Performance Appraisal System
Performance Appraisal System
APPRAISAL
SYSTEM
PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL:
An organization’s goals can be achieved only when people put in their best efforts.
How to ascertain whether an employee has shown his or her best performance on a
given job? The answer is performance appraisal. Employee assessment is one of the
fundamental jobs of HRM. But not an easy one though. This chapter is devoted to a
detailed discussion of the nature and process of conducting performance appraisal.
The objectives of performance appraisal, listed above, point out the purpose which
such an exercise seeks to meet. What needs emphasis is that performance
evaluation contributes to firm's competitive strength. Besides encouraging high
levels of performance, the evaluation system helps identify employees with
potential, reward performance equitably and determine employee's need for
training. Specifically, performance appraisal helps an organization gain
competitive edge in the following ways
Improving Performance
An effective appraisal system can contribute to competitive advantage by
improving employee job performance in two ways-by directing employee
behaviour towards organizational goals, as was done by the second beekeeper (see
opening case), and by monitoring that behaviour to ensure that the goals are met.
APPRAISAL PROCESS
Objectives of Appraisal
Design an appraisal
performance
Performance interview
Not that the role of the individual is undermined. The individual is responsible for
a large percentage of his or her work performance. Employees should not be
encouraged to seek organizational reasons for his failures. The identifications of
systems obstacles should be used to facilitate development and motivation, not as
an excuse to poor performance. The following table displays some of the
differences between the traditional approach and the systems-oriented one.
3. Who are Raters? Raters can be immediate supervisors, specialist from the HR
department, subordinates, Peers, committees, clients, self appraisal, or a
combination of several.
b. Subordinate can assess the performance of their superiors. The use of this
choice may be useful in assessing an employee ability to communicate, delegate
work, allocate resources, disseminate information, resolve intrapersonal conflict,
and deal with employees on a fair basis. But the problem with the subordinate
evaluation is that supervisors tend to become popular, not by effective leadership,
but by mere gimmicks.
c. Peers are in better position to evaluate certain facts of job performance which
the subordinates or supervisors cannot do. Such facts include contribution skills,
reliability and initiative. Closeness of the working relationships and the amount of
personal contacts place peers in a better position to make accurate assessments.
Unfortunately friendship or animosity may result in distortion of evaluation.
Further when reward allocation is based on peer evaluation, series conflicts among
co-workers may develop. Finally join together to rate each other high.
d. Although clients are seldom used for rating employee performance, nothing
prevents an organization from using this source. Clients may be members within
the organization who have direct contact with the rate and make use of an output
(goods or services) this employee provides. Interest, courtesy, dependability and
innovativeness are but a few of the qualities for which clients can offer rating
information. Clients, external to the organization can also offer similar kinds of
information. Where appraisal is made by the superior, peers, subordinates and
clients, it is called the 360-degree system of appraisal. First developed at General
Electric, US in 1992 the system has become popular in our country too. GE (India).
Reliance Industries, Crompton Greaves, Godrej Soaps, Wipro, Infosys, Thermax
and Thomas Cook are using the method with greater benefits. The Arthur
Anderson Survey 1997 reveals that 20% of the organization use 360 degree
method. In the 360 degree method, besides assessing performance. Other attributes
of the assess—talents, behavioral quirks, values, ethical standards, tempers and
loyalty are evaluated by the people who are best placed to do it. Many employees
use rating committees to evaluate employees. These committees are often
composed of the employee’s immediate supervisor and three or four other
supervisors who come in contact with the employee. This choice is welcome when
an employee in the course of his or her job performs a
variety of tasks in different environment. For e.g. 1supervisor may work with the
employee when technical aspects of a job are being performed and another
supervisor may deal with the same employee in situations where communications
skills are crucial. There are several benefits in using multiple raters. First there may
be objectivity in rating as more than rater is involved in the assessment.
Furthermore where there are differences in the rater ought ratings they usually
stem from the fact that raters at different level in the organization often observe
different facets of an employee performance-the appraisal to reflect these
differences. The disadvantages of committee rating are that it diminishes the role
of the immediate supervisor in the area of training and development.
5. Leniency or Severity: - Leniency or severity on the part of the rater makes the
assessment subjective. Subjective assessments defeat the very purpose of
performance appraisal. Ratings are lenient for the following reasons:
The rater may feel that anyone under his or her jurisdictions who is rated
unfavorably will reflect poorly on his or her own worthiness.
He or she may feel that anyone who could have been rated unfavorably has
already been discharged from the organization
He or she may feel that a derogatory rating will be revealed to the rate to the
determinant of the relations between the rater and rate.
He or she may rate leniently in order to win promotions for the subordinates
and therefore indirectly increase his or her hold over them.
He or she may be projecting
He or she feels it necessary to always approve of others in order to gain
approval for him or herself.
He or she may be operating on the premise, “whoever associates with me is
meritorious therefore, and I am meritorious”.
He or she may rate leniently because there exists, in the culture, a response
set approve rather than disapprove.
4. Central tendency: - This occurs when employees are incorrectly rated near the
average or middle of the scale. The attitude of the rate is to play safe. This safe
playing attitude stems from certain doubts and anxieties which the raters have
while assessing the ratees. Such doubts and anxieties are:
“Do I know the man sufficiently well to be able to give a fair assessment of
him?
“If I rate him the way I think I should what will be its influence on his
relations with me and on his performance in the future?
“If I rate him the way I think I should what will be its effect on my relations
with the others subordinates?”
“If I rate him the way I think I should what will be its effect on his
relationship within the group or subordinates?”
“Will I able to be objective in view of pressures from peers, subordinates
and trade union?”
“If I rate him the way I think I should will be accused to being partial?”
“How will my boss view the appraisal I make and how will that influences
the way he appraises the man?”
“What standards will my peers adopt to appreciate their subordinates? And
in view of this am I likely to affect adversely the future of my
subordinates?”
Naturally the rates use such expressions as satisfactory and average to describe the
performance of the rates. For example the principal of a college while giving
character certificates to the outgoing students describe the character of each student
as satisfactory. Obviously it’s become difficult to distinguish between excellent
performance and poor performance. In small organization it is common to label all
employees as an average. But in large companies errors of this type tend to obviate
the value of evaluations.
Rater effect: this includes favoritism, stereotyping and hostility. Excessively high
or low scores are given only to certain individual or groups based on the rater’s
attitude towards the rate, not on actual outcomes or behavior. Sex, age, race and
friendship biases are example of this type of error.
Primary and recency effects: - the rater’s ratings are heavily influenced either by
behavior exhibited by the rate during the early stage of the review period or by
outcomes or behavior exhibited by the rate near the end of the review period
(recency). For example if a salesperson captures an important contract/ sales just
before the completion of the appraisal the timing of the incident may inflate his or
her standing even though the overall performance of the salesperson may not have
been encouraging. Likewise a blunder committed just before the appraisal period
may diminish chance of securing a favorable rating even if the performance is
good.
One way of guarding against such an error is to ask rater to consider the composite
performance of the ratee and not to be influenced by one incident or own
achievement. The rater must also be aware of tendency on the part of the rates to
improve odds in their favors or suppress weak points during the rating period.
But training can help improve the appraisal system to the extent of distortion that
occurs due to the rater’s error such as halo, leniency, central tendency and bias. In
a typical training, raters are shown a video-tape of jobs being performed and are
asked to rate the workers. Ratings made by each participant are then placed on a
flip chart and the various charts are explained. For e.g., a trainee is rated on all
criteria (such as quantity and quality) about the same, the trainer might explain that
halo error had occurred. If, on the other hand, a trainer rated all video-taped
workers very high, this might be explained as a leniency error. Typically, the
trainer gives the correct rating and then illustrates the rating errors made. In effect,
training of raters must help strengthen the factors that tend to improve accuracy of
ratings and weaken those that lower the accuracy of the performance measurement.
1. Quality: The degree to which the result or process of carrying out an activity
approaches perfection in terms of either conforming to some ideal way of
performing the activity, or fulfilling the activity’s intended purpose.
4. Cost Effectiveness: the degree to which the use of the organization’s resources
(e.g. human, monetary, technological and material) is maximized in the sense of
getting the highest gain or reduction in loss from each unit or instance of use of a
resource.
5. Need for supervision: the degree to which a job performer can carry out a job
function without either having to request supervisory assistance or requiring
supervisory intervention to prevent an adverse outcome.
How often should an employee be assessed? The general trend is to evaluate once
in 3 months, or six months, or once in a year. According to a survey conducted in
1997 by Arthur Anderson, 70 percent of the organizations conduct performance
appraisal once a year. Newly hired employees are rated more frequently than the
older ones. Frequent assessment is better than phased evaluation. Feedback in the
latter is delayed and the advantage of timely remedial measures by the employee is
lost. Frequent evaluation gives constant feedback to the rate, thus enabling him or
her to improve performance if there is any deficiency. The performance of trainees
and probationers should be evaluated at the end of respective programmes.
METHODS OF APPRAISAL
The last to be addressed in the process of designing an appraisal programme is to
determine methods of evaluation. Numerous methods have been devised to
measure the quantity and quality of employee’s job performance. Each of the
methods discussed could be effective for some purposes, for some organizations.
None should be dismissed or accepted as appropriate except as they relate to the
particular needs of the organization or of a particular type of employees. Broadly,
all the approaches to appraisal can be identified into
(i) past-oriented methods
(ii) Future-oriented methods.
Past-Oriented Methods
Rating Scales: This is the simplest and most popular technique for appraising
employee performance; the typical rating-scale system consists of several
numerical scales, each representing a job-related performance criterion such as
dependability, initiative, output, attendance, attitude, co-operation, and the like.
Each scale ranges from excellent to poor. The rater checks the appropriate
performance level on each criterion, then computes the employee’s total numerical
score. The number of points scored may be linked to salary increases, whereby so
many points equal a rise of some percentage.
Rating scales offer the advantages of adaptability, relatively easy use and low cost.
Nearly every type of job can be evaluated in a short time, and the rater does not
need any training to use the scale.
The disadvantages of this method are several. The rater’s biases are likely to
influence evaluation, and the biases are particularly pronounced on subjective
criteria such as cooperation, attitude and initiative. Furthermore, numerical scoring
gives an illusion of precision that is really unfounded.