical ratings, but visual "never-to-always" scales about behavior, how much the employee has challenged him-/herself, and results Written assessments are not required. A conversation guide for managers No distribution curve No pay for performance Peer-based kudos system Theme: Self-management Worker participates in setting own SMART goals. Communicates about status. Solicits feedback from peers and customers. - Note the effect of broadening accountability to peers, not just to the manager. Evaluates own performance. Takes responsibility for own development. Theme: Intrinsic rewards in the job Put people in roles where they can meet their needs. Put people in roles where they can use their strengths. Revise jobs regularly to make them more challenging and enjoyable. Create an inspiring purpose beyond tasks and profits. Theme: Manager as coach Guides development. Gives helpful feedback relative to goals. page 5 of 6

Focuses more on strengths than weaknesses. Builds confidence through support, encouragement, and training. Praises and recognizes. (But appropriately.) Theme: The system as an ongoing conversation Coaching meetings Personal development plans and reviews Evaluations Consider not using ratings. Consider eliminating "pay for performance". But how can we make these things happen in practice? Start with organizational culture and values. Example: Zappos values Hire for values. Pay people who do not fit to leave, e.g., Zappos and Netflix Shape behavior through: - Orientation, training - Communication - Rules and policies - Leaders' behavior - Stories - Rites - Space Use the performance management system to reinforce behavior. - Zappos - 50% of each performance review measures how employees are furthering the company s culture. - We will fire anyone "who is bad for our culture, even if they re doing a specific function perfectly fine." - Netflix: "No tolerance for brilliant jerks." - Bulbrite publicly recognizes the most value-driven worker every month and every year. page 6 of 6