The manager’s single most powerful tool
The performance appraisal is the manager’s single most powerful tool, but sadly it is also the least recognised one in his/her toolkit. To many, the performance appraisal is a waste of time required by HR, to be gotten over with as quickly as possible so ‘we can go do more important work’. This attitude shows a lack of understanding of what the performance appraisal (PA) can do for the incumbent. Any manager can do this. When I was a young engineer of 26, I was promoted to be in charge of the HDD manufacturing engineering department when HP started up operations in Bristol. It would have been a steep learning curve to learn about hard disk drives in managing the 8 new people under my charge. I decided I needed to be the best manager for them instead. This required understanding three non-technical areas: First is the business and what overall key performance metrics are. That is the reason for the business’s existence and continued survival. As a new factory, we needed to come online as soon as possible and generate revenue quickly. Second is responsibility of my department, how this fits in the overall whole, and its contribution to the key performance metrics of the division. Bringing up the production line smoothly and smoothly running afterwards is paramount. We need to work with production well and put processes in place quickly. Third, involves my direct reports. They already know what they are doing as they were there before me. What I had to do was to understand their roles, capabilities and ensure that all 8 of them cover everything my department is responsible for. Thereafter, I set monthly objectives for each of them and sat with each of them every two weeks to ensure we are on track and on schedule. We also used the meetings to realign responsibilities should there be unexpected issues to ensure they are covered in a timely manner. Feedback was provided there and then. As manager, my job is to coordinate that start-up problems are properly resolved. It allowed my team to do their job with ease and in so doing, achieve goals of the department and contribute to the business. When time came to do their performance appraisal it was a simple matter of pulling out our monthly achievements and formalizing them into the template provided by HR. Together, we made the annual PA into a continuous process and incorporated time to provide guidance, give feedback and allow individual growth. Performance appraisal is the fundamental method that we as leaders recognize that people are our most important resource. Rewarding them properly is a consequence of this activity.
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