Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Unit 2 - Issues for practitioners

Five concerns of practitioners who design and support SPM:

1.       Eliciting the active involvement and buy-in of executives and managers to the design, roll-out, and ongoing use of the program elements

2.       linking the components of the program to the strategy of the organization overall while maintaining relevancy to departments and individuals throughout the organization

3.       keeping the program current so that managers and employees will find it valuable and will be motivated to use it

4.       capturing the learning so that managers and employees become more able to focus on performance issues and creating an environment in which it is acceptable to discuss difficult performance issues

5.       evaluating the program, assessing its impact on individual, departmental, and organizational performance and regularly fine-tuning the program to improve its effectiveness.
Human resource and/or organizational development professionals are likely to be responsible for the design and implementation of the SPM program. However, these professionals need the active engagement of the employees and manager who will use the program. The elements of the program need to be helpful in doing their jobs. Customizing performance dimensions and incentive plans to the organization, and having the people who will use the program involved in the customization, is likely to result in a program that will be accepted and valued.
The performance management process should be viewed as developmental and evolutionary. Working on its design educating managers and employees during its initial roll-out, and supporting the use of the program over time helps educate managers about the meaning of performance management. They can then grow more comfortable dealing what performance issues and incorporate performance discussions into their daily activities. Over time, performance management becomes part of the way the organization does business. A performance-based culture is created.
Overall, when creating strategic performance management programs, HR professionals can generate higher degrees of commitment to both the program and the process of performance management by inviting managers and employees to contribute to the design, implementation, and evaluation of the program. HR professionals should strongly consider forming a design task force for development and implementation with representatives from different functions and levels of the organization. This will not only help build commitment, it will also help to ensure that key components (e.g., performance dimensions) that are important to the overall organization, as well as those that are unique to specific departments or functions, will be included in the program. After the program has been implemented, HR professionals should consider forming a performance management council to oversee the program’s assessment and use. As a result, monitoring the use of the program becomes more than the bureaucratic exercise of being sure forms are completed; rather, it becomes an examination of how people are using the process, what they think about it, and ways they would like it changed to be even more valuable.
Sustaining interest in the process and ensuring compliance are two different things. Compliance can be enforced by requiring that annual appraisal forms be completed before salary increases or other administrative changes, such as promotions, can be implemented. However, completing appraisals because they are required can result in a pro formal exercise with little meaning or effect. Sometimes organizations try to refresh their programs by changing formats, rating methods, and performance dimensions. Training can be used to explain these changes and create more awareness of performance issues and how the process might be used to evaluate and improve performance. However, both employees and managers may become jaded quickly when new performance programs are introduced every year or two.
Another potential reason for redesigning a performance management program is to build on the skills and competences both employees and managers have developed in performance management. For example, as managers become adept at giving feedback and supporting development, they may need to rely less on formal processes, such as 360-degree surveys. Instead of a semi-annual 360-degree survey for all managers, for instance, the organization may implement a just-in-time, online process that allows managers to formulate their own surveys when they believe they need feedback to understand how their peers, subordinates, or customers are responding to their decisions and actions. In other words, they learn when to ask ‘how am I doing,’ and how to gather information that will help them guide their efforts.
Knowing when to adapt or devise an entirely new performance management program requires constant assessment. Assessment is usually the job of the human resource or organization development professionals in the organization. They need to devise and implement methods for assessment, and they need to convince top executives of the importance of investing in assessment.
There are four types of assessment data:

1.       attitude surveys that ask about the perceived value of the performance management program

2.       behavioral data, which may be self-report (part of a survey that asks not only about value but use; for instance, ‘Did you complete the annual performance appraisal form for all your subordinates?,’ ‘How often do you and your manager discuss your job performance?’), or it may be frequency counts of use (e.g., number of managers who completed appraisal forms for their employees)

3.       behavior change reflected in changes in performance ratings over time or external measures (e.g., number of times a behavior was carried out, such as a successful sales call)

4.       improvement in bottom-line performance and outcomes associated with the organization’s strategic goals (e.g. change in profits, sales, new clients, employees hired, employees retained, etc.) and objectives (methods for accomplishing the goals).

Each of these measurements has potential problems. Ratings may be subject to response biases, such as central tendency (ratings in the middle of the scale) or halo (ratings at the top end of the scale). In either case, the result is that managers are not truly differentiating between dimensions of performance but instead rating one employee or all employees the same on all performance dimensions. So when the data are averaged across employees to consider performance change in a department or the organization as a whole, the results would be confounded by rater error. Behavioral and performance ratings may be a function of many factors other than an honest assessment of performance as defined by the performance management program in place. This is why multiple measures are needed to understand the performance management program from different perspectives and to recognize the diverse factors that influence performance, including faulty measurement. Insights result as data from different sources and indicators converge to tell a consistent story. So, for instance, attitude survey results may indicate that performance dimensions are difficult to understand or too time consuming to complete. This may explain why managers leave items blank, fill out the appraisal forms in a cursory way, or don’t meet with employees to discuss performance results.
Program evaluation, alternatively called action or applied research, faces greater challenges than basic research because program evaluation is not designed to eliminate alternative explanations. So the data are likely to be subject to a variety of unavoidable confounds. However, consistent measurement procedures repeated over time that take into account subgroup differences are likely to produce meaningful results. These results can be used to understand how people are using and reacting to the elements of a performance management program, and can also be used to fine-tune the program. When the program undergoes a major transition in response to changes in the organization’s strategic goals, or to increase awareness of performance issues, or to reinvigorate motivation to apply performance management techniques, the assessment methods can be changed accordingly. Some measures may stay the same in order to assess change over time. Others may be added to reflect performance relative to the new goals and program objectives. In the case we present at the end of the chapter, the organization development group used the results of the company-wide employee opinion survey to track use and satisfaction with its performance management process, ad to design specific training to meet skill gaps in setting strategic goals, giving and receiving feedback, and conducting the performance appraisal conversation.

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