Communication Skills for Managers
Performance appraisal is probably the
most misused and abused management tool in history. When
asked, the majority of human resource managers will swear
blind that it is their most important device for reviewing
members of the team. The reality is that, on the whole,
managers, supervisors, and employees hate the thoughts of
them and they rarely get done. Human resource professionals
spend a lot of time whipping people into doing them, while
managers look for a variety of reasons to delay the
process.
The reason for this is that it's often an uncomfortable
practice to carry out, people undertake performance appraisal
for the wrong reasons and from the wrong perspective. This can
end up putting the manager and the employee on different
"sides". Appraisals are used for determining pay increases, who
gets let go, who gets promoted. Most commonly, they are used to
focus on what people have done wrong.
So what is the real point of performance appraisals? Generally,
the aim of the practice is to:
• Give feedback on performance to employees.
• Identify employee training needs.
• Document criteria used to allocate organizational
rewards.
• Form a basis for personnel decisions: salary increases,
promotions, disciplinary actions, etc.
• Provide the opportunity for organizational diagnosis and
development.
• Facilitate communication between employee and
administrator.
• Validate selection techniques and human resource policies to
meet federal Equal Employment Opportunity requirements
The most important purpose or goal of the appraisal is to
improve performance in the future, in both employees and team
leaders. Managers can get valuable information from staff to
help them make their jobs more productive. Through feedback
given in performance appraisals work units can identify
problems that interfere with everyone's, and take steps to
rectify them. If there is a shift from affixing blame to
identifying barriers to performance the fear and dread
associated with appraisals will be removed.
When managers put away the "blaming stick" in appraisals and
move to a cooperative, dialogue approach, the whole process can
become more comfortable and effective. Because, it puts the
manager and employee on the same side, and working towards the
same goals, getting better and better.
Performance appraisals are always awkward for everyone. While
managers make an effort to be as objective as possible, there
are always concerns about specific performance appraisals, and
their accuracy. When you’re evaluating your staff it’s wise to
be aware of factors that may affect your assessments. Here are
a few factors you should be aware of, so that you can examine
your own assessment processes to ensure that they are as free
from bias as possible.
Generalising
Generalising, or the halo effect, is the tendency to rate
someone high or low in all categories, based on their
performance in other areas. Results of performance appraisals,
where generalising occurs, do not help develop employees
because they are inaccurate and unspecific to their entire
performance.
Different Standards of Evaluation
Evaluation terms such as fair, good, excellent, etc, are
commonly used in performance appraisals, yet managers should be
aware that the meaning of these words will differ from person
to person. In any case, the use of these categories is not
recommended; they are just too unspecific and do little to
provide sufficient information to evaluate individuals and help
them develop.
Current and Lenient Bias
Current bias is the tendency to assess people based on their
most recent performance and to ignore previous behaviour.
Leniency bias occurs when the employee gets rated higher than
warranted, this is usually accompanied by rationalization as to
why this is appropriate.
Opportunity Bias
This occurs as a result of ignoring the notion that factors
beyond the control of the employee may either restrict or
facilitate their performance. In the case of opportunity bias,
credit or blame is given to the employee when the true cause of
the performance was opportunity.
False Attribution Errors
There is often a tendency, in performance appraisal, to
attribute success or failure to individual effort and ability.
So when someone does well, we give them credit, and when
someone does less well, we suggest it's somehow their fault.
While there is some truth in this, the reality is that
performance is a function of both the individual and the system
he or she works in. If both factors are not taken into account,
it will be increasingly difficult to improve on
performance.
Although performance appraisals are commonly dreaded throughout
the company, from team leader to employee, they are a necessary
tool in ensuring development. If conducted fairly and
appropriately the information gathered can be used to vastly
improve the performance of the entire team.
Source: Free
Articles Sheila Mulrennan from
Professionaldevelopment.ie specialises in writing articles
relating to Personal Development Training, Communication
Skills, Prfesentation Skills and Performance
Appraisals.
Visit her website at www.Professionaldevelopment.ie
for more.

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