Advantage & Disadvntage of Performance Management System.doc(RISHU BASWAL)

5
Advantage of performance management system 1. Performance based conversations Managers get busy with day-to-day responsibilities and often neglect the necessary interactions with staff that provide the opportunity to coach and offer performance feedback. A performance management process forces managers to discuss performance issues. It is this consistent coaching that affects changed behaviors. 2. Targeted Staff Development If done well, a good performance management system can be a positive way to identify developmental opportunities and can be an important part of a succession planning process. 3. Encouragement to staff Performance Appraisals should be a celebration of all the wonderful things an employee does over the course of a year and should be an encouragement to staff. There should be no surprises if issues are addressed as they arise and not held until the annual review. 4. Rewards staff for a job well done If pay increases and/or bonuses are tied to the PA, process staff can see a direct correlation between performance and financial rewards. 5. Underperformers identified and eliminated As hard as we try, it is inevitable that some employees just won’t “cut the mustard” as they say. An effective PA process can help identify and document underperformers, allowing for a smooth transition if the relationship needs to be terminated.

Transcript of Advantage & Disadvntage of Performance Management System.doc(RISHU BASWAL)

Page 1: Advantage & Disadvntage of Performance Management System.doc(RISHU BASWAL)

Advantage of performance management system

1. Performance based conversations

Managers get busy with day-to-day responsibilities and often neglect the necessary interactions with staff that provide the opportunity to coach and offer performance feedback.  A performance management process forces managers to discuss performance issues.  It is this consistent coaching that affects changed behaviors.

2. Targeted Staff Development

If done well, a good performance management system can be a positive way to identify developmental opportunities and can be an important part of a succession planning process.

3. Encouragement to staff

Performance Appraisals should be a celebration of all the wonderful things an employee does over the course of a year and should be an encouragement to staff. There should be no surprises if issues are addressed as they arise and not held until the annual review.

4. Rewards staff for a job well done

If pay increases and/or bonuses are tied to the PA, process staff can see a direct correlation between performance and financial rewards.

5. Underperformers identified and eliminated

As hard as we try, it is inevitable that some employees just won’t “cut the mustard” as they say.  An effective PA process can help identify and document underperformers, allowing for a smooth transition if the relationship needs to be terminated.

6. Documented history of employee performance

It is very important that all organizations keep a performance record on all employees.  This is a document that should be kept in the employee’s HR file.

7. Allows for employee growth

Motivated employees value structure, development and a plan for growth.  An effective performance management system can help an employee reach their full. full potential and this is positive for both the employee and manager. A good manager takes pride in watching an employee grow and develop professionally.

Page 2: Advantage & Disadvntage of Performance Management System.doc(RISHU BASWAL)

Organizations should take a global look at their performance management system and have very objective goals that are tied to strategic initiatives and the performance management process.  Successful organizations have learned the secret to this and while not always perfect, a constant striving to improve the process can help organizations reach their Vision.

 The Disadvantages of Performance Management System

1. Time Consuming

It is recommended that a manager spend about an hour per employee writing performance appraisals and depending on the number of people being evaluated, it can take hours to write the department’s PA but also hours meeting with staff to review the PA.  I’ve know managers who had 100 plus people to write PAs on.

2. Discouragement

If the process is not a pleasant experience, it has the potential to discourage staff.  The process needs to be one of encouragement, positive reinforcement and a celebration of a year’s worth of accomplishments. It is critical that managers document not only issues that need to be corrected, but also the positive things an employee does throughout the course of a year, and both should be discussed during a PA.

3. Inconsistent Message

If a manager does not keep notes and accurate records of employee behavior, they may not be successful in sending a consistent message to the employee. We all struggle with memory with as busy as we all are so it is critical to document issues (both positive and negative) when it is fresh in our minds.

4. Biases

It is difficult to keep biases out of the PA process and it takes a very structured, objective process and a mature manager to remain unbiased through the process.

Page 3: Advantage & Disadvntage of Performance Management System.doc(RISHU BASWAL)

5.Risk of Internal Competition

Under this system, employees compete with each other for job status, position and pay. This could amount to backstabbing, failure among team members to communicate efficiently and strong employee rivalry. It could lead to dysfunction of the department and/or team, resulting in failure to achieve performance standards.

6.Favoritism

Managers and supervisors tend to trust and depend on one employee more than the others. This employee could be the foreman or the team leader. This employee is entrusted with responsibility of explaining new job roles and duties to other employees. It leads to dissension and distrust among the group members. It causes team fraction and adversely effects employee morale and satisfaction. The attitude is "Why should I even try when the boss will only trust Employee A?"

7.Expensive and Time-Consuming

Performance management systems are costly, requiring a lot of administrative work, patience and time. Usually, the areas impacted negatively include the human resources department, finance and organizational development. Performance management demands equipping employees with the "right" skills and knowledge. This means conducting extensive training, retraining and career development workshops for every division and employee level. This turns out a costly process. Further, projects are lost as employees are getting trained with new improved skills. This means a negative organizational performance as the time when employees could have been working was spent in a workshop.

8.Manager's Dilemma

The manager is unable to perform his tasks efficiently because he spends too much time supervising employees about their job functions. He is faced with value-based appraisal systems. It becomes challenging and tough to decide value and performance indicators for measurement. It is not possible to have common indicators as each job has different job requirements. Managers are faced with information overload.

9.Convoluted and Bureaucratic

The company ends up hiring and training new personnel. Performance management creates new organizational layers. The employee population increases. Now, instead of one team to do a project, two teams are doing it. This actually affects the financial structure of the organization.

Page 4: Advantage & Disadvntage of Performance Management System.doc(RISHU BASWAL)

Source:-1. http://thethrivingsmallbusiness.com/articles/what-are-the-advantages-and-disadvantages-of-performance-management/

2. The Disadvantages of Performance Management System | eHow.com

3.http://www.ehow.com/list_5852735_disadvantages-performance-management-system.html#ixzz1YNKjzj3v

Prepared by:-

Name -Rishu baswal

Rollno.-111053

Class –bcom(hons) 1st year

Section -A