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Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal...

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Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal
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Page 1: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal

Page 2: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Class Overview

Course Administration

Performance Appraisal Discussion

Page 3: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Introduction to Performance Appraisal

Page 4: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Case: The Hallway Appraisal

Page 5: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Case: The Hallway Appraisal

How can such positive feedback result in such a mixture of feelings?

How is Performance Appraisal currently practiced in your company?

What are the critical elements of a good and defensible performance appraisal system?

Page 6: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Performance Appraisal Defined

Performance Appraisal is the systematic assessment of an individual’s job related strengths and weaknesses.

Page 7: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Design and Implementation Considerations

See Handout Booklet for Systems Model

Page 8: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

This discussion will attempt to cover the following factors:

1. Goals and Uses of PA.2. Legal Considerations of PA.3. Selecting a Method/Instrument

Characteristics of the effective PA system.

4. Training Managers.Sources of errors in rating employee

performance

Page 9: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Today’s discussion focuses on....

5. Recording Work Behaviors.

6. Evaluate Employees.

7. PA Interviewing and CounselingWho should conduct PA’s?

8. Evaluating the PA System.

Page 10: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Uses and Goals of P.A.

Page 11: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

1. Compensation

One of the most important rewards is pay.

It is logical that amount of an employee’s pay increase should be related to job performance.

In fact it is quite common for an organization to base the amount of merit increases directly to performance ratings.

Page 12: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Two reasons to tie pay to performance.

1. Society is committed to a sense of equity that suggests reward and performance should be related.

2. Research in motivation shows that if pay is to be a motivator, employees must see a clear correlation or relationship with performance. If pay is based on PA. Then the system must be

valid in that it accurately measured important employee contributions.

Page 13: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

2. Placement

Many organizations promote from within whenever possible.This helps decrease turnover,

increase motivation, and attract good applicants.

Page 14: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

2. Placement...

Job behaviors are much better predictors of future performance than test score or interviews.

By observing behavior it is possible to identify specific aspects of performance that are determined by a Job Analysis to be necessary for the next level.

Page 15: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

2. Placement...

Another aspect of placement comes into play when an employee must be transferred out of a job who he/she is performing poorly to a job where there is a better chance for acceptable performance.

Page 16: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

3. Employee Development

Many personnel professionals consider this to be the most productive aspect of P.A.

Page 17: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Feedback Objectives

1. Employees find out where they stand with the supervisor and the organization.

2. Supervisor-Subordinate relationships are strengthened because they encourage mutual agreement on performance expectations.

Page 18: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Feedback Objectives

3. Training and Development needs are identified.

4. Provides an opportunity for the supervisor and subordinate to express themselves on a variety of performance related issues.

Page 19: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

4. Validation of Selection Instruments

Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and its amendments (specifically stated in the EEOC guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures) have required that selection instruments be job related.

Page 20: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

5. Discipline

Dealing with problem employees is probably one of the most troublesome aspects of a supervisor’s job.

P.A. can be used to identify job related problems and through frequent observation and feedback, the employee can be made aware of the problems and what corrections are necessary.

Page 21: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

5. Discipline

Also P.A. (if reliable and valid) can be used as legal justification for termination.

Page 22: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Legal Considerations

Under the Guidelines, PA is considered a test and falls under the requirements of all other selection procedures. In fact, anything used to make an employment decision is a “test.”

Page 23: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Prescriptions for legally defensible appraisal systems

Ensure that procedures for personnel decisions do not differ as a function of the race, sex national origin, religion, or age of those affected by such decisions.

Use objective and uncontaminated data whenever they are available.

Page 24: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Prescriptions for legally defensible appraisal systems

Provide a formal system of review or appeal to resolve disagreements regarding appraisals.

Use more than one independent evaluator of performance.

Use a formal, standardized system for personnel decisions.

Page 25: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Prescriptions for legally defensible appraisal systems

Ensure that evaluators have ample opportunity to observe rate performance before they rate their subordinates.

Avoid ratings on traits such as dependability, drive, aptitude or attitude.

Page 26: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Prescriptions for legally defensible appraisal systems

Provide documented performance counseling prior to performance-based termination decisions.

Communicate specific performance standards to employees.

Provide raters with written instructions on how to complete performance evaluations.

Page 27: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Prescriptions for legally defensible appraisal systems

Evaluate employees on specific work dimensions, rather than on a single overall or global measure.

Require documentation in terms of specific behaviors (e.g.., critical incidents) for extreme ratings.

Base the content of the appraisal form on a job analysis.

Page 28: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Prescriptions for legally defensible appraisal systems

Provide employees with an opportunity to review their appraisals.

Educate personnel decision-makers regarding laws on discrimination.

Page 29: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Selecting a PA Method/Instrument

Page 30: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Types of PA Methods

Ranking Behavioral Checklists Narrative Essays Graphic Rating Scales

Behaviorally Anchored Rating Scales

Goal SettingMBO

Page 31: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Training Managers

Page 32: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Typical Rating Errors

Leniency Errors - Leniency Errors can be either in the negative or positive direction. They occur when a rater consistently gives all subordinates high or low ratings. It can be controlled by reducing the ambiguity in the rating scales (see your booklet) and by forcing raters to justify any high or low ratings.

Page 33: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Typical Rating Errors...

Central Tendency - Central Tendency occurs when a rater rates everyone average. This can be avoided by having the supervisor rank his/her employees before rating them.

Page 34: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Typical Rating Errors...

Halo Effects - Halo Effects occur when a rater generalizes performance on one duty to performance on other job duties. Just because an employee does well in one area of the job does not mean they will do well in all other areas as well. Use as much factual information as possible and take your time when rating employees.

Page 35: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Typical Rating Errors...

Contrast Effects - Contrast Effects occur when a rater lets an extremely bad or extremely good employee evaluation color any subsequent employee's evaluation. Do not rate all your employees at one sitting. Put some time and distance between each rating so that the glow of the previous evaluation does not carry over to the next evaluation.

Page 36: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Recording Work Behaviors

Utilizing the Employee LogCritical Incidents

Page 37: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Evaluating Employees

Review causes of rating errors

Allow subordinate to self-evaluate

See page 43 of handout booklet for other recommendations

Page 38: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Conducting the PA Interview

Consider interview type.Tell and SellTell and Listen

Consider type of employee. It should not be the only feedback

given to an employee.

Page 39: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Conducting the PA Interview...

Allow the employee to participate.

Utilize goal-setting.

Never talk money!

See pages 43-44 of handout booklet for other recommendations.

Page 40: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Evaluating the PA Process

Page 41: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Three important questions

1. Do employees accurately perceive feedback during the interview?

2. Do employees react favorable to feedback immediately following the interview?

3. Is there a change in performance during the next appraisal period?

Page 42: Lecture 10: Performance Appraisal. Class Overview n Course Administration n Performance Appraisal Discussion.

Any Questions?


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