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Nico Tonozzi's avatar

You're missing a big piece of the puzzle! The main reason some companies fire the bottom X% of performers every year is to motivate everyone to work hard (if not frantically) to try to stay out of firable bucket. The system you are measuring is affected by the performance management tactics you use, by design.

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Charles Wetherell's avatar

In a previous life, I have both taken part in and organized annual employee rankings for a group of about 100 staff. What were the goals?

- Identify excellent performers for likely promotions, bonuses, and large raises.

- Provide information for annual raises.

- Identify those staff members who need specific guidance, training, or management to improve.

- Identify those staff members (generally only one or two) who may need to find some other place to work (possibly terminated or possibly moved for some reason to another part of the organization).

There are some features of the practical process.

- The process only works if the ranking is done by large group of near managers cross-consulting in an open (but closed to those being ranked, of course) meeting.

- There must be written evaluations of every member being ranked written in advance by the direct manager. These must be circulated well in advance to the group doing the rankings.

- The actual rankings took about 2 days of solid group meeting. No manager excused during that time.

- There are no tied ranks. We organized that by opening nominations for slot one and then, by a process of consensus, finally selecting a staff member for that slot. Then slot two, slot three, and so on.

Some observations.

- At the top, there were always several candidates for each slot and the discussions took a long time.

- Oddly, someone who might have been a candidate for slot 2, say, could fall way down after discussions and someone who was not thought to be exceptional could rise a lot during the discussions. This would sometimes happen when the phrase (or something like it) was heard:

"But didn't X work on that project beside Y?"

- The direct manager led the discussion for each candidate for each slot but it was very often comments from other managers who had seen the candidate "from the side" which were the most important.

- Wherever a staff member landed, the manager was expected to amend the original review with knowledge learned during this meeting. Sometimes the manager was specifically directed by the meeting about some point to include.

- There were often surprises. One, in particular, was of a staff member who was very good, arrogant, and hard for management to work with. However, the member happened to be, by a large margin, the most experienced on a large (maybe 15 members) group which had been given the mind-numbing task of bringing a large set of (software) libraries and tools gathered from "every which where" up to release standards. As it happened, many other managers had heard from the junior members of this group that the experienced member had been extremely kind and helpful to all of them, mentoring and teaching them constantly and never taking any credit. All the way, the direct manager had not been shown this behavior. The upshot is that the direct manager learned an important lesson that people can have more than one facet, the staff member was ranked very highly, got a big bonus and raise, and was sounded out about possible promotion. Turns out that the staff member was happy to hear about all that but really just wanted to go back to small, hard projects that could be done pretty much alone without much management. And so that happened.

- The distribution of competence clearly bulged in the middle with a long tail towards the better end. It was not a normal distribution. Only near the lower ranks did performance start to drop off noticeably. In almost all cases, the problems were either temporary (say, an accident with lots of medical treatment) or something else that could be remediated fairly easily. It was common for someone, after a year ranked at 30%, to jump up to 60, 70, or 80% just because an appropriate adjustment had been made. There were seldom such dramatic falls.

- Because of this, even the staff at the bottom of the rankings could be treated generously and fairly. During my tenure in that job, there were only one or two tagged for termination and one had already figured it out and found a job outside before the termination could even be organized. The other that I can remember may have moved on voluntarily as well. However, a few years later I worked somewhere else where that staff member had worked for a while. The member was also terminated at the new place. That suggests that mechanism had actually identified someone who was not a good worked in the field.

Finally, a word about consensus as a decision making mechanism.

The rankings were done by consensus. We did not move on from slot one until the management group (about 25 people) had agreed who was deserved that rank. Consensus does not mean a majority vote. Rather, it is a mechanism in which every voter has a veto. The discussion cannot end until every voter agrees that the decision is to stand. So long as at least one voter "vetoes", the discussion continues.

The objection is that discussions can go on for a long time. Apparently forever!

The actual effect is that a decision desired even by a large majority can be held up by a strong enough counter view. That may seem bad. But the meta-effect is even when the decision is very close (51% to 49%), if there is consensus, even the opponents agree that it is the best decision to be had. The opponents may feel it is wrong, but they will also feel that

- they and their objections have been completely and fairly heard, and

- more time and energy will not create a decision different from this one — or, at least, it would be not worth the effort to do that.

[I have also used this at other kinds of meetings to make technical decisions and it works surprisingly well. Often, if a break is taken (say, come back a week later for another discussion), the objection will vanish or the two sides will have found a new path to an even better solution. The key seems to be let every one feel that they have have been heard out and that what they have been said has been absorbed. Then the final decision can be accepted.]

The summary.

- Do prior work before the decisions (of any sort).

- A group makes the decision and consensus works. Do not rank (or promote) based on the observations of a single person.

- Rankings are not punishments. They are a way for management to figure out what needs to be rewarded and what staff needs help to do better.

- Almost every staff member has positive contributions and even those whose contributions are fairly small can get better once the roadblocks are known and addressed.

- Ranking can identify staff members who should not be part of the organization. There should not be many of those (or perhaps it is time to start ranking those who do the hiring). But the number of them should never be decided by some mechanical rule.

- Finally, fear is not a good motivation for good performance. And those who think it is should be considered for termination.

I have perhaps been lucky in my life and in my places of employment. But I was continually surprised by the good work done by those who were simply treated like human beings.

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