Performance Management: Definition
Performance Management: Definition
Performance Management: Definition
Definition:
Performance management (PM) includes activities that ensure that goals are consistently being
met in an effective and efficient manner. Performance management can focus on the
performance of an organization, a department, employee, or even the processes to build a
product or service, as well as many other areas.
The field of performance management can comprise two separate types of management. In one
aspect of performance management, an analyst may view the performance of a company as a
whole, and also evaluate the effectiveness of the managers and heads of companies in reaching
goals. In another sense, performance management may be a system of evaluating employees to
help them reach reasonable goals and thus ensure that the company performs better. This
discussion will focus on the latter definition.
What is performance?
A number of factors can influence your employees' performance in the workplace. Employees
may feel negatively influenced because of micromanaging by their supervisors or miserly budget
restrictions. Conversely, employees will most likely feel inspired and otherwise positively
influenced by top quality equipment and a supervisor's approachable management style.
Regardless of the field or industry in which they work, the factors influencing employee
performance and morale are very much the same.
It has often been said that a corporation is only as good as its employees. That might explain why
research by talent management firm Bersin & Associates reveals that 40 percent of United
States-based corporations claim that driving a performance-based culture is one of their top three
talent strategies. Several factors impact employee motivation and performance, and they
encompass much more than the numbers on a paycheck.
Work Environment
Your office space must have quality lighting, good temperature controls and proper ventilation
not only for employee morale but also for their health. Broken or malfunctioning light fixtures
are not only annoying, but poor lighting can also damage employee eye health. Poor climate
controls can also cause employees to become too chilled or deal with a heat-related illness. And
proper ventilation is perhaps the most critical piece of the office environment as poor ventilation
not only can make employees ill, it could also break local ordinances, as most municipalities
have some sort of environmental laws regarding proper ventilation.
Supportive Boss
While few bosses could live up to the image of the perfect boss, a boss who is supportive and
gives positive feedback helps influence employee morale in positive ways. "Entrepreneur"
magazine reports that in a poll of 30 administrative professionals, the top characteristics they
want in a boss are "supportive" at the #1 spot, followed by (in descending order) understanding,
flexible, honest/ethical, motivating and fair. These professionals defined a supportive boss as one
who looks for solutions rather than scapegoats when the team encounters a problem. And when
things go well, the supportive boss is quick to recognize a job well done. An understanding boss
recognizes when his staff is overworked and makes himself available,
occasionally even socializing with the staff outside work hours.
Perhaps the most positively influenced employees are those who know
their bosses wouldn't ask them to do anything the boss wouldn't be
willing to do himself.
Non-monetary Incentives
Receiving recognition for a job well done can do wonders for an employee's self-esteem and
satisfaction at work. Even in the absence of monetary rewards, knowing that high performance
will result in a title promotion, praise from colleagues or recognition at a team meeting can keep
motivation and performance levels high.
Personal Distractions
Employees experiencing problems in their personal life might have a hard time concentrating
while at work, causing a dip in performance. Some common issues include having a sick family
member, abusing alcohol or drugs, and consistently not getting enough sleep.
Compensation
Although many other factors contribute to employee satisfaction, money does come into play to
some degree. If employees feel underpaid for their services, they are less motivated to perform at
a consistently high level. Compensation needs to be competitive among all companies operating
in a specific market in order for employees to feel that they are receiving an appropriate amount.
Bonuses/Raises/Incentives
The economy has made it tough for employers to give bonuses and raises to top employees, but
according to a report from Employee Benefit News, employers are starting to re-institute pay
raises and bonus plans in order to retain the best employees. Until employers are able to reward
employees with salary increases and bonuses, however, incentives like restaurant gift cards,
comp time or other inexpensive rewards, when given with praise, are good alternatives for
boosting employee morale.one more important thing to be kept in mind is that incentives should
be competitive.
There are many psychological factors that can influence performance; some of these are
shown below.
STRESS ANXIETY SELF-CONFIDENCE
The relationship between these and performance is unfortunately not simple, and at times it
can be hard to understand.
Stress has become a popular topic. The media often attribute unusual behavior or illness in
people to burn out from stress or a nervous breakdown resulting from stress. For example,
when a celebrity attempts suicide, it is often said that he or she was burnt out from the
pressures of public life. In their daily lives at school, students often talk about each other's
levels of stress. "I'm so stressed out!" is a common claim. But what is stress?
In general terms, stress occurs when people are faced with events they perceive as
endangering their physical or psychological well-being.
We can cope with low levels of stress because they cause us become psychologically
activated. A so-called activation pattern is set up which enables you to cope with the stress
by personality "pushing back", as it were. However, too much stress feels threatening: near
the limits of your activation range you will no longer feel stimulated, instead you are likely
to become anxious and to start worrying about your ability to cope.
The Purpose to drive improvement in business results through individual, group, enterprise goal
alignment, measurement, performance coaching and performance information sharing.
Formal and informal processes are used for identifying and communicating performance
expectations and goals and ensuring goal alignment across group performance goals and
measures are developed at several levels in the organization. This is usually done with some
balance between financial, operational and customer-based metrics.
2. Development purpose
Many employees may express interest in growing in their current positions or in furthering their
careers. Supervisors shall work with them to identify strengths and weaknesses and, if
appropriate, to help them prepare an individual development plan. Individual development plans
may specify how employees can more fully apply their strengths in their current positions, build
up areas of weakness, enhance their performance in their current positions, or develop the skills
and experience they will need for possible future assignments. Following two are the
developmental purposes of performance management:
Its purpose is to drive organization and individual capability development by clarifying role-
specific goals and competencies, establishing an environment of constructive feedback, and
using formal developmental coaching/mentoring.
Coaching and mentoring programs and processes are used on a formal basis to provide
employees with ongoing support as they develop and apply new competencies.
Growing Talent
To motivate and retain high performers by providing career development programs
encompassing motivational and reward strategies, challenging work assignments and other on-
the-job learning initiatives that will lead to career advancement and ongoing job satisfaction.
A performance management process for identifying and rewarding talent is typically designed to
yield a performance assessment that can easily be used to make decisions involving
compensation, work assignments, career advancement and/or recognition.
The way in which measures and goals are developed lends itself to differentiating individuals
and/or groups.
In the toolbox of performance management system training, performance appraisals are simply
one of the tools. Performance appraisals give opportunity to evaluate the staff, praise their
positive efforts, discuss areas of improvement, and set goals for reaching higher levels of
performance. The appraisal, or evaluation, focuses on key objectives that have been set within
the organization. When supervisor meet with an employee to discuss his performance, he should
keep these objectives in mind. How is he helping the company reach its ultimate goals? What
behaviors has he displayed that need correcting? Which of his personal strengths will become
better with more training? A detailed analysis of each employee gives the starting point for
further development.
Suitability of the employees is normally gauged through annual evaluation report initiated by
supervisors and endorsed by senior managers.
Annual evaluation report is an important tool available to managers for reporting upon
performance of personnel placed under their control. It is the most effective means of appraisal
promising many dividends at various levels. However, many managers, not realizing its
importance, handle the annual reporting just half-heartedly. As natural corollary, wrong reporting
leads to wrong decisions that adversely affect efficiency of the organization in the long run.
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was the first federal law designed to protect most U.S
employees from employment discrimination based upon that employee's (or applicant's) race,
color, religion, sex, or national origin (Public Law 88-352, July 2, 1964, 78 Stat. 253, 42 U.S.C.
Sec. 2000e et. seq.).The Title also established the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission to assist in the protection of U.S. employees from discrimination.
QUALITY, addresses how well the employee or work unit is expected to perform the
work and/or the accuracy or effectiveness of the final product. It refers to accuracy,
appearance, usefulness, or effectiveness. Measures can include error rates (such as the
number or percentage of errors allowable per unit of work) and customer satisfaction
rates (determined through a customer survey/feedback).
QUANTITY addresses how much work the employee or work unit is expected to
produce. Measures are expressed as a number of products or services expected, or as a
general result to achieve.
TIMELINESS addresses how quickly, when, or by what date the employee or work unit
is expected to produce the work.
COST-EFFECTIVENES addresses cost control. These should address cost-
effectiveness on specific resource levels (money, personnel, or time) that can generally be
documented and measured. Cost-effectiveness measures may include such aspects of
performance as maintaining or reducing unit costs, reducing the time it takes to produce
or provide a product or service, or reducing waste.
The most popular methods used in the performance appraisal process include the following:
Management by objectives
The term "management by objectives" was first popularized by Peter Drucker in his 1954 book
'The Practice of Management'.
The essence of MBO is participative goal setting, choosing course of actions and decision
making. An important part of the MBO is the measurement and the comparison of the
employee’s actual performance with the standards set. Ideally, when employees themselves have
been involved with the goal setting and choosing the course of action to be followed by them,
they are more likely to fulfill their responsibilities.
The basic principle behind Management by Objectives (MBO) is for employees to have a clear
understanding of the roles and responsibilities expected of them. They can then understand how
their activities relate to the achievement of the organization's goal. MBO also places importance
on fulfilling the personal goals of each employee.
1. Motivation – Involving employees in the whole process of goal setting and increasing
employee empowerment. This increases employee job satisfaction and commitment.
2. Better communication and Coordination – Frequent reviews and interactions between
superiors and subordinates help to maintain harmonious relationships within the
organization and also to solve many problems.
3. Clarity of goals
4. Subordinates tend to have a higher commitment to objectives they set for themselves than
those imposed on them by another person.
5. Managers can ensure that objectives of the subordinates are linked to the organization's
objectives.
360-degree appraisal
Absolute standards
1. Essay Appraisal
In the essay method approach, the appraiser prepares a written statement about the
employee being appraised. The statement usually concentrates on describing specific
strengths and weaknesses in job performance. It also suggests courses of action to remedy
the identified problem areas. The statement may be written and edited by the appraiser
alone, or it be composed in collaboration with the appraisee.
Advantages
The essay method is far less structured and confining than the rating scale method. It
permits the appraiser to examine almost any relevant issue or attribute of performance.
This contrasts sharply with methods where the appraisal criteria are rigidly defined.
Appraisers may place whatever degree of emphasis on issues or attributes that they feel
appropriate. Thus the process is open-ended and very flexible. The appraiser is not locked
into an appraisal system the limits expression or assumes that employee traits can be
neatly dissected and scaled.
Essay methods are time-consuming and difficult to administer. Appraisers often find the
essay technique more demanding than methods such as rating scales.
The techniques greatest advantage - freedom of expression - is also its greatest handicap.
The varying writing skills of appraisers can upset and distort the whole process. The
process is subjective and, in consequence, it is difficult to compare and contrast the
results of individuals or to draw any broad conclusions about organizational needs.
Example:
Items from a behavioral checklist for a salesperson's job
Graphic rating scales are one of the most common methods of performance appraisal.
Graphic rating scales require an evaluator to indicate on a scale the degree to which
an employee demonstrates a particular trait, behavior, or performance result. Rating
A disadvantage of such rating scales is that they are susceptible to rating errors which result in
inaccurate appraisals. Possible rating errors include halo effect, central tendency, severity, and
leniency. The halo effect occurs when a rating on one dimension of an appraisal instrument
substantially influences the ratings on other dimensions for the same employee. As a result of the
halo effect, an employee is rated about the same across all performance dimensions. Central
tendency is a lack of variation or difference among ratings of different subordinates, wherein
most employees tend to be rated as average. Leniency refers to an evaluator's tendency to rate
BARS differ from other rating scales in that scale points are specifically defined
behaviors. Also, BARS are constructed by the evaluators who will use them. There are
four steps in the BARS construction process:
Ratings 5 and 6:
Demonstrates the ability to consistently consider and respond to the needs and ideas of
others which encourages and stimulates further communication. Effectively listens in
group or one-to-one situations involving distractions, stress, complex information, or
when the person speaking is emotional/distraught. Creates/maintains a positive work
environment that encourages expression of thoughts, ideas, and feelings.
6. Forced distribution
Use of the forced distribution method is demonstrated by a manager who is told that
he or she must rate subordinates according to the following distribution: 10 percent
low; 20 percent below average; 40 percent average; 20 percent above average; and 10
percent high. In a group of 20 employees, two would have to be placed in the low
category, four in the below-average category, eight in the average, four above
average, and two would be placed in the highest category. The proportions of forced
distribution can vary. For example, a supervisor could be required to place employees
into top, middle, and bottom thirds of a distribution.
Forced distribution is primarily used to eliminate rating errors such as leniency and
central tendency, but the method itself can cause rating errors because it forces
Relative standards
Appraisal systems based on relative standards involve comparing the performance of an
employee to the performance of other employees doing the same job.
As these appraisals can result in a ranking from best to worst, they are useful in deciding merit
pay increases, promotions, and allocation of organizational rewards
Individual Ranking
Each individual is compared to every other. Final ranking is based on number of times the
individual is preferred member in a pair.
Group ranking
Employees are placed in a classification reflecting their relative performance, such as “top
one-fifth.” Supervisor places employees into a particular classification – e.g. "top one-fifth"
and "second one-fifth". If a supervisor has ten employees, only two could be in the top fifth,
and two must be signed to the bottom fifth.
Paired Comparison
In paired comparison method for every traits (quality of work, quantity of work, creativity
etc) you pair and compare very subordinate. This method becomes unwieldy when large
numbers are being compared.
Each individual is compared to every other. Final ranking is based on number of times the
individual is preferred member in a pair.
Key Performance Indicators define a set of values used to measure against. These raw sets of
values, which are fed to systems in charge of summarizing the information, are
called indicators. Indicators identifiable as possible candidates for KPIs can be summarized into
the following sub-categories:
Key Performance Indicators, in practical terms and for strategic development, are objectives to
be targeted that will add the most value to the business. These are also referred to as Key
Success Indicators.
KPI’s Example
1. New customers acquired
2. Demographic analysis of individuals (potential customers) applying to become
customers, and the levels of approval, rejections, and pending numbers.
Many of these customer KPIs are developed and managed with customer relationship
management (CRM) software.
Faster availability of data is a competitive issue for most organizations. For example, businesses
which have higher operational/credit risk (involving for example credit cards or wealth
management) may want weekly or even daily availability of KPI analysis, facilitated by
appropriate IT systems and tools.
Cycle Time
Cycle time is the total time from the beginning to the end of your process, as defined by you and
your customer. Cycle time includes process time, during which a unit is acted upon to bring it
closer to an output, and delay time, during which a unit of work is spent waiting to take the next
action.
Utilization
Rejection rate
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