Friday 12 July 2013

THE POLITICS OF PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL - case study



Every Friday, Max Steadman, Jim Coburn, Lynne Sims, and Tom Hamilton meet at Charley's after work for drinks. The four friends work as managers at Eckel Industries, a manufacturer of arc-welding equipment in Minneapolis. The one-plant company employs about 2,000 people. The four managers work in the manufacturing division. Max, 35, man­ages the company's 25 quality-control inspectors. Lynne, 33, works as a supervisor in inventory management. Jim, 34, is a first-line supervisor in the metal coating department. Tom, 28, supervises a learn of assemblers. The four managers' tenure at Eckel Industries ranges from 1 year (Tom) to 12 years (Max).

The group is close-knit; Lynne, Jim, and Max's friendship stems from their years as undergraduate business students at the University of Minnesota. Tom, the newcomer, joined the group after meeting the three at an Eckel management seminar last year. Weekly get-togethers at Charley's have become a comfortable habit for the group and provide an opportunity to relax, exchange the latest gossip heard around the plant, and give and receive advice about problems encountered on the job.
This week's topic of discussion: performance ap­praisal, specifically the company's annual review process, which the plant's management conducted in the last week. Each of the four managers completed evaluation forms (graphic rating scales) on all of his or her subordinates and met with each subordinate to discuss the appraisal.

Tom:      This was the first time I've appraised my people, and 1 dreaded it. For me, it's been the worst week of the year. Evaluating is difficult; it's highly subjective and inexact. Your emotions creep into the process. 1 got angry at one of my assembly workers last week, and 1 still felt the anger when 1 was filling out the evaluation forms. Don't tell me that my frustration with the guy didn't bias my appraisal. 1 think it did. And I think the technique is flawed. Tell me—what's the difference between a five and a six on "cooperation"?

Jim:    The scales are a problem. So is mem­ory. Remember our course in human resources in college? Dr. Philips said that, according to research, when we sit down to evaluate someone's perfor­mance in the past year, we will only be able to actively recall and use 15 per­cent of the performance we actually observed.
Lynne:    1 think political considerations arc always a part of the process. I know I consider many other factors besides a person's actual performance when 1 appraise him.
Tom:    Like what?

Lynne:    Like the appraisal will become part of his permanent written record that affects his career. Like the person I evaluate today, I have to work with tomorrow. Given that, the difference between a five and a six on cooperation isn't that relevant, because frankly, if a five makes him mad and he's happy with a six ...

Max:    Then you give him the six. Accuracy is important, but I'll admit it—accuracy isn't my primary objective when I eval­uate my workers. My objective is to motivate and reward them so they'll perform better. I use the review process to do what's best for my people and my department. If that means fine-tuning the evaluations to do that, I will.

Tom:    What's an example of fine-tuning?

Max:    Jim, do you remember three years ago when the company lowered the ceiling on merit raises? The top merit increase that any employee could get was 4 per­cent. I boosted the ratings of my folks to get the best merit increases for them. The year before that, the ceiling was 8 percent. The best they could get was less than what most of them received the year before, I felt they deserved the 4 percent, so 1 gave the marks that got them what 1 felt they deserved.

Lynne:    I've inflated ratings to encourage someone who is having personal problems but is normally a good employee. A couple of years ago, one of my better people was going through a painful divorce, and it was showing in her work. I don't think it's fair to kick someone when they're down, even if their work is poor, I fell a good rating would speed her recovery.

Tom:    Or make her complacent.

Lynne:    No. I don't think so. I felt she realized her work was suffering. 1 wanted to give her encouragement; it was my way of telling her she had some support and that she wasn't in danger of losing her job.

Jim:    There's another situation where I think fine-tuning is merited—when some­one's work has been mediocre or even poor for most of the year, but it improves substantially in the last two, three months or so. If I think the guy is really trying and is doing much better, I'd give him a rating that's higher than his work over the whole year deserves. It encourages him to keep improving. If I give him a mediocre rating, what does that tell him?

Tom:    What if he's really working hardy, but not doing so great?

Jim:    If I think he has what it takes, I'd boost the rating to motivate him to keep trying until he gets there.

Max:    I know of one or two managers who've inflated ratings to get rid of a pain in the neck, some young guy who's trans­ferred in and thinks he'll be there a short time. He's not good, but thinks he is and creates all sorts of problems. Or his performance is OK, but he just doesn't fit in with the rest of the department. A year or two of good ratings is a sure trick for getting rid of him.

Tom:    Yes, but you're passing the problem on to someone else.

Max:    True, but it's no longer my problem.

Tom:    All the examples you've talked about involve inflating evaluations. What about deflating them, giving someone less than you really think he deserves? Is that justified?

Lynne:    I'd hesitate to do that, because it can create problems. It can backfire.

Max:    But it does happen. You can lower a guy's ratings to shock him, to jolt him into performing belter. Sometimes, you can work with someone, coach him, try to help him improve, and it just doesn't work. A basement-level rating can tell him you mean business. You can say that isn't fair, and for the time being, it isn't. But what if you feel that if the guy doesn't shape up, he faces being fired in a year or two, and putting him in the cellar, ratings-wise, will solve his problem? It's fair in the long run if the effect is that he improves his work and keeps his job.

Jim:    Sometimes, you get someone who's a real rebel, who always questions you, sometimes even oversteps his bounds. I think deflating his evaluation is mer­ited just to remind him who's the boss.

Lynne:    I'd consider towering someone's true rating if they've had a long record of rather questionable performance, and 1 think the best alternative for the per­son is to consider another job with an­other company. A low appraisal sends him a message to consider quitting and start looking for another job.

Max:    What if you believe the situation is hopeless, and you've made up your mind that you're going to fire the guy as soon as you've found a suitable re­placement? The courts have chipped away at management's right to fire. Today, when you fire someone, you'd better have a strong case. I think once a manager decides lo fire, appraisals become very negative. Anything good that you say about the subordinate can be used later against you. Deflating the ratings protects you from being sued and sometimes speeds up the termina­tion process.

Tom:    I understand your points, but I still believe that accuracy is the top priority in performance appraisal. Let me play devil's advocate for a minute. First, Jim, you complained about our mem­ory limitations introducing a bias into appraisal. Doesn't introducing politics into the process further distort the truth by introducing yet another bias? Even more important, most would agree that one key lo motivating people is providing true feedback—the facts about how they're doing so they know where they stand. Then you talk with them about how to improve their performance. When you distort an evaluation- -however slightly—are you providing this kind of feedback?

Max:    I think you're overstating the degree of fine-tuning.

Tom:    Distortion, you mean.

Max:    No, fine-tuning. I'm not talking about giving a guy a seven when he deserves a two, or vice versa. It's not that extreme. I'm talking about making slight changes in the ratings when you think that the change can make a big difference in terms of achieving what you think is best for the person and for your department.

Tom:    But when you fine-tune, you're manipu­lating your people. Why not give them the most accurate evaluation and let the chips fall where they may? Give them the facts and let them decide.

Max:    Because most of good managing is psy­chology. Understanding people, their strengths and shortcomings. Knowing how to motivate, reward, and act to do what's in their and your department's best interest. And sometimes, total accuracy is not the best path. Some­times, it's not in anybody's best interest.

Jim:    All this discussion raises a question. What's the difference between fine-tuning and significant distortion? Where do you draw the line?

Lynne:    Thai's about as easy a question as what's the difference between a five and a six. On the form, I mean.

Questions
1. Analyse the case.
Assume you are the vice president of human re­sources at Eckel Industries and that you are aware that fine-tuning evaluations is a prevalent prac­tice among Eckel managers. If you disagree with this perspective, what steps would you take to re­duce the practice?

1 comment:

  1. Hi

    Tks very much for post:

    I like it and hope that you continue posting.

    Let me show other source that may be good for community.

    Source: Performance review weekly

    Best rgs

    David

    ReplyDelete