The way of performance management and evaluation at organization
Performance management is a natural process of management: it is not an HRM technique or tool. As a natural process of management, the performance management cycle corresponds with plan-do-check-act model.
Figure 1.0 PDCA Cycle
Performance planning and implementing – performance agreement
As an example, in our organization before recruiting the employee organization has designed the jobs for fulfilling different functions/duties. And HR department communicating and delivering job role through the job description to relevant employees after they recruiting.
job description is a written document that clearly outlines the responsibilities, duties, skills, qualifications, and expectations associated with a specific role within an organization
As well as each and every department maintaining the competency matrix analysis implemented by HR department to identify the skills and experiences and knowledge of employees and that is the way to identify the employees whether fit to job or need to improve? As well as conduct the annual training need analysis for identify the requirement of trainings of employees. According to the training need analysis they design the annual training plan for employees. Annual training plan is the good way to improve the employee performance.
Monitor – Performance
Key performance indicators (KPIs) are the metrics or other sources of information which indicate how outcomes can be measured or recognized.
As an example, there are departmental objectives to monitor the departmental performance at our organization.
Eg : Quality Assurance Departmental objectives
- Minimizing customer complaint by CPM
- First time quality release
- Minimizing transactional error by 5%
Considering Factors when creating objectives
Figure 2.0 SMAT Goals
Review and Rating – Performance
A performance review provides a focal point for the consideration of key performance and development issues. Review and rating of the performances of the team has to be done in a structured way.
1. Set clear objectives for the team or the department with the criteria
This is an important part of the performance review process to set up the team with right talents and to get the desired outputs.
2. Define the job roles and responsibilities
Generally the job description of each team member is sufficient for this which should define their responsibilities, key activities, desired outcomes or deliverables. Employee has to be understood this clearly.
3. Set the goals (SMART Goals)
Goals need to be set with Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic and Time bound.
4. Define core competencies (Technical and soft skills)
The employees need the competencies of problem solving, effective communication, independent decision making, innovative and deliver the team work.
5. Select a review process
This is depending on the requirement. Some evaluations can be conducted by their own which is called ‘self-evaluation’ and others can be by their peers or managers depending on the project or specified task.
6. Evaluation process (by the manager)
Generally, this is very common. Manager who assigned the role can review the performance after certain time with the defined criteria. This may contain a rating system from 1 to 5 or ‘Poor’ performance to ‘Outstanding’.
7. Plan for future actions
After the evaluation process, the employee and manager or reviewer mutually agree on a plan to address the weaknesses and enhance the strengths. This includes documentation process. Example: action plan based on a SWOT analysis, Employee Development Plan.
8. Periodical reviews
Periodical review of agreed action plan is important to make sue that employee is taking effective efforts to complete them and company is effectively creating the supportive environment.
Example: is adequate training is provided?
This is an insightful breakdown of how performance management aligns with the PDCA model and how each stage from planning to review the adds strategic value. I particularly appreciate the inclusion of practical examples like job descriptions, competency matrices, and departmental KPIs it clearly shows how theory translates into practice. As a suggestion, integrating a visual or flowchart summarizing the entire performance management cycle could make the content more digestible for readers and enhance clarity on how each step interconnects.
ReplyDeleteDear Kuganeshan, Thank you for your valuable comment suggestion. I'm looking to integrating a visual or flowchart summarizing the entire performance management cycle
DeleteThis article clearly explains how performance is managed and reviewed in the organization. I found it helpful how you used the PDCA model and showed each step, from setting job roles to using KPIs and SMART goals. The part about regular reviews and training plans also shows a good effort to support employee growth
ReplyDeleteThank you for your comment
DeleteThis blog gives a clear and useful way to manage performance that is closely related to the well-known PDCA cycle. It rightly stresses that performance management is a natural and ongoing part of management, not just a tool for HR, which makes it more useful strategically.
ReplyDeleteI like how detailed job descriptions and competency matrices help with thorough performance planning by making sure that employees' skills match their job roles. Using KPIs and SMART goals to keep an eye on and review performance shows how important it is to have clear, achievable goals that hold people accountable. This is a thorough and well-thought-out guide that can help companies create a strong, open, and employee-centred performance management system.
Thank you for your valuable comment.
DeleteClear job descriptions and competency matrices help with performance planning by ensuring that employees' skills fit their job roles. Using KPIs and SMART goals allows for tracking and reviewing performance. This highlights the importance of having clear and achievable goals that hold people accountable.
ReplyDelete