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Does your organisation have one of those annual ?occasions? that few look forward to: the annual appraisal or performance review? How do you look forward to it? I wonder how people talk about it before and after?
Are appraisals worth doing? If done properly ? yes. If done poorly ? no!!! Why have appraisals? When carried out properly they can achieve a number of benefits for all parties. The organisation, the manager and the appraisee can:
- It is an annual process - Nothing has happened with the outcome of the last one - There is no on-going feedback or review of progress - Things can change in between, whether it is the manager or the job! - The process is not taken seriously from the top - The organisational culture views the whole process as a chore to be endured - Insufficient preparation time or effort - The ?recency? effect where only the previous 6-8 weeks are reviewed - Too much focus on the negatives or problems of the year - It is too subjective and too much is based on opinion - It is too time consuming and interferes with day-to-day work - Appraisals are just part of the salary negotiation When you look at what can be achieved and compare the benefits with the reasons why they often fail to deliver, you can see that a lot of this is due to the attitude of the organisation and the line managers, starting from the top! Think about what can happen when appraisals are handled in a constructive manner. They allow the organisation and individuals to:
One challenge in many organisations is to use the current system effectively. Too many people get caught up in worrying about the paperwork ? whether designing a new set or using the existing. I recall working with one client in developing a good, thorough, process only to be questioned by some directors from their Scandinavian partner about why we were going to so much trouble. They held up a blank sheet of paper and explained that was their idea of all they needed for a productive appraisal!!! They are right. The reality is that a productive appraisal owes more to the quality of the communication between the people involved than to the paperwork! Should appraisals involve salary reviews? This is a quandary with no straightforward answer. When they do, there is a risk that the amount of the rise becomes the absolute focus of the discussion and can even be a negotiation. If they don?t, how objective is the salary award when it is given? My own view is that the salary review and appraisal can be linked, yet held very separately. There is no reason for not holding the appraisal, setting some goals and even specifying some behavioural change and then using this as a part of the salary discussion. Although there is a risk in having the appraisal and salary combined ? it can work, regardless of the gap. After all, shouldn?t salary and raises reflect performance rather than just opinion? If appraisals are carried out well and constructively there should be a fit between the two. Everyone involved has to take their share of responsibility for making appraisals work. While the tips below will not guarantee success, they will help you to get more from the process, whatever your role. If you are the ?appraiser?
Finally, there should be a sense of agreement about what has happened, what will happen and how. To reinforce the effectiveness, avoid making it just an annual event. Set on-going reviews to monitor progress towards the goals, to support any training or development and to improve communication between bosses and teams. An idea for all is to keep some notes throughout the year of successes and any particular challenges or events you want to recall later. It will help to reduce some of the subjectivity of poor appraisals and also makes sure things are remembered throughout the year! |
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