Modern Method of Appraisal & Career Development
Most of the traditional methods emphasise either on the task or the worker‘s personality, while making an appraisal. For bringing about a balance between these two, modern methods, have been developed. The details of these methods are as follows :
1. Management by Objective (MBO) : It was Peter F. Drucker who first gave the concept of MBO to the world in 1954 when his book The Practice of Management was first published. Management by objective can be described as, a process whereby the superior and subordinate managers of an organisation jointly identify its common goals, define each individual‘s major areas of responsibility in terms of results expected of him and use these measures as guides for operating the unit and assessing the contribution of each of its members.
Essential Characteristics of MBO : The important features of MBO are as follows :
1. A Philosophy : Management by objective is a philosophy or a system, and not merely a technique.
2. Participative Goal Setting : It emphasises participative goal setting.
3. Clearly Define Individual Responsibilities : Management by objective (MBO) clearly defines each individual‘s responsibilities in terms of results.
4. Accomplishment of Goal : It focuses a tension on what goal must be accomplished rather than on how it is to be accomplished (method).
5. Objective Need into Personal Goal : MBO converts objective need into personal goals at every level in the organisation.
6. It Establishes Goals Yardsticks : It establishes standards or goals yardsticks as operating guides and also as basis of performance evaluation.
7. Efforts to Blend and Balance Goals : It is a system intentionally directed toward effective and efficient attainment of organistional and personal goals.
Objectives of MBO : The objective of MBO is to change behaviour and attitudes towards getting th ejob done. In other words, it is results-oriented. It is performance that counts. It is a management system and philosophy that stress goals rather than methods. It provides responsibility and accountability and recognises that workers or employees have needs for achievement and self-fulfillment. It meets these needs by providing opportunities for participation in goal setting process. Subordinates become involved in planning their own careers.
The Process of MBO : It is as follows :
1. Establishment of Goal : The first step is to establish the goals of each subordinate. In some organisations, superiors and subordinates work together to establish goals. While in other organisation, superiors establish goals for subordinates. The goals typically refer to the desired outcome to be achieved. Thereafter these goals can be used to evaluate employee performance.
2. Setting the Performance Standard : The second step involves setting the performance standard for the subordinates in a previously arranged time period. As subordinates perform, they know fairly well what there is to do, what has been done, and what remains to be done.
3. Comparison of Actual Goals with the Standard Goals : In the third step the actual level goal attainment is compared with the standard goals. The evaluator explores reasons of the goals that were not met and for the goals that were exceeded. This step helps to determine possible training needs. It also alerts the superior to conditions in the organisation that may affect a subordinate but over which the subordinate has no control.
4. Establishing New Goals, New Strategies : The final step involves establishing new goals and, possibly, new strategies for goals not previously attained. At this point, subordinate and superior involvement in goal-setting may change. Subordinates who successfully reach the established goals may be allowed to participate more in the goal-setting process next time. The process is repeated.
Benefits or Advantages of MBO : The benefits of MBO are as follows :
1. Balanced Focus on Objectives : MBO forces the management to set objectives with balanced stress on key result area. Thus, crisis conditions are avoided to take place in the organisation.
2. Better Managing Things : MBO forces managers to think about planning for results, rather than merely planning activates or work. Managers are required to ensure that the targets are realistic and needed resources are made available to subordinates to achieve the targets. Clearly set objectives for the subordinates serve as evaluation standards and motivators for them. Thus, MBO results in improvement in managing.
3. Better Organising : The positions in the enterprise can be built around the key result areas. Managers are required to clarify organisational roles and structures hence better organising.
4. MBO Reduces Role Conflict and Ambiguity : Role conflict exists when a person is faced with conflicting demands from two or more supervisors; and role ambiguity exits when a person is uncertain as to how he will be evaluated, or what he has to achieve. Since MBO aims at providing clear targets and their order or priority, it reduces both these situations.
5. It Provide more Objective Appraisal Criteria : The targets emerge from the MBO process provide a sound set of criteria for evaluating the manager‘s performance.
6. More Motivation : MBO helps and increases employee motivation because it relates overall goals to the individual‘s goals : and help to increase an employee‘s understanding or where the organisationis and where it is heading.
7. Managers Complete with Themselves : Managers are more likely to complete with themselves than with other managers. The kind of evaluation can reduce internal conflicts that often arise when managers compete with each other to obtain scarce resources.
8. Develop Personal Leadership : MBO helps the individual manager to develop personal leadership, especially the skills of listening, planning, controlling, motivating, counseling and evaluating. This approach to managing instills a personal commitment to respond positively to the organisation‘s major concerns as well as to the development of human resources.
9. MBO Identifies Problem Early : It identifies problems better and early. Frequent performance review sessions makes this possible.
10. Identifies Performance Deficiency : MBO identifies performance deficiencies and enables the management and the employee to set individualised self improvement goals and thus proves effective in training and development of people.
Mc Gregor points out that MBO, in most of the cases, does some good without costing much. He further point out, under proper conditions, participation and consultative management provide encouragement to people to direct their creative energies towards organisation objectives, give them some oice in decisions which affect them, and provide sufficient opportunities for satisfaction of social, egoistic and self-fulfillment needs.
DISADVANTAGES OF MBO
1. Unfavourable Attitude of Managers : Some executives have an attitude that the regular attention required of them by Management by objectives system, drawn heavily on their busy time-schedule and is not consistent with their roles. They feel that it is not so effective a way as some other approaches. Some view their roles as primarily involving policy-making, budget formulation etc.
2. Difficult to Apply MBO Concepts : Those executives who have been involved very often find it difficult to apply MBO concepts to their own work habits. They find it hard to think about the results of work rather than the work itself. They tend to over emphasize goals that the easy to quantify, sometimes forgetting that workers often behave almost like children at play-when the game no longer challenges, interest is soon last.
3. Heavy Paper Work : MBO involves a huge amount of news letter, instruction booklets, training manuals, questionnaires, performance data review and appraisals report to be prepared by the superior and subordinates. Thus MBO is said to have created one more paper mill in organisation added to the already existing large amount of paper work.
4. Tug of War : There is sometimes tug of war in which the subordinates try to set the lowest targets possible and the supervisors the highest.
5. Time Consuming : MBO is time consuming especially in the early phases of its introduction when employees are unfamiliar with its process.
A number of pitfalls have been indicated, by the researchers, in the way of effective working of MBO programmes. The reasons for failure in the MBO process are : hasty implementation, unknowledgeable users, lack of management follow through, and support, over emphasis on structure, treatment of another gimmick, failure to carefully monitor and encourage the MBO process during hard initial year of implementation.
MBO can be effective technique for performance evaluation and for motivating subordinates, by developing communication between executives at all levels. Those at the bottoms must be willing to listen to the voice of experience, and those at the bottoms must be willing to listen to the voice of experience, and those at the top willing to accept fresh idea from lower echelon employees. Similarly, executives must keep abreast of new programmes, especially the modern ideas that have been developed in the academic circles.
2. Assessment Centre Method
This concept was first applied to military situations by Simoniet in the Geran Army in the 1930s and the War office Selection Board of the British Army in the year 1960. The main objective of this method was and is to test candidates in a social situation, using a number of assessors and variety of procedures. The most important characteristic of the assessment centre is job-related simulations. These simulations involve characteristics that managers feel are important to the job success. The evaluators observe and evaluate participants as they perform activities commonly found in these higher level jobs.
In this method many evaluators join together to assess the performance of employee in several situations with the use of variety of criteria. It is used mostly to help select employees for the first level (the lowest) supervisory positions. The assessments are made to find employee potential for the purpose of promotions. The assessment is generally done with the help of a couple of employees and involves a paper-and pencil test, interviews, and situational exercises. The main features of the techniques are given below :
(i) Leaderless Discussion : The use of situational excises such as an in basket exercise, business game, a role-playing incident and leaderless group discussion.
(ii) Highly Experienced Evaluator : Evaluators are drawn from experienced managers with proven ability at different level of management.
(iii) Employee’s Individual and Collective Evaluation : The evaluators evaluate all employees, both individually and collectively, and each candidate is given one of the three categories more than acceptable, less than acceptable and unacceptable.
(iv) Preparation of Summary Report : A summary Report is made by the members, and a feed back on a face-to-face basis is administered to all the candidates who ask for it.
Objectives of Assessment Centres : The centres are used for the following purposes :
1. For implementing affirmative goals.
2. For making an early determination of potential.
3. For providing accurate information relating with human resource planning.
4. For determining individual training needs of employees.
5. For selecting recent college students for entry level position.
6. For measuring potential for first level supervision, sales and upper management positions and also for higher levels of management for development purposes.
The characteristics assessed in a typical assessment centre include assertiveness, persuasive ability, communicating ability, planning and organisaional ability, self confidence, resistance to stress, energy level, decision-making, sensitivity to the feeling others, administrative ability, creativity, and mental alertness etc.
Procedure : The Assessment centre programme commonly used as follows :
Firstly : A leadership group is made each member supporting a predefined position, but the group must arrive at consensus.
Secondly : A task force is used with an appointed leader, who decides on a course of action.
Thirdly : Simulation games and in-basket exercises are used to test organisational and planning abilities.
Fourthly : Oral report is made by the candidate, which tests his communication skills and straight into his present position.
Fifthly and Lastly : Personal interviews, and projective tests are used to assess work motivation, career orientation, and dependence on other. Paper and pencil tests measure intellectual ability.
The duration of Assessment centre programme varies with the persons. For instance, centre designed to select first line supervisors, sales personnel, and management trainee generally last for a day or less; while those used for higher-level managers may run for two or three days or longer if used for developmental and not for selection purposes.
Drawbacks : These are as follows :
(i) Exam Syndrome : One of the most obvious drawbacks is the examination-taking syndrome solid performer in day-to-day operations feel suffocated in the simulated environment.
(ii) Adverse Effect on Potential : Another drawback is its potential adverse effect on those not selected to participate in the exercise.
(iii) Negative Reaction : Employees who receive a poor report from the centre may react in negative way.
(iv) Poor Report Demoralises Employee : A good performer at one level may leave the organistaion in order to remove the bad assessment report from his or her work record. Thus, a poor report can demoralise an employee who was once an asset.
(v) Other Problems : Other problems include-strong and unhealthy sense of competition among the assesses, difficulty of conducting test frequently, and the possibility of overemphasising the test performance.
However a well-conducted assessment centre can and does achieve better forecasts of future performance and progress than other methods of appraisal. Apart from that reliability, content validity, and predictive validity are said to be high in the assessment centres. This test helps in making sure that the wrong people are not hired or promoted.
3. Human Asset Accounting Method :
This technique refers to money estimates to the value of a firm‘s internal human organisation and its external customer goodwill. If well trained employees leave a firm, the human organisation is worthless; if they join it, its human assets are increased. if distrust and conflict prevail, the human enterprise is devalued. If team work and high morale prevail, the human organisation is a very valuable asset.
The current value of a firm‘s human organisation can be evaluated by developed procedures by undertaking periodic measurements of key casual and intervening enterprise variables. The key casual variables include the structure of an organisation‘s management policies, decisions, business leadership, skills, strategies, and behaviour. The intervening variables indicate the internal state and health of an organisation. They include loyalties, attitudes, motivations, and collective capacity for effective interaction, communication and decision-making. These two types of variable measurements must be made over several years to provide the needed date for the computation of the human asset accounting.
4. Behaviourally Anchored Rating Scales (BARS) :
This method is also called behavioural expectation scales. These are the rating scales whose scale points are determined by statements of effective and ineffective behaviour. They are said to be behaviourally anchored in that the scales represent a range of descriptive statements of behaviour varying from the least to the most effective. A rater must indicate which behaviour on each scale best described an employee‘s performance. Behaviourally anchored rating scales (BARS) are having 5 steps :
1. Generate Critical Incidents : Persons with knowledge of the job to be appraised (job holders/supervisors) are asked to describe specific illustrations (critical incidents) of effective performance behaviour.
2. Develop Performance Dimensions : These people then cluster the incidents into a smaller set (or say 5 or 10) of performance dimensions. Each cluster (dimension) is then defined.
3. Reallocate Incidents : Any group of people who also know the job then reallocate the original critical incidents. They are given the cluster‘s definitions, and critical incidents, and asked to redesign each incident to the dimension it best described. Typically a critical incident is retained if some percentage usually (50 to 80%) of this group assigns it to the same cluster as the previous group did.
4. Scale of Incidents : This second group is generally asked to rate (7 or 9 point scales are typical) the behaviour described in the incident as to how effectively or ineffectively it represents performance on the appropriate dimension.
5. Develop Final Instrument : A subset of incident (usually 6 or 7 pe) cluster are used as behaviour anchors for the performance dimensions.
BARS were developed to provide results which subordinates could use to improve performance superiors would feel comfortable to give feedback to the ratee. Further, BARS help to overcome rating errors. Unfortunately, the method too suffers from distortions inherent in most rating techniques.
5. 360o Appraisal : In 360-degree performance appraisal technique a manager is rated by everyone above, alongside and below him.
360 degree approach is essentially a fact-finding, selfcorrecting technique, used to design promotions. The personality of each top manager – their talents, behavioural traits, values, ethical standards, tempers, loyalties – is to be scanned, by their colleagues as they are best placed to diagnose their suitability for the job requirements.
In this method a question are is structured to collect required data about a manager from his bosses, peers, subordinates.
360-degree approach of assessment provides equal opportunity to evaluate the efforts of the top manager or managers in running a company effectively. It focuses on the intrinsic qualities of the manager as well as his capacity to lead. It also gives feedback to all assesses on their styles.
Merits of 360-Degree Approach : The merits of the technique are
1. The organisation gains from the self-awareness of the top managers. It reveals strengths and weaknesses in their managing styles.
2. The gap between self assessment and the views of one‘s colleagues is reduced.
3. Teamwork thrives once peer group assessment is included in the methodology.
4. Empowerment is facilitated.
5. Facts about the organisational culture are brought to light.
6. Inflexible managers are forced to initiate change in their style:
Demerit of 360-Degree Approach : The main drawbacks of this approach are as follows :
1. 360-degree approach can be utilised to humiliate people.
2. Response from colleagues tends to be biased.
3. Linking rewards to findings can prove to be unfair.
4. The results could be uneven.
This technique identifies most suitable and acceptable person for the consideration of promotion. 360-degree approach supports the company‘s progress and rewarding the excellent performance of an individual.
Limitations of Performance Appraisal
The main limitations of Performance Appraisal are explained below :
1. Time Consuming : Performance appraisal is a time taking affair. It is a very lengthy process under which different forms are to be filled in and various observations are required to be noted in a careful manner.
2. Lack of Reliability : Reliability implies stability and consistency in the measurement. Lack of consistency over time and among different raters may reduce the reliability of performance appraisal.
3. Incompetence : Raters may fail to evaluate performance accurately due to lack of knowledge and experience. Post appraisal interview is often handled ineffectively.
4. No Uniform Standards : The standards used for appraisal purpose are not uniform within the same organisation. This makes the rating unscientific. Similarly, the rating is done on the basis of an overall impression, which is not proper.
5. Absence of Effective Participation of Employees : In performance appraisal effective participation of concerned employee is essential. In many methods of appraisal he is given a passive role. He is evaluated but his participation or self evaluation is rather absent.
6. Resistance of Employees to Appraisal : Employees oppose the system as they feel that the system is only for showing their defects and for punishing them. The managers resist the system as they are not willing to criticise their subordinates or have no capacity to guide them for self improvement or self development.
7. Paperwork : Some supervisors feel that performance appraisal is paperwork. They make such complaints because many a times, performance appraisal reports are found only in the files rather than rendering any practical use.
8. Fear of Spoiling Relations : Performance appraisals may also affect superior-subordinate relations. As appraisal makes the superior more of a judge rather than a coach, the subordinate may look upon the superior with a feeling of a suspicion and mistrust.
9. Stereotyping : This implies forming a mental picture of a person on the basis of his age, sex, caste or religion. It results in an over-simplified view and blurs the assessment of job performance.
10. Negative Approach : Performance appraisal loses most of its value when the focus of management is on punishment rather than on development of employees.
11. Multiple Objectives : Raters may get confused due to two many objectives or unclear objective of performance appraisal.
12. Resistance : Trade unions may resist performance appraisal on the ground that it involves discrimination among its members. Negative ratings may affect interpersonal relations and industrial relations particularly when employees/unions do not have faith in the system of performance appraisal.
13. Halo Effect : Generally, there is the presence of 'a halo‘ effect which leads to a tendency to rate the same individual first, which once have stood first.
14. Individual Differences : Some people are more distinct while some are very liberal in assigning the factors, points or number to the employees. They are unable to maintain a fair distinction between two individuals. It also nullifies the utility of this system.
15. Unconfirmed : Sometimes the results of performance appraisals are not confirmed by other techniques of motivation, incentive wages plans and so on. Factors are introduced in the managerial appraisal because of a fact or bias in the person concerned conducting the appraisal.