Performance management is like dancing: most people do it occasionally, few people do it well, and very few people use it to drive financial revenue. But unlike dancing, it is actually relatively easy to use performance management in a way that is both effective and highly impactful for improving the financial performance of an organization. The problem is many organizations don’t approach performance management as a method for executing on business strategies. They simply see it as something they have to do in order to adhere to legal policies. Or as one COO described it to me, “the main purpose of our performance management process is to document ratings that justify compensation and personnel decisions we have already made”.
When done well, performance management creates a shared sense of performance expectations across a company, gives employees meaningful feedback that helps them improve their effectiveness, and provides the organization with insight into the quality and capabilities of the workforce. When done poorly, performance management has about the same level of strategic value as the process for completing expense reports. It simply documents what people did in the past (and often does this very poorly), and has very little emphasis on improving what they might do in the future.
Using performance management to drive business execution is largely a matter of focusing on four things:
Accuracy: have you clearly defined the goals and competencies that people are being evaluated against? Effective performance management starts with accurately defining what you mean by performance.
Relevance: Is performance management data used for anything that is important to the managers who are completing the reviews? If managers know their performance ratings are going to be examined by senior leaders in the company and used to inform important workforce decisions then they will take them more seriously. For example, are performance management ratings used to influence succession and promotion decisions? Are managers expected to discuss their ratings with their peers, or do performance ratings just go into a file cabinet never to be seen again unless they lawyers show up? Note, pay is probably the most common outcome linked to performance reviews. While pay decisions are certainly relevant to managers, in terms of impacting the value managers get from performance data, tying performance to the pay of their direct reports is probably relatively low on the list.
Accessibility: Is it easy for managers to provide and use ratings? Do they have access to the tools, skills and knowledge needed to make accurate ratings and hold productive employee feedback discussions?
Accountability: Do leaders in the company hold managers accountable for making accurate performance ratings? What happens to a manager if they refuse to complete their performance reviews or provide poor quality data?
Focusing on these four areas will go a long way toward increasing the impact of performance management on business execution. Conversely, a failure to think through issues of accuracy, relevance, accessibility and accountability is almost certain to lead to a performance management process that solely focuses on tracking the past as opposed to influencing the future.

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