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Daily Archives: March 11, 2010

Management by Coup 1: Eliminate Employee Evaluations

11 Thursday Mar 2010

Posted by Paul Kiser in Human Resources, Management Practices, Re-Imagine!, Rotary, Tom Peters

≈ 8 Comments

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Employee evaluations, HR, job standards, performance reviews, Tom Peters

by Paul Kiser

Paul Kiser - CEO of Enterprise Technologies, inc.

I have worked many years in Human Resources and at one time my job was to help managers write employee job standards and performance evaluation tools. I would like to now publicly apologize for playing a role in the dark side of management.

HR people can give you dozens of reasons why employee evaluations are absolutely necessary. You need to give the employee feedback, you need to let the employee know your expectations, evaluations are documentation of the employee performance, documentation is needed for disciplinary actions, blah, blah, blah, blah…it’s all BS. Here are four myths about employee evaluations:

Myth #1: Employees need periodic feedback
WRONG! Employees need
constant feedback. Respectable HR people will tell you that there should be nothing discussed during the employee evaluation that they were not already aware of; however, in actual practice the employee evaluation is the moment many managers use the GOTCHA Management Technique by dredging up hearsay and listing new expectations that the employee has never heard before the evaluation.

Tom Peters discussed a technique known as MBWA or Management by Walking Around. The basic idea is the manager stops wasting time sitting in an office and spends it by interacting with his or her employees and customers. This brilliant 21st Century management technique was first discussed in the book, In Search of Excellence by Tom Peters and Robert H. Waterman in 1982! For over 25 years managers have been told to get out of her or his office to manage and yet some people still don’t get it.

Myth #2:  Evaluations are needed to support disciplinary action
While some managers use the evaluation as a GOTCHA moment, others will minimize a negative performance issue in order to maintain a positive working relationship; therefore, an employee’s evaluation often fails to support disciplinary action taken against them.  Time after time an employee’s lawyer seizes on a lack of evidence in the employee’s evaluation to justify disciplinary action by the employer.  A manager is better off having written documentation of a problem at the time of the incident rather than trying to use the evaluation to document an issue regarding the employee’s performance.

Myth #3:  Evaluations are needed to determine pay increases.
Pay increases need to be fair and equitable, but many organizations find that withholding a pay increase based on performance causes more potential legal problems than is solves, and punishment destroys employee morale rather than improves an individual’s performance.  Pay for performance was a novel idea that never delivered on the promises of improved productivity by the HR department.

Myth #4:  If a manager is not required to do periodic employee evaluations they will never give the employee the information they need to excel at their job.
An evaluation does not a good manager make!  If a manager is not giving constant feedback to their team, then what good are they?

Life Without Evaluations
I know it seems unthinkable for some, but evaluations are an HR imposed control system that is completely unnecessary.  In fact, evaluations do more harm to teamwork because they create a formal “Us vs Them” situation between the manager and the worker.  Evaluations can make a manager feel superior and that is not a good foundations for positive employee relations.

Other Blogs

  • Management by Coup 2:  Eliminate Job Standards and Job Descriptions
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  • Social Media 2020:  Keep it Personal
  • Social Media 2020:  Who Shouldn’t Be Teaching Social Media
  • Social Media 2020:  Public Relations 2001 vs Social Media Relations 2010
  • Social Media 2020: Who Moved My Public Relations?
  • Publishing Industry to End 2012
  • Who uses Facebook, Twitter, MySpace & LinkedIn?
  • Fear of Public Relations
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  • Does Anybody Really Understand PR?

Weather (or Whether) Report

11 Thursday Mar 2010

Posted by Paul Kiser in Lessons of Life, Management Practices

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Today was sunny with blue skies. Average temperature for today is 56F (13C) degrees. Unfortunately, despite a brilliant sun all day, the high temperature was 13F degrees below that average and we had fresh snow on the ground this morning. For some the unseasonable cold might make one believe that Winter was never going to end.

Any other day the Sun would have bumped us up over 60F (15C) degrees, but today arctic air won. I am convinced within a few days or so the Sun will bring us back to normal, maybe even higher than normal.

Whether it is the weather or life in general, it is easy for people to become discouraged. I am no stranger to falling into the trap of negative thinking, especially when it comes to the weather. I grumble about the cold, the short days, the snow, the lack of snow, almost anything. I should live at a lower latitude, but I’m not sure it would help my attitude.

March Sun

Burning off the Fog

The problem is that unhappiness spreads like an infection and unhappy people do stupid things. Last week I heard a speaker talk about wacky laws and how the wackiest laws are a reaction to some event.

Humans don’t do their best work when they are unhappy, and now there are a lot of unhappy people. People are out of work, money is tight, and it’s still Winter. Unfortunately, right now a lot of people are making decisions and this is not the best ‘season’ to make those decisions. The truth is we have a lot to be happy about. A year ago it looked like there was no bottom to the economy, jobs were being slashed at historic rates, and the financial earthquake was rocking the entire world. Things are a thousand times better now, but we still have a lot of discouraged people and I don’t really understand why. Spring is already here and Summer will follow, but we are still reacting to last year’s disaster.

My four year-old boy likes Curious George on PBS. I find it amusing that some of the greatest disasters in the life of the “Man in the Yellow Hat” are preceded by him saying, “Be a good little monkey.” One can question the wisdom of the man in yellow when he leaves Curious George alone for long periods, but you have to admire his ability to keep a positive attitude even in the face of constant monkey-caused disasters.

A lesson for us all.

Other Pages of This Blog

  • About Paul Kiser
  • Common Core: Are You a Good Switch or a Bad Switch?
  • Familius Interruptus: Lessons of a DNA Shocker
  • Moffat County, Colorado: The Story of Two Families
  • Rules on Comments
  • Six Things The United States Must Do
  • Why We Are Here: A 65-Year Historical Perspective of the United States

Paul’s Recent Blogs

  • Dysfunctional Social Identity & Its Impact on Society
  • Road Less Traveled: How Craig, CO Was Orphaned
  • GOP Political Syndicate Seizes CO School District
  • DNA Shock +5 Years: What I Know & Lessons Learned
  • Solstices and Sunshine In North America
  • Blindsided: End of U.S. Solar Observation Capabilities?
  • Inspiration4: A Waste of Space Exploration

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