During my career, I had the responsibility of rating and ranking employee performance for 30 to 50 person organizations. In my role, I felt it was important to clearly explain how managers recognized various levels of performance even when the outcome appeared to be similar. Over time, I developed the following analogy to help employees visualize the differences.
First, I put the employee in the position of a homeowner hiring someone to care for their lawn. Then, I then provided three example employees and asked them which they would like to hire. Here were the examples:
In all three examples, the lawn care was done well. However, the level of supervisor involvement needed and the approval process for additional work were also factors in determining performance level. While these examples were not perfect, everyone with whom I had the discussion understood that the performance levels of these three employees were different even though each delivered the same good result.
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This is not financial or career advice. Please consult a professional advisor.Copyright © 2010 Achievement Catalyst, LLC
1 comment:
Yes a very critical job, managers judge performance of each employ from it's daily task sheet which employ manage and send to their managers before leaving each day. So if this pattern follows in companies then it's not tough for managers to differentiate employee performances.
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