Fairness in HRM
Fairness in HRM
Fairness in HRM
GROUP ESSAY
TOPIC
PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
Fairness and performance appraisal
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Performance appraisal (PA) which involves “measuring job performance” (Murphy and
Cleveland 1995, p.1) has become a fact of organizational life. A research conducted in 1992
by Longenecker and Goff had estimated that over 90 percent of all large organizations in the
U.S. employ some form of systematic employee appraisal and review. According to
Nykodym (1996), the appraisal process can provide managers with a useful communication
tool for employee goal setting and performance planning, increase employee’s motivation and
solid basis for wage and salary administration and provide data for a host of human resource
decisions. However, it is suggested that there is no “ideal” performance appraisal system due
addition, other researchers have also acknowledged the importance of fairness to the success
or failure of appraisal systems (Smither, 1988; Taylor, Tracy, Renard, Harrison and Carroll,
1995, as cited in Jawahar, 2007). In order to give some implications of how to effectively
assess “a man’s contribution and ability” (Thompson and Dalton, 1970, p. 150, cited in
Narcisse and Harcourt, 2008), the essay will examine the factors that impact fairness
perceptions and the consequent correlations of appraisal fairness perceptions and PA systems.
important to appraisals and the appraisal process, studying the influence of fairness
believed to make a significant impact on the effectiveness and the general viability of
appraisal systems (Jawahar, 2007). Kavanagh, Benson and Brown (2007) point out that there
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is a positive and significant association between the PA process and employee perceptions of
performance appraisal fairness and that among PA process variables, participation in PA,
self-appraisals in the align with their managers’ assessment (Franke, Murphy and Nadler,
by other factors called justice factors. According to Narcisse and Harcourt (2008), there are
mainly three factors recognized by previous studies and used in reality, namely distributive
justice, procedural justice and interactional justice. People care about the fairness of their
outcomes (distributive justice), the procedures to which they undergo (procedural justice), and
fairness of the interpersonal treatment and conversation that they receive (interactional
justice) (Ambrose 2002; Bies 2001). However, with the qualitative sampling strategy of
interviews with 20 knowledgeable employees, Narcisse and Harcourt also add four additional
justice factors affecting fairness perceptions, one distributive – the consistency in reward
distribution – and three procedural – appraisal frequency, job relevant criteria, and rater and
ratee training. In general, the bottom-line of all those findings is that justice factors can make
Regarding the impacts of fairness on PA system, it is widely accepted that employee beliefs
about the fairness of a PA system play a crucial role in any PA system because perceived
fairness is linked to trust in and hence, acceptance of the PA system (Kavanagh, Benson &
Brown, 2007; Jawahar, 2006; 2007). Certain fairness perception leads to various performance
and procedural justice perceptions play important role in satisfaction with feedback - an
important reaction positively related to job satisfaction and organizational commitment. More
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specifically, the author emphasizes the roles of procedural justice in the influence on
satisfaction with appraisal feedback comparing with that of distributive and interactional
justice perceptions. This viewpoint is shared by many other studies. Perceived procedural
fairness causes one’s satisfaction, commitment and high performance motivation (Steensma
and Visser, 2007; Tyler and Blader, 2000; Masterson, Lewis, Goldman, and Taylor, 2000).
Overall, a fairness PA system leads to positive outcomes, including better employee reactions
to the appraisal process, the improvement of motivation and performance, as well as attitudes
toward the organization (Franke, Murphy and Nadler, 2003; Pettijohn, Pettijohn and d’Amico,
2001; Leung, Su, and Morris, 2001; Colquitt and Chertkoff, 2002).
necessary to design the “right” PA instruments ensuring both the accuracy of the instruments
and employee perceptions of fairness (Latham, Almost, Mann and Moore, 2005). Three
frequently used appraisal instruments are bottom-line measures (managing objectives based
on goal attainment), trait-based scales (assessing attitudinal and personality variables such as
employee’s loyalty, commitment, creativity and so on), and behavioral scales (measuring and
coaching a person on observable behaviors) (Latham et al., 2005). As assessed by the authors,
apart from behavioral scales, the two first measuring tools are accompanied with limitations
(Bourne, 2005). According to Kaplan and Norton (2005), the balanced scorecard (BSC)
and strategy into a set of performance measures. The BSC is proposed on four perspectives:
financial, customers, internal business process, and learning and growth. Among those
aspects, learning and growth are the most important and useful one for the organization as it
involves “the determination of employee capabilities and skills, technology, and ensuring a
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corporate climate that supports organizations” (Martello, Watson and Fischer, 2008, p. 70).
By focusing on such question as how to sustain the ability to change and improve, it is more
likely to create an positive working environment where the organization care for employee’s
development, leading to employee’s satisfaction and vice versa the employee’s loyalty as well
appraisal tool named as 360-degree feedback is also recognized to be used in numerous big
corporations, such as DuPont, General Electric Co. (GE), Motorola Inc., Procter & Gamble
Co, and et cetera (Latham et al., 2005). This measure is defined as the practice of gathering
and processing multi-rater assessments on individuals and feeding back the results to the
recipients (Jones & Bearley, 1996). As such, its main objective is usually to assess training
planning, not for promotion or pay increase. In this tool, three sources of feedback can be
used to evaluate an individual's performance (Alma and Thomas, 2001), including (i) people
who can observe the recipient's behavior such as boss, peers, subordinates, and
individuals themselves (Alma and Thomas, 2001). With this multi-source assessment, 360-
degree feedback seems to reduce individual bias and error in judging performance, improve
accuracy and adequacy in performance appraisal, and create better communication at all
levels resulting from performance discussion (Bentley and Kohn-Bentley, 1998; 2001;
Kirksey, Milliman, Zawacki, Norman, and Powell, 2001). However, this method may take
much time to implement, causing the hesitation for managers and employees to keep it done
Theoretically, PA is not easy to be proceeded in the way of ensuring fairness due to different
perceptions and no best-suit PA tool to all situations. As the same scenario, implementation of
PA in reality is even more complicated task. A case study from a Performance Management
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Program of East Carolins University (Mani, 2002) elaborated the importance of fairness in
performance appraisal. This survey found that, even though employees received outstanding
ratings, they still dissatisfied the measurement system because they perceived that some other
employees also received high ratings without hard working. Mani also noticed that
employees’ satisfaction is based on fairness of system and the trust and satisfaction level
toward their supervisors. Additionally, another case study in Saint Lucian public service
organization (Narcisse and Harcourt, 2010) illustrated that the employees cared deeply about
performance appraisals is affected by how consistently pay raises and promotions reflect
appraisal ratings across all employees. During the performance appraisal process, participants
at management level felt that procedural justice factors were more fairness than low- and
standards makes them feel the unfairness in the appraisal procedures. More clearly,
employees were more likely to believe that their appraisal rating was based on inaccurate and
biased information and that the rating was determined by unfair means. In contrast, all
managing-level participants believed that their appraisal were accurate. These two case
studies is worthy for human resource staff to consider in order to more deeply examine
It can be concluded that fairness perceptions of employees and PA system are consequently
correlated with each other. Fairness perception might be affected by many factors, including
factors evolved in PA process, mainly one of three basic kinds: distributive, procedural or
interactional (Narcisse and Harcourt, 2008). On the other hand, the success of PA systems
appraisal is one that satisfies both the aims of employees as well as employers. Consequently,
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in the design and implementation of PA instruments, there must be a shared perception on the
goals of employees and managers on the performance appraisal process (Longenecker and
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