Seven Stupid Things Human Resource
Departments Do To Screw Up Performance Appraisals
(This article is based on the book: Performance Management -
Why Doesn't It Work, and the McGraw-Hill book entitled Performance Management
released in October, 1998. Copyright 1998 Robert Bacal. This article may not be
reproduced without permission.)
We've written an article entitled "The Ten Stupid
Things Managers Do To Screw Up Performance Appraisals", but the truth is
that managers don't do dumb things just to fill up their time. A lotof the time
we find that when managers are doing performance appraisals badly, they are
getting a lot of "help"from their human resource (HR) or personnel
department. Central HR departments can create a situation that virtually
destroys any value from the performance appraisal process. Here's the list of
dumb things HR folks do.
Stupid Thing #1:
Focusing on and stressing the paperwork and forms.
We can understand why human resource people want some sort
of paper trail related to performance appraisal. But when the emphasis on the
forms and paperwork overshadows the real purpose of doing appraisals, then huge
amounts of resources are wasted. When HR departments focus on getting the forms
done, that's exactly what they get. Forms done. If that's all this is about,
hire a monkey to do it. Any fool (no insult to the monkey) can tick off boxes
on a form and send it on.
Stupid Thing #2:
Believing that a ratings based form of appraisal will serve as protection
against lawsuits by employees.
Big mistake. If you are caught speeding, do you think the
court is going to accept as evidence a policeman's statement that "On a
scale of 1-5 the driver was a 4?" I don't think so. But HR departments
believe that THEIR form is going to withstand legal scrutiny. It's not. It's
too subjective and too vague. This desire for false security is one reason HR
folks feel they need to pressure managers to get the forms done. At least until
their first lawsuit.
Stupid Thing #3:
Using an automated system
This is a new development. You can purchase software that
automates the performance appraisal process. What it does is it takes a lousy
paper process, then makes it a lousy computerized process, so now we go much
faster pretending we are doing something useful.
Performance appraisal is an interpersonal communication
process. Even between two people, it's often not done well. Automating the
process is a waste of money and time, and HR departments that go that route are
doing charitable work for the vendors of the software.
It's bad enough we mechanize a human process using paper
forms. Now we can take it one step further. Heck, now managers never have to
speak to staff. This is progress?
Stupid Thing #4:
Undertraining or mis-training managers in the process
Take some HR folks. They design some new forms, and a new
way of doing performance appraisals. They print out some basic instructions,
print out some forms, and distribute them to managers. The assumption is
managers will know the purpose goes much further than "getting the forms
done".
That's not going to happen. If the HR folks yell and scream,
they probably WILL get the forms back, but not much more. Managers need
extensive training, not only regarding the nuts and bolts of the appraisal
process, but about the why's and interpersonal parts of it. Without that, one
gets an empty paper chase (while people pretend it is a useful way to expend
energy).
Stupid Thing #4: Not
training employees
Why would you train employees in their role in the appraisal
process. First, because the only way it works is when employee and manager work
together, in partnership. Both manager and employee need to hold the same
understanding about why they are doing appraisal, how it will be done, and what
is expected.
Very few organizations offer anything but a superficial
orientation to the appraisal process. That's because they see it as something
done TO employees. It isn't, except of course when the HR department treats it
as something done to employees. Then managers will probably do it that way.
Stupid Thing #5: Thinking pressuring managers to get the
forms in is productive.
One reason managers procrastinate with respect to doing
appraisals is that they don't see the point, or see it as a waste of time.
There are other reasons, too. Most can be dealt with by using flexible
approaches that take into account the needs of managers. Unfortunately, a good
many HR departments believe it's just a question of ordering, yelling, coercing
or begging managers to get them done.
That doesn't address the reasons why managers aren't doing
them. If they felt they were useful, they would do them. The key to getting
them done is to make them useful. Unless of course the HR folks want to spend
their days ordering, yelling coercing and begging.
Stupid Thing #6: One
size fits all fantasy
Imagine the difficulty for HR staff if every manager used a
different form, or different method. How would you keep track? How would you
file them? We can understand the desire to standardize the forms across a
company.
But if you think about it, does it make sense? Can we
evaluate a teacher in the same way as we evaluate the school custodian? Do we
evaluate a baseball umpire the same way we evaluate a baseball player? Of
course not. But still, HR departments expect managers to use a single tool for
everyone, often a rating form. This kind of inflexibility addresses a filing
problem. Is that why we do appraisals? To make it easier for the HR department?
No, we do it to improve performance.
Stupid Thing #7:
Playing the appraisal cop.
Unfortunately, HR and personnel departments get stuck with
the responsibility of getting appraisals done by managers. Perhaps it isn't
their fault, but it is a strong indicator that the system being used is or has
failed. How come?
In a properly functioning system, each manager is assessed
on a number of things, one of which will be their fulfillment of the
performance management and appraisal function. The responsibility lies with
management. If a manager is not carrying out the responsibility, it is his or
her boss that should be evaluating the manager. It's a cascading process. No
appraisal system is going to work until each manager's boss makes it clear that
getting it done is going to be a factor in the manager's own appraisal.
HR departments shouldn't be appraisal cops If anyone is to
do that, it should be the manager's boss. Anything less is going to be a waste
of time and effort.
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