performance appraisal(the gentleman’s three )

15
Session 8 Performance Appraisal The Gentleman’s Three by Brian J. Hall & Andrew Wasynczuk

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Performance Appraisal(The Gentleman’s Three ), H.R

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Page 1: Performance appraisal(the gentleman’s three )

Session 8Performance Appraisal

The Gentleman’s Three by Brian J. Hall & Andrew Wasynczuk

Page 2: Performance appraisal(the gentleman’s three )

-When they are going to get time?

-They‘ll make time.

-Don’t they have real work to do?

-This is the real work.

The Gentleman’s Three by Brian J. Hall & Andrew Wasynczuk

Page 3: Performance appraisal(the gentleman’s three )

Conflicting Roles for Performance Appraisal

Page 4: Performance appraisal(the gentleman’s three )

Types of Performance Information

Trait-basedInformation

Trait-basedInformation

Behavior-basedInformation

Behavior-basedInformation

Results-basedInformation

Results-basedInformation

JobPerformance?

JobPerformance?

Page 5: Performance appraisal(the gentleman’s three )

Uses of Performance Appraisal

Criticisms of Performance Appraisal

◦Focus is too much on the individual and does little to develop employees.

◦Employees and supervisors believe the appraisal process is seriously flawed.

◦Appraisals are inconsistent, short-term oriented, subjective, and useful only at the extremes of performance.

Page 6: Performance appraisal(the gentleman’s three )

Potential Performance Criteria Problems

ObjectivityObjectivity

DeficiencyDeficiency ContaminationContamination

PerformanceCriteria

PerformanceCriteria

Page 7: Performance appraisal(the gentleman’s three )

© 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved.

11–7

Common Rater Errors

Figure 11–11

Page 8: Performance appraisal(the gentleman’s three )

8

The Balanced ScorecardBalanced Scorecard

21 languages

17 languages

Page 9: Performance appraisal(the gentleman’s three )

What is the BSC?

InitiativeTargetsMeasuresObjectives

FinancialTo succeed financially, how should we appear to our shareholders?

InitiativesTargetsMeasuresObjectives

Learning & GrowthTo achieve our vision, how will we sustain our ability to change and improve?

Init

iati

ves

Targ

ets

Measu

res

Ob

ject

ive

s

Cust

om

er

To a

chie

ve

ou

r vis

ion

, h

ow

sh

ou

ld

we a

pp

ear

to o

ur

cust

om

ers

?

Initia

tives

Targ

ets

Measu

res

Obje

ctives

Inte

rnal B

usin

ess

Pro

cess

To sa

tisfy

ou

r sh

are

hold

er

s an

d

custo

mers,

wh

at

bu

siness

pro

cesse

s m

ust w

e

exce

l at?

VISION AND

STRATEGY

Page 10: Performance appraisal(the gentleman’s three )

10

Performance Measures in Financial Perspective

Return on investmentEconomic value addedSales growth rate by

segmentPercentage revenue

from new product, service, or customer

Share targeted customer an account

Cross-selling

Cross-selling Customer and product

line profitability Revenue/employee Cost reduction rate Unit cost Payback Return on Capital

Employed Working capital ratios

(cash-to-cash cycle)

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11

Information about market & customer

Customer selection, acquisition, retention & growth

Who are profitable customers? — Target Segmentations

What do they need? [same as the thing we serve them]— Customer Values Propositions (e.g. QSC&V – quality, services, cleanliness, and value)

Customer Perspective

Page 12: Performance appraisal(the gentleman’s three )

12

Performance Measures in Customer Perspective

Market Share: Reflects the proportion of business in a given market (in term of number of customer, dollar spent, or unit volume sold) that a business unit sells.

Customer Acquisition: Measures, in absolute or relative, the rate at which a business unit attracts wins new customers or business.

Customer Retention: Measures, in absolute or relative, the rate at which a business unit retains or maintains ongoing relationships with its customers.

Customer Satisfaction: Assesses the satisfaction level of customers along specific performance criteria within the value proposition.

Customer Profitability: Measures the net profit of a customer, after allowing for the unique expenses required to support customer.

Page 13: Performance appraisal(the gentleman’s three )

13

Performance Measures in Customer Perspective

Market Share: Reflects the proportion of business in a given market (in term of number of customer, dollar spent, or unit volume sold) that a business unit sells.

Customer Acquisition: Measures, in absolute or relative, the rate at which a business unit attracts wins new customers or business.

Customer Retention: Measures, in absolute or relative, the rate at which a business unit retains or maintains ongoing relationships with its customers.

Customer Satisfaction: Assesses the satisfaction level of customers along specific performance criteria within the value proposition.

Customer Profitability: Measures the net profit of a customer, after allowing for the unique expenses required to support customer.

Page 14: Performance appraisal(the gentleman’s three )

14

Performance Measures in Internal Process Perspective

QualityResponse timeCostYieldsWasteScrap

Rework New product

introduction Service error rate Product development

cycle Hours with customer Time to market

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15

Performance Measures in Learning & Growth Perspective

Employee satisfactionEmployee retention/turnover rateEmployee productivityInformation system availabilityOrganizational Climate IndexPersonal Goals Alignment IndexStaff development