Try this out in your organization some time. Ask the employees how many of them would rate their performance and skills in the 90th percentile or more. Statistically speaking, that should be no more than ten percent of the employees who have been asked the question. But real life is very different from this. A very large percentage will see themselves as members of the hallowed group.Now imagine the plight of the manager who has to appraise the group that has an inflated view of their skills, and get them grounded.It’s not just in the workplace that we judge ourselves generously. When the weighing scale tells us that our weight is more than what it ought to be, we blame the scale. When a psychometric instrument tells us something about ourselves that we are uncomfortable with, a person will question the design of the instrument.In an assessment center feedback, leaders agree vehemently with the strengths that have been identified. When it comes to the developmental gaps, they will question the sanity of the psychologist who designed it.Performance appraisals are, perhaps, the most controversial of all processes. Not only is it a time when someone sits in judgement about the quality of your work, but eventually, reward and recognition gets linked to it, and so does the development effort that companies are willing to invest. No one likes to be left out of the room when money is being counted. The goals that we set are also meant to inspire and motivate action. So the foundation for good performance appraisals lies in setting the right number of goals (no more than four in my opinion).Three Factors To Keep In Mind While Setting Goals:1) Difficult goals tend to motivate people more than easy goals2) Ensure that critical goals are aligned with what we are naturally inspired to do3) Too many goals are as ineffective as having too few goals. Four is a good number of goals to have so that each goal can get 25% of effortPerformance appraisal is good feedback for the boss
Day: March 14, 2013
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Hard To Look Into The Mirror