2173 Salk Avenue, Suite 250 Carlsbad, CA

support@assignmentprep.info

What are the advantages and disadvantages of traditional performance appraisal?

June 26, 2021
Christopher R. Teeple

Jessica Taplow, head of People and Culture at iQmetrix Software Development Corp (iQmetrix), was about to unveil the results of her recent quasi-experiment in July 2019. Over the last six months, she had tested four different performance evaluation systems in the organization to determine which was best. Performance evaluation systems were chronically plagued by difficulties: they were too cumbersome, too slow, too expensive, too time consuming to implement, too backward looking, too demotivating, and too unfair, and they were generally loathed by employees and managers alike. However, performance evaluation systems were seen as necessary for rewarding good performance, penalizing poor performance, and identifying development needs. Taplow was hoping to identify a system that would minimize the difficulties while delivering the benefits.
IQMETRIX
iQmetrix, a software development company founded in Regina, Saskatchewan, by brothers Christopher and Greg Krywulak in 2001 and now headquartered in Vancouver, British Columbia, was built on the idea that sharing information and metrics through computer systems would lead to breakthroughs in efficiency, productivity, and competitive advantage. The company was even more important to the founders as an opportunity to build what they called the “ultimate organization,” in which creativity and innovation would flourish and people could be their best. Flat decision-making structures—in which staff had access to information, autonomy, and authority to make decisions—would allow solutions and innovations to emerge from anywhere in the organization. The idea of the ultimate organization became a foundation for the evolution of the iQmetrix culture. As a young entrepreneur starting out, Christopher Krywulak did not know what the ultimate organization looked like, but he knew he was dissatisfied with what he saw around him in the business world, and he wanted to create an organization in which people like him could flourish. He believed he would recognize the ultimate organization only after he had created it. This belief became the development strategy that iQmetrix returned to time after time. Each time growth put stress on the company, the company’s strategy was to decide what it needed to do next to continue creating the ultimate organization. As the company grew from its Regina base and opened satellite offices in Winnipeg, Vancouver, and Charlotte, North Carolina, it experienced pressure to become more formalized. Searching for a model that resonated with the initial founding vision of the ultimate organization, iQmetrix adopted holacracy in early 2017.
HOLACRACY
Holacracy contrasted starkly with traditional organizational designs. The goal of holacracy was to create an organization based on following simple rules for recognizing, articulating, and creating the tasks that needed to be accomplished and then giving people the authority to adapt their professional roles to these new tasks at their own discretion. Holacracy organized people around common tasks or projects. In holacracy, there were no job titles—only roles. Moreover, there were no managers in holacracy. Instead, authority was distributed throughout the organization, and work was organized by groups of employees (referred to as “circles” within the organization’s structure) that formed and disbanded as required, according to the tasks they needed to accomplish. Circles followed detailed procedures regarding how decisions were made and how meetings were run. Holacracy sought to increase transparency and reduce the time required to make decisions by making three key changes to the organization: (1) it organized the work to be done by roles, (2) it associated specific accountabilities with those roles, and (3) it gave the person assuming each role complete authority to make the decisions required for that role. This approach contrasted with traditional hierarchies, in which the organizational structure tended to push accountability upward and which required people who did the work to continually seek authority to make decisions, resulting in lost time, a lack of ownership, and low levels of accountability regarding decisions. Such a system—in which the more powerful enjoyed the perks of power and the less powerful had little or no accountability—could encourage bad habits for both management and employees. To successfully implement holacracy, iQmetrix would have to eliminate both of these outcomes.
PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AT IQMETRIX
The adoption of holacracy meant that adopting a new performance evaluation method was also possible. It was clear that a traditional, stable, yearly formal assessment process would not be appropriate. Moreover, there was an industry trend toward giving up employee performance appraisals, recognizing all the difficulties associated with them. What should the company do instead? During the first 12 months after iQmetrix introduced holacracy, the company left its performance assessment processes relatively unchanged; performance assessments were handled idiosyncratically throughout the company—sometimes well, sometimes poorly—but in most cases, just once a year. Given holacracy’s fluidity and emphasis on capability, Taplow needed a more responsive and developmental performance management system, so she turned to the literature for help. Taplow identified three different types of performance assessments: 1. those built around absolute rating scales, which asked questions such as, How well can an employee do a task? 2. those built around relative rating scales, sometimes with a forced distribution, which asked, How does the employee compare to their peers? 3. those built around developmental, qualitative evaluations, with no numeric ratings at all. After her study, Taplow decided to try out four different models of performance assessment: two absolute rating models, one relative rating model, and one model that used only qualitative feedback. The first absolute rating system she tested was a fairly traditional model that used a graphic rating scale. In this system, employees were evaluated along a number of behavioural dimensions that had been identified as central to good performance on the job. Employees were given scores (from 1 to 5) on each of these dimensions, and an overall rating was determined from these scores. The second absolute rating system Taplow tried used a nine-box grid that placed employees across three levels along two dimensions: (1) their current performance (low, solid, or high) and (2) their future potential (a good fit at the current level, able  to move up or laterally, or able to move up one or more levels). Appropriate development opportunities could be designed and provided for employees, depending on their placement in the grid. The relative system Taplow tested was the relative percentile method (RPM). This was a modern socialcomparative rating method that asked managers to assign percentile scores to each employee’s performance across a set of performance dimensions. The rating was made in reference to the performance of the employee’s peers both within and beyond the company. Finally, Taplow tested the use of qualitative performance feedback only, based on an emerging trend in the human resources community toward the abandonment of scoring in performance management systems altogether. Instead of scores, people were given only qualitative feedback, with the intention that such feedback would be free from the often-demotivating factors associated with numerical ratings and rankings and would thus encourage higher levels of engagement and overall job performance.
THE QUASI-EXPERIMENT
In the spirit of investigation, Taplow set out to test which model might work best at iQmetrix. To this end, she examined employee reactions to these four different performance management models. Each of the four models was implemented in four different parts of the organization for six months. At the end of six months, Taplow began to collect data on managerial perceptions, employee perceptions, and performance, which would help her decide which system should then be rolled out to the entire organization. Today, she had her data; she turned to the Excel spreadsheet and opened the file.
Questions:
1. Identify the virtues and pitfalls of performance appraisal in a growing company such as iQmetrics, methods in the context of the modern performance management system. What are some recommandations for an ideal appriasal process for the human resources department in a rapidly growing technology company? 500 words
2. What options do employers have for evaluating employees? Explain. 500 words
3. What are the advantages and disadvantages of traditional performance appraisal? How do these advantages and disadvantages apply to iQmetrics? 500 words

Struggling With a Similar Paper? Get Reliable Help Now.

Delivered on time. Plagiarism-free. Good Grades.

What is this?

It’s a homework service designed by a team of 23 writers based in Carlsbad, CA with one specific goal – to help students just like you complete their assignments on time and get good grades!

Why do you do it?

Because getting a degree is hard these days! With many students being forced to juggle between demanding careers, family life and a rigorous academic schedule. Having a helping hand from time to time goes a long way in making sure you get to the finish line with your sanity intact!

How does it work?

You have an assignment you need help with. Instead of struggling on this alone, you give us your assignment instructions, we select a team of 2 writers to work on your paper, after it’s done we send it to you via email.

What kind of writer will work on my paper?

Our support team will assign your paper to a team of 2 writers with a background in your degree – For example, if you have a nursing paper we will select a team with a nursing background. The main writer will handle the research and writing part while the second writer will proof the paper for grammar, formatting & referencing mistakes if any.

Our team is comprised of native English speakers working exclusively from the United States. 

Will the paper be original?

Yes! It will be just as if you wrote the paper yourself! Completely original, written from your scratch following your specific instructions.

Is it free?

No, it’s a paid service. You pay for someone to work on your assignment for you.

Is it legit? Can I trust you?

Completely legit, backed by an iron-clad money back guarantee. We’ve been doing this since 2007 – helping students like you get through college.

Will you deliver it on time?

Absolutely! We understand you have a really tight deadline and you need this delivered a few hours before your deadline so you can look at it before turning it in.

Can you get me a good grade? It’s my final project and I need a good grade.

Yes! We only pick projects where we are sure we’ll deliver good grades.

What do you need to get started on my paper?

* The full assignment instructions as they appear on your school account.

* If a Grading Rubric is present, make sure to attach it.

* Include any special announcements or emails you might have gotten from your Professor pertaining to this assignment.

* Any templates or additional files required to complete the assignment.

How do I place an order?

You can do so through our custom order page here or you can talk to our live chat team and they’ll guide you on how to do this.

How will I receive my paper?

We will send it to your email. Please make sure to provide us with your best email – we’ll be using this to communicate to you throughout the whole process.

Getting Your Paper Today is as Simple as ABC

No more missed deadlines! No more late points deductions!

}

You give us your assignments instructions via email or through our order page.

Our support team selects a qualified writing team of 2 writers for you.

l

In under 5 minutes after you place your order, research & writing begins.

Complete paper is delivered to your email before your deadline is up.

Want A Good Grade?

Get a professional writer who has worked on a similar assignment to do this paper for you