C - 11 - Performance Management and Motivation
C - 11 - Performance Management and Motivation
CHAPTER 11
PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AND
MOTIVATION
Learning Outcomes
• Identify key components of effective Performance
Management Systems
Competitive
Human resources
advantage
SMART!
Definition of
individual’s goals
Goals should be set
ex-ante!
Are performance standards to be
shared among employers and
employees?
3. Establishing Performance
Standards
• The employee should know “How will individual performance
be judged?” à standards should be explicit
• Measurements against established standards ensure fairness
of the review process
• Both the employee and the employer can regularly track
personal and organizational achievements
• Implications for motivation and proactive behaviour
Task No
Ex post and
related (not Timely and personal or Fair
evidence-
person specific ambiguous feedback
based
related) comments
Which are the key rules to be
considered for performance
appraisal?
5. Performance Appraisal
• Performance appraisal refers to the formal evaluation of
employees conducted to determine the degree to which they
are meeting specified objectives. This has a:
– Administrative purpose: determine pay and promotions (i.e.
focus on past performance)
– Developmental purpose: determine individual needs (i.e. focus
on future performance; e.g. perceived supervisor’s support)
• It’s important that PA is perceived as fair, transparent and
objective. The appraisal procedures should be:
– Shared among appraisers and appraisees
– Documented
– Followed by an accurate communication of purposes
Performance Appraisal – Key
Considerations
• The evaluation process
– Clear roles and responsibilities (everybody should know in
advance what to do to succeed and document the success, i.e.
prepare in advance) à “no one likes to be left out of the room
when money is being counted!”
– Based on both the recording of performance-related information
and supporting documentation from the appraisee
• The scheduling of evaluation (including participated reviews)
– Yearly, monthly, project based, etc. (accuracy/effort trade-off)
– Being clearly informed of the timing helps being well prepared
and detecting deviations from the expected results in early phases
Performance Appraisal – Key
Considerations
• The appraiser: single-source or multi-source feedback
– Appraiser = often the direct supervisor (Pros = familiar with the
task; enables feedback and coaching; Cons = independence?) à
best for administrative approach
– Multi-source feedbacks (e.g. 360 degree) often come from both
the supervisors and subordinates, peers, clients, customers, etc.
(Pros = accuracy; Cons = costs; incommensurability of different
perspectives) à best for developmental approach
• Evaluating performance
– Importance of training for both appraisers and appraisees on:
organization’s policy on PMSs; purpose of the appraisal
(developmental/administrative); PA process; established
standards; forms and tools; feedback process; implications (e.g.
impact on compensation and career)
– Evaluation is subject to the same biases of the selection process
(…see next slide…)
Which are the typical errors to be
prevented in performance
appraisal?
Performance Appraisal – Key
Considerations
It is better to set performance or
distribution thresholds?
Performance appraisal in practice:
the example of the “bell curve”
• Bell curve = forced distribution method
• Fixed percentage (e.g. 10%) of individuals are a-priori rated at
the high end on low end of the scale, e.g.:
%
Maybe too generous?
A-priori reasonable
Rate
1 2 3 4 5
Needs
Performance Results Appraisal Outcomes
satisfaction
Performance Management and
Employee Motivation
1. Performance → Results
– Since individuals like to be appreciated, motivations depend
on the match between abilities and expected(/actual) results
– The harder the results to be achieved, the less the chances to
meet the expected performance, the less the motivations
2. Results → Appraisal
– When whatever results are achieved, a prompt assessment
and feedbacks are necessary to acknowledge what has
exceeded or not met expectations
– The more fair the appraisal, the clearer the development plan,
the higher the motivations
Performance Management and
Employee Motivation
3. Appraisal → Outcomes
– Real reward should follow a good performance and, in general,
the perceived link between appraisal and outcomes should be
preserved.
– The higher the trust in appraisal, the higher the outcomes for
good performance, the higher the motivations
4. Outcomes → Needs
– Is the more critical link, because not the same things satisfy all
individuals, but the reward system should be at least partially
standardized. Learning about subordinates’ needs is a main
task of supervisors.
– The higher the understanding of individual needs, the more
appropriate the outcomes, the higher the motivations
Which are the typical errors that
supervisors should avoid?
Supervisor–Subordinate
Relationship
Given the centrality of the supervisor-subordinate relationship
for performance management it is essential that managers
receive training:
1. On how to avoid creating in-groups (i.e. friends or people
the supervisor likes) and out-groups (i.e. people the
supervisor dislikes) among subordinates, because this
categorization introduces distortions in the assessment
2. On ensuring that evaluations are based on objective data to
demonstrate that are not biased by their relationships with
their subordinates which, in addition to being unfair, is often
illegal (especially when out-groups are a particular group
being discriminated, e.g. women).
Which are the main
recommendations for performance
management in MNCs?
Performance Management in
MNCs
• Even though PMSs theoretically have two purposes
(administrative decisions, i.e. merit raises, and development
decisions, i.e. feedback and training), research shows that the
purpose of PMSs may differ (generally) in different parts of
the world. For example:
– In the US performance appraisals are primarily designed to
evaluate individuals’ performance, and award appropriate
rewards (Cardy, Dobbins & Ferris, 1994)
– In collectivist cultures, e.g. Japan, performance appraisals are
more concerned with evaluating employees’ long-term potential
(Pucik, 1984)
• Thus organisations may have to develop PMSs that ‘fit’ with
the expectations and values of their local operations, not just
transfer systems developed for the home office to other
locations
Summary 1
• Performance management systems (PMSs) are critical to
successful performance management
• The "bell curve" approach: contextualize and explain the main pros
and cons
Example of questions #3
When Miss Kohli enquired why the appraisals were to be kept confidential, Mr Srivastava told her
that they had always treated all their employees as family members, and sharing ‘report cards’ with
them would create tension among the workforce and lead to unhealthy competition between
employees, instead of the cooperation that the employees have been demonstrating all these years.
Miss Kohli was somewhat taken aback, though not surprised, at the owners’ thought process. She
was well aware that many companies in India (and elsewhere in Asia and Latin America) follow
the paternalistic model, whereby employees are treated like family members and are protected by
the company. At the same time, the professors in her business school had continuously reinforced
the importance of transparency and providing feedback to individuals. Indeed, in her work with
other companies, she had found that global companies often had open systems, whereby each
manager/supervisor discussed their subordinate’s evaluation with them and explained each rating.
Indeed, as part of her climate survey, Miss Kohli spoke to several employees and asked how they
felt about not being evaluated formally, and almost all of them said that they would like to know
how they were doing, so they could improve where necessary. Many employees also noted that
almost all their colleagues got the same (or very similar) raises, even though they knew that many
of their colleagues did not work as hard. When Miss Kohli approached Mr Srivastava with the
feedback she had gathered from the employees, he seemed unhappy and asked her to simply
concentrate on the task she was given, instead of starting trouble.
Case study assignment