I read an article this morning written by someone touting themselves as a "management expert" and he was making the case that annual performance reviews are a waste of time and aren't very effective in accomplishing what they are intended to do.
This is a relevant topic for me because I have a review coming up in the next couple of months.
The writer of the article argued that annual reviews are too "one sided" and rather than being an open dialogue, a boss is instead required to grade an employee based on a scale often similar to the way a teacher would grade a students paper and that many reviews focus more on the bad than on the good.
He also talked about how a performance review more or less boils down to one persons opinion of you, which is bound to have biases. He said (and I agree with him on this) that the same employee could receive three vastly different performance reviews from three different bosses.
In my opinion, an annual review is silly because so much changes in a business in the course of a year (or heck even in a week or a month!). In a prior job, our boss gave us a monthly evaluation. It wasn't scored, it was just an informal review of how he felt we were doing and where we needed to improve and we were welcome to give any feedback on him as well. I liked this system and it seemed to work well.
The article writer also feels that a boss can use performance reviews as a way to "blame" his subordinates for poor performance. For example, if the boss misses his sales goals, he'll retaliate by giving his employees sub par reviews because he feels they are the ones who caused him to miss the goals.
I've seen this happen in the real world. I worked for a crappy manager who never took responsibility for his own screw-ups, he would always blame them on others and usually the Regional Manager believed him. When review time came, he gave his entire staff low scores on account of the store's poor performance.
The Regional Manager then used those low review scores to fire two very good employees and replace them. Consequently, the replacements had problems with the manager too the store performance stayed low. Eventually the company realized where the real problem was and canned both the Manager AND the Regional Manager who had been protecting him.
Also most reviews come with the possibility of an annual merit increase. I've written on here before about when my manager scored me a 49 and I needed a 50 to qualify for a higher raise. It's tough for me to swallow sometimes that my raise is contingent on how one person feels about me, but, as the article writer states, that's how it's always been with annual reviews.
This is a relevant topic for me because I have a review coming up in the next couple of months.
The writer of the article argued that annual reviews are too "one sided" and rather than being an open dialogue, a boss is instead required to grade an employee based on a scale often similar to the way a teacher would grade a students paper and that many reviews focus more on the bad than on the good.
He also talked about how a performance review more or less boils down to one persons opinion of you, which is bound to have biases. He said (and I agree with him on this) that the same employee could receive three vastly different performance reviews from three different bosses.
In my opinion, an annual review is silly because so much changes in a business in the course of a year (or heck even in a week or a month!). In a prior job, our boss gave us a monthly evaluation. It wasn't scored, it was just an informal review of how he felt we were doing and where we needed to improve and we were welcome to give any feedback on him as well. I liked this system and it seemed to work well.
The article writer also feels that a boss can use performance reviews as a way to "blame" his subordinates for poor performance. For example, if the boss misses his sales goals, he'll retaliate by giving his employees sub par reviews because he feels they are the ones who caused him to miss the goals.
I've seen this happen in the real world. I worked for a crappy manager who never took responsibility for his own screw-ups, he would always blame them on others and usually the Regional Manager believed him. When review time came, he gave his entire staff low scores on account of the store's poor performance.
The Regional Manager then used those low review scores to fire two very good employees and replace them. Consequently, the replacements had problems with the manager too the store performance stayed low. Eventually the company realized where the real problem was and canned both the Manager AND the Regional Manager who had been protecting him.
Also most reviews come with the possibility of an annual merit increase. I've written on here before about when my manager scored me a 49 and I needed a 50 to qualify for a higher raise. It's tough for me to swallow sometimes that my raise is contingent on how one person feels about me, but, as the article writer states, that's how it's always been with annual reviews.
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