Performance-Appraisal.ppt

144 views 56 slides Jun 05, 2023
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About This Presentation

performance appraisal


Slide Content

Performance
Appraisal

Performance Appraisal :
Performance Appraisal (PA) refers to all
those procedures that are used to
evaluate the personality, performance,
potential, of its group members

Relationship between jab analysis
and performance appraisal:
Job analysisperformance performance
standards appraisal
Describes work
& Personnel
Requirement
Of a particular
job
Translate job
Into levels of
To acceptable
Or unacceptable
performance
Describes the
Job relevant
strengths and
weakness of
Each individual

Question arises?
Why do we measure performance?
Effective performance appraisal
systems
How do we measure performance?

Characteristics
It is a step by step process
It examine the employee strengths and
weaknesses
Scientific and objective study
Ongoing and continuous process
Secure information for making correct
decisions on employees

Needs and Objectives:
Provide feedback about employees
Provide database
Diagnose the S & W of individuals
Provide coaching, counseling, career
planning to subordinates
Develop positive relation and reduce
grievance
Facilitates research in personnel management

Appraisal Benefits (cont.)
Appraisals offer
employees:
Direction
Feedback
Input
Motivation

Appraisal Benefits
Appraisals offer the company:
Documentation
Employee Development
Feedback
Legal protection
Motivation system

Why Appraisals Are Important
•Recognizeaccomplishments
•Guide progress
•Improve performance

Why Important (cont.)
Review performance
Set goals
Identify problems
Discuss career advancement

Steps in performance appraisal
Establishing job standards
Designing an appraisal programme
Appraise performance
Performance interview
Use appraisal data
For appropriate purpose

Process of PA
Setting
performance
standards
Taking corrective
standards
Discussing
results
Comparing
standards
Measuring
standards
Communicating
standards

Issues in appraisal system
Appraisal Design?
Formal and informal
Whose performance?
Who are the raters?
What problems?
How to solve?
What to evaluate?
When to evaluate?
What methods?

What to evaluate? (Philip Model)
Problem
children
Planned
separation
stars
Social
citizen
H
L H
L
Potential
Performance

How PA contribute to firm’s
competitive advantages
Improving
performance
Making correct
decision
Ensuring legal
competence
Minimizing dissatisfaction
And turnover
Values and behavior
Competitive
advantage

Problems in performance appraisal
1.Errors In rating
Halo effects
Stereotyping
Central tendency
Constant error
Personal bias
Spill over effect

2.Incompetence
3.Negative approach
4.Multiple objectives
5.Resistance
6.Lack of knowledge
Problems in performance appraisal
(Cont’d)

Essentials of an effective appraisal system
Mutual trust
Clear objectives
Standardizations
Training
Job relatedness
Documentation
Feedback and participation
Individual differences
Post appraisal review
Review and appeal

Appraisals and Discrimination
Title VII
ADA
Other fair employment
Laws

Discrimination (cont.)
Failure to communicate standards
Failure to give timely feedback
Failure to allow employees to correct
performance
Inconsistency in measuring
performance
Failure to document performance
objectively

Appraisal Forms
Define performance expectations
Describe measurement tools
Use a rating system
Cover specific examples
Set measurable goals

Measure Performance
Measurement systems need to be:
Specific
Fair
Consistent
Clear
Useful

Measure Performance (cont.)
Systems can be:
Numerical
Textual
Management by Objective (MBO)
Behavior oriented

Document Performance
Make sure documentation is objective
Document performance of all
employees
Provide complete and accurate
information
Document performance on a regular
basis

Set Goals….
Based on job requirements
Realistic
Measurable
Observable
Challenging
Prioritized

Employee Input
Employees take an active role:
Setting goals
Designing action plans
Identifying strengths and weaknesses
Employees participate in the PA meeting

Preparation
Employees:
Review performance
Think about new goals

Preparation (cont.)
Supervisors:
Review performance
Complete written appraisal
Think about new goals
Schedule time and place

Start the Meeting
Lay out agenda
Talk about money
Encourage input
Give good news first

During the Meeting
Review performance:
Based on previous goals
Noting strengths and accomplishments
Identifying areas for improvement

Presentation Tips
Focus on the professional
Give objective examples
Invite response
Listen actively
Create “we” mentality

During the Meeting (cont.)
Set goals: Based on company goals
Building on areas that need
improvement

End the Meeting
Encourage good performance
Lay out action plan
Communicate outcome of goals not
met
Confirm understanding

Continuous Feedback
Formal appraisals
Informal appraisals
Open communication

Recognize Good Performance
Verbal
Public
Tangible
Monetary

Identify Poor Performance
Act early
Take the right approach
Deal with employee reaction
Handle continued poor performance

Discipline Poor Performance
Recognize problems
Talk with employee
Follow company policy

Handle Hard Cases
Reviewing highly emotional employees
Rating former peers

Key Points to Remember
You must conduct objective appraisals on a
scheduled basis.
Appraisals tell employees how they’re doing and
how they can improve.
Appraisals help create a system of motivation
and rewards based on performance.

Performance Appraisal Methods
Individual Evaluation Methods
Confidential report
Essay evaluation
Critical incidents
Checklists
Graphic rating scale
Behaviorally anchored rating scale
MBO

Critical Incident method
Ex: A fire, sudden breakdown, accident
Workers reaction scale
A informed the supervisor immediately5
B Become anxious on loss of output 4
C tried to repair the machine 3
D Complained for poor maintenance 2
E was happy to forced test 1

Checklist method
•Simple checklist method
•Weighted checklist method
•Forced choice method
Simple checklist method:
Is employee regular Y/N
Is employee respected by subordinateY/N
Is employee helpful Y/N
Does he follow instruction Y/N
Does he keep the equipment in orderY/N

Weighted checklist method
weights performance rating
(scale 1 to 5 )
Regularity 0.5
Loyalty 1.5
Willing to help1.5
Quality of work1.5
Relationship 2.0

Forced choice method
Criteria Rating
1.Regularity on the job Most Least
•Always regular
•Inform in advance for delay
•Never regular
•Remain absent
•Neither regular nor irregular

Graphic Rating Scale
•Continuous Rating Scale
•Discontinuous Rating Scale
Employee name_________ Deptt_______
Rater’s name ___________ Date________
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Exc.GoodAcceptableFairPoor
5 4 3 2 1 _
Dependability
Initiative
Overall output
Attendance
Attitude
Cooperation
Total score Continuous Rating Scale

Discontinuous Rating Scale
Attitude
No
Interest
Indifferent
Interested
Enthusiastic
Very
enthusiastic

BARS( behaviorally Anchored rating scale)
Step 1. Identify critical incidents
Step 2. Select performance dimension
Step 3. Retranslate the incidents
Step 4. Assign scales to incidents
Step 5. Develop final instrument

MBO Process
Set organizational goals
Defining performance target
Performance review
feedback

Group Appraisal
Ranking
Paired comparison
Forced distribution
Performance tests Field review
technique
Performance Appraisal Methods

Ranking method
Employee Rank
A 2
B 1
C 3
D 5
E 4

Paired comparison method
A B C D E Final Rank
A - - - + + 3
B + - - + + 2
C + + - + + 1
D - - - - + 4
E - - - - - 5
No of Positive evaluation
Total no. of evaluation * 100 = employee superior evaluation

Forced Distribution method
10%20%40% 20%
10%
poorBelow
average
averagegoodExcellent
No.
of
employees
Force distribution curve

Field review method
Performance subordinatepeerssuperiorcustomer
Dimension
Leadership ^ ^
Communication ^ ^
Interpersonal skills^ ^
Decision making ^ ^ ^
Technical skills ^ ^ ^
Motivation ^ ^ ^

Performance criteria for executives
For top managers
Return on capital employed
Contribution to community development
Degree of upward communication from
middle-level executives
Degree of growth and expansion of
enterprise.

For middle level managers
Departmental performance
Coordination among employees
Degree of upward communication from
supervisors
Degree of clarity about corporate goals and
policies

For supervisors
Quality and quantity of output in a given period
Labor cost per unit of output in a given period
Material cost per unit in a given period
Rate of absenteeism and turnover of employees
No of accidents in a given period
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