Module 3 Performance Management
Module 3 Performance Management
PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
Introduction
Performance management is the process of continuous feedback and communication between managers
and their employees to ensure the achievement of the strategic objectives of the organization.
The definition of performance management has evolved since it first appeared as a concept. What was
once an annual process is now transitioning to continuous performance management. The goal is to ensure
that employees are performing efficiently throughout the year, and in the process, address any issues that
may arise along the way that affect employee performance.
“Most workers perceive their organization’s performance management approach as confusing, subjective,
and infrequent,” said Kathi Enderes (vice president, Talent, and Workforce Research Leader) and Matthew
Shannon (senior research analyst) at Bersin, Deloitte Consulting LLP, in an exclusive with HR Technologist.
This is the current state of performance management. However, it doesn’t have to be that way.
Automation now plays a significant role in performance management, and many of the processes involved
can be streamlined so that employee performance can be strategically managed. This is the age
of continuous performance management, and here’s everything you need to know about it.
Definition of Performance Management
Performance management is defined as the process of continuous communication and feedback
between a manager and employee towards the achievement of organizational objectives.
Traditionally, performance management has been a forward-looking solution based entirely on hindsight.
But organizational culture is evolving to one of continuous feedback powered by technology, where
managers can foresee problems based on current employee performance and initiate any form of course
correction to bring the employee back on track.
In this article, we offer clear insights into what performance management is, the performance
management cycle and best practices, the features of an effective performance management software,
and the future of performance management.
Performance management differs from talent management in that the latter is a set of initiatives taken to
engage employees to retain them. Performance management, on the other hand, is an initiative that
guides employees towards establishing and achieving their goals in alignment with the organization’s
immediate and overarching goals.
1. Planning
This stage entails setting employees’ goals and communicating these goals with them. While these goals
should be disclosed in the job description to attract quality candidates, they should be communicated once
again when the candidate becomes a new hire. Depending on the performance management process in
your organization, you may want to assign a percentage to each of these goals to be able to evaluate their
achievement.
2. Monitoring
In this phase, managers are required to monitor the employees performance on the goal. This is where
continuous performance management comes into the picture. With the right performance management
software, you can track your teams performance in real-time and modify and correct course whenever
required.
3. Developing
This phase includes using the data obtained during the monitoring phase to improve the performance of
employees. It may require suggesting refresher courses, providing an assignment that helps them improve
their knowledge and performance on the job, or altering the course of employee development to enhance
performance or sustain excellence.
4. Rating
Each employee performance must be rated periodically and then at the time of the performance appraisal.
Ratings are essential to identify the state of employee performance and implement changes accordingly.
Both peers and managers can provide these ratings for 360-degree feedback.
5. Rewarding
Recognizing and rewarding good performance is essential to the performance management process, as
well as an important part of employee engagement. You can do this with a simple thank you, social
recognition, or a full-scale employee rewards program that regularly recognizes and rewards excellent
performance in the organization.
The next step is to convey your findings to decision-makers who can sponsor and drive change in your
organization. Share your internal findings as well as evidence-based research from experts that show the
impact that an improved performance process can have on business results.
Employers want their employees to be happy. But happiness isnt necessarily what people want from their
employers. Instead, employees want to feel motivated and understand that their work matters and why. A
performance management experience that delivers value to employees should focus on increasing
motivation.
To drive motivation, a performance management process must include frequent, ongoing conversations
between employees and managers so that goals, progress, and personal achievement remain relevant and
top-of-mind.
The content of these conversations is just as relevant as their frequency. Motivation is tied to a future-
focused outlook focused on developmental opportunities. Managers must authentically engage with
employees about their career success, goal achievement, and alignment of their work to the organization’s
top priorities.
To be successful, these frequent conversations should be lightweight and include future-oriented
questions for employees such as: What motivates you? What’s helping you? What do you need? And HR
can support this by coaching managers in giving more productive, proactive feedback, as well as asking the
right questions.
Managers are critical to the success of your organization’s performance management program. They play
an outsized role in motivating, engaging, and developing staff. This makes it essential to ensure managers
are trained to give and receive useful feedback and are coached in the elements of a continuous process.
Take time to meet with managers and train them on your talent management practices so that everyone
feels comfortable having frequent, lightweight conversations.
Finally, having the right technology in place to support continuous performance management is essential.
You need HR technology explicitly designed to help managers and the organization in a continuous process.
Performance management is not just a matter for HR. It is the concern of all leadership levels in an
organization. However, Organizations are often left wondering if investments in technology will actually
lead to improvements, says Deloittes Performance management Solutions: Market Primer.
Should you invest in performance management software?
Investments in technology will lead to improvements only when there is a specific performance
management strategy in place. Without one, an automated solution can only overburden a manager.
Enderes and Shannon believe that: “When no strategic vision is in place, an organization might fall back on
merely automating existing processes, missing out on the transformational power of technology. This
typically results in a lack of adoption by the workforce and leadership, which in turn will result in a lack of
business outcomes.
Every employee (including top leadership) is a stakeholder who will benefit from the organization-wide
implementation of an automated performance management system. However, they must be aware of the
goals they aim to achieve through performance management. Performance management data can offer
unique insights that no amount of manual tracking or surveys can offer.
Artificial intelligence-powered tools use features such as advanced natural language processing, which
track project-related keywords through email and other communication to gauge progress on a project.
These tools can enable more objective performance evaluations.
8. Performance comparison: Managers should be able to track the performance of all employees in their
team or those assigned to a specific project. The tool should go further and be able to generate a
performance report automatically, providing data on the metrics you have customized it to evaluate.
9. Automated reminders and notifications: A gentle nudge to employees/managers to remind them of
deadlines, notifications that indicate progress on a particular project, and general updates to changes in
the process can improve an employees experience with performance management.
10. Data security: This level of granular data about individual employees should be safeguarded with a
robust firewall in place. Always ensure that any tool you shortlist offers a robust data security and
protection feature.
What is critical in the implementation of a performance management system is that both managers and
employees are trained to use the system for maximum efficiency. Choose a PMS from a vendor who offers
ongoing support and helps both managers and their team members use the software optimally.
While feedback conversations are often difficult, when supplemented with objective data supplied by
performance management systems, they can turn into honest discussions and coaching sessions. This data
can also help eliminate implicit bias, so employees know that they are being assessed objectively.
The only way to ensure the success of performance management is to treat it like a continuously evolving,
fluid process by three best practices.
Best Practices for Effective Performance Management
Some of the key questions that a well-designed performance management plan will answer are:
This again is made possible by using an automated performance management tool that allows you to set
goals, modify them, and communicate changes on the go. No unnecessary meetings are required, and
employees can modify their work plan and strategy as per the goals you assign.
Continuous monitoring can help initiate conversations about employee issues. A negative sentiment or the
poor performance of an employee can be addressed only when communication is open and transparent in
an organization.
A culture of communication is also developed by hiring people managers who are skilled in delivering both
positive and constructive feedback managers who motivate employees but also hold them accountable for
their work.
3. Continuous monitoring
This may sound more like a Big Brother form of monitoring an employees every move and action, but that
is the exact opposite of efficient performance management.
In the HR context, this involves tracking employees’ progress in real-time and monitoring the output and
outcomes an employee delivers. Also, by keeping an eye on employee sentiment, through observation,
interactions, as well as with the help of sentiment analysis tools, managers can assess the general mood of
their teams. This allows them to address the specific problem at hand as soon as a problem occurs.
With the tech tools available, as discussed in detail later, continuous monitoring at a granular level is now a
much easier task. And with the objective data an automated performance management software can
reveal, it is easier to start conversations with employees.
To enable all these elements of a successful performance management strategy, there is a host of
automated performance management systems to choose from. These solutions can simplify several
operations that traditionally relied on manual processes as well as monitoring and feedback delivery.
What Is the Future of Performance Management?
Interestingly, as the concept of performance management evolves, so do the practices associated with it.
For instance, several organizations such as Netflix have entirely abandoned annual performance
management practices for what they call fluid performance management, a more agile, continuous
approach to managing performance.
It must be emphasized that the replacement of annual for fluid performance management does not
eliminate the need for one-on-one feedback. In fact, it reinforces the importance of regular feedback to
ensure that employees work is aligned with the organizations objective. And if necessary, managers can
coach their employees and tweak the workflow to facilitate the achievement of goals.
From a technology perspective, we expect smart machines, cognitive and artificial intelligence to become
more prevalent including capabilities that can actively recommend performance actions and engagement
suggestions to better meet individual goals. We also foresee a much more advanced use of capabilities that
offer a user experience that is seamless rather than disparate systems building performance activities into
the systems where work actually happens, say Enderes and Shannon.
With these insights, the key takeaway for HR teams is clear. The alignment of an effective performance
management system with managers who have the people skills to deliver feedback regularly can result in a
highly motivated workforce, not to mention, translate into improved business outcomes.
Performance management is about measuring, managing, and improving the contribution of the individual
to the organization.
In a classical study by Cleveland, Murphy & Williams (1989) that’s still relevant today, HR managers were
asked what their goals were for their performance management. Based on this data, the researchers ran a
factor-analysis and identified four factors, or goals, for performance management in these organizations.
1.Between-person applications. This includes evaluating the performance of employees, determining
compensation, promotions, raises, mutations, job rotations, and firing.
2.Within-person applications. This includes feedback on individual performance, assessment of weak and
strong points and further identification of training needs. These points of feedback enable the employee to
develop the specific skills required for the job and career advancement.
3.Consolidate the global HR approach. Performance management is also used to identify a company-wide
HR approach, including strategic workforce planning, identification of company-wide training needs, and
the identification of a productive organizational climate.
4.Research purposes. Performance management can finally be used to validate selection choices and
evaluate training programs. An example is the quality of hire metric, which measures to what degree new
employees perform satisfactorily after joining the company. This is a key success metric for HR’s
recruitment activities.
How to do performance management
There are many ways to conduct performance management. In literature, there are two approaches when
it comes to performance evaluation.
Behavioral approach: Employees are evaluated based on their behaviors and effort made. Behaviors are
identified and evaluated. This approach is suitable for giving detailed feedback on behaviors and by
mapping desirable future behaviors. This approach is suitable when individual results are hard to measure.
Examples include individual players in a team, support staff, and (oftentimes) HR professionals.
Result-oriented approach: In this approach, employees are evaluated based on objective criteria. The
focus is not on input but output, both in terms of quality and quantity. This approach is suitable when
there are multiple ways to do the job. The end-result is key, not how it has been done. Examples include
call center employees who have specific success metrics, as well as sales professionals. The evaluation of
lawyers and accountants is also highly result-oriented, as they keep track of their billable hours.
A second element to focus on is extra-role behavior. These are the behaviors that go beyond the job
description. For more information about these, check our employee performance review template article.