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“Performance Review Pitfalls” Does your boss do any of this?

Somehow I got on some email mailing list from business managers, so I get these solicitations for training classes that like to teach people how to screw over employees. Todays is warning them about how to do good performance reviews. This is their list of what not to do & I wanted to share it in case any of your bosses approach you with any of these. Using stereotypes rather than first-hand observations (e.g., rating male em­­ployees higher than female employees in leadership skills based on gender alone). Letting personal feelings influence the assessment (e.g., rating employees favorably because they are friendly with the manager outside of work; rating em­­ployees poorly because they’ve previously butted heads with the manager). Rating all employees as average. Taking the easy way out will ultimately drive away top performers and encourage poor performers to stay at their same low performance level. Inflating the ratings…


Somehow I got on some email mailing list from business managers, so I get these solicitations for training classes that like to teach people how to screw over employees.

Todays is warning them about how to do good performance reviews. This is their list of what not to do & I wanted to share it in case any of your bosses approach you with any of these.

  1. Using stereotypes rather than first-hand observations (e.g., rating male em­­ployees higher than female employees in leadership skills based on gender alone).

  2. Letting personal feelings influence the assessment (e.g., rating employees favorably because they are friendly with the manager outside of work; rating em­­ployees poorly because they’ve previously butted heads with the manager).

  3. Rating all employees as average. Taking the easy way out will ultimately drive
    away top performers and encourage poor performers to stay at their same low performance level.

  4. Inflating the ratings of poor performers. Some managers assume an in­­flated rating will motivate employees to improve their behavior. But most do so to avoid having a confrontation or because they don’t know how to correct their em­­ployee’s problem behavior. Ignoring employee problems only allows the problems to grow.

  5. Relying only on recent performance. The review should cover the entire review period (usually 12 months) and should address the employee’s growth (or lack thereof) over that period.

  6. Equating long tenure with positive performance. An assumption that an em­­ployee has been with the company for a long time because he or she is a good worker can be erroneous. Managers should be on the lookout for veteran employees who are actually stuck in a rut & may be content to simply “get by” instead of consciously trying to excel.

  7. Basing employee ratings on the manager’s own ratings. Some ­managers assume that their status alone makes them the hands-down top performer in their department.
    So if they receive an average overall rating, they will not let their employees’ ratings exceed average.

  8. Putting too much emphasis on how employees stack up against other employees rather than on how they fare against objective performance standards and expectations. Using forced rankings or ranking on a bell curve can result in good performers being unfairly rated as poor.

  9. Failing to explain reasons for the ratings. An appraisal form with no comment fields completed is unacceptable. So, too, are comments that aren’t specific. Managers should always provide concrete examples that back up their ratings.

  10. Making backhanded compliments, e.g., “You did a great job on the Tucker account, Jill, especially for your age.”

  11. Focusing on personal characteristics and not on behaviors. Managers are not supposed to be judging employees as human beings; they are to evaluate employees’ job performance and workplace behaviors. Areas to focus on: time management skills, teamwork, professionalism, organizational skills, communication, judgment, job knowledge, initiative and dependability.

  12. Interpreting motives behind behavior, instead of just stating the behavior, e.g., “Shane isn’t committed to the job. That’s why he was late to work 21 times.” Stick with objective facts.

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