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Performance evaluation methods




Today it is widely recognized that a manager who wants to improve organizational
performance must concern himself with the total environment in which employees work.
He must be sensitive to the need for change in the physical and social surroundings in
which work is performed, as well as to questions of compensation, hours of work,
incentives, recognition, and the like.

The importance of the physical setting-plant layout, lighting, ventilation, and so forth-on
productivity was an early concern of scientific managers.

There is very complex and subtle interdependence of

(a) Management efforts to introduce change,

(b) Workers perceptions of such efforts, and

(c) Organizational efficiency. Unfortunately, the impact of this important insight-as well
as a limited understanding of the way space and other aspects of the physical
environment affect people-led to inferences that the physical setting hardly mattered.
Today space planners and organizational development experts have found in a broader
approach to the physical environment natural and fruitful areas for collaboration in their
efforts to improve organizational effectiveness.

A broad view of the work environment requires a firm to consider the convenience and
esthetics of plant or office location just as important as the efficiency and attractiveness
of the plant itself, but for most managers plant or office location is a given. For them the
more direct and continuing concerns are likely to be light, ventilation, noise level, layout
of work space, and the trappings of status. Some of the major considerations are summed
up in the following questions.

• Is the workplace big enough to give employees easy access to all necessary material and
to allow them to perform their jobs without getting in each other's way?

• Does the workplace contain all the necessary materials and provide reasonable access to
less frequently used resources such as copying machines?

• Is there sufficient flexibility in the rooms to accommodate special needs and to permit
easy adjustments as conditions change?

• How effective is the management of distance in facilitating the flow of work, in needs
for privacy, in facilitating essential communication, in establishing a friendly social
climate and (if required) conferring status?
• Are staff meeting places appropriate? Can one room accommodate the entire staff at
one time?

• Is the work setting reasonably free of distraction from noise, smells, and interruptions?

• Within the constraints imposed by the nature of the workplace, have efforts been made
to make the setting orderly and esthetically pleasing through the use of light, color,
materials, effective arrangements, comfort of seating, and so forth, that give some
semblance of organization and permit logical relationships while providing opportunity
for variety?

• Within constraints imposed by work flow and other production requirements, is the
employee given the maximum freedom to control the arrangement and aesthetics of his
work area?

• Should more be done to make people sensitive to their setting and to involve them in
improving it?

One major obstacle to improving physical setting is often passivity rather than active
opposition to change. A passive attitude stems from personal characteristics, such as un
awareness of what can be changed or an acceptance of the status quo. It results from an
absence of any analysis of whether an inherited arrangement has any lack of analysis of
the impact of the work setting on performance and the fear of raising questions about
issues that may seem to lie outside one's prerogatives.

• The importance of work in an individual life will decline, perhaps to the point where
other activities will absorb most of his energies and will be the source of self-satisfaction
and status. There has been a great decline in the proportion of an employee life that is
spent on the job: The workweek is shorter by a third; vacations are longer; and workers
generally enter the labor force later and retire earlier than they did in the past. The step
from a reduction in hours worked to a substantial decline in the importance of production
and distribution activities is admittedly a big one; but in the long run the link between
work performance as presently defined, consumption, self-fulfillment, or status could be
severed. In such a setting there would be continuing efforts to eliminate the physical and
psychic discomforts and hazards associated with work but perhaps less attention to efforts
to make work interesting and satisfying since these factors would count for little.

• Work will continue to be a central focus for most people in the labor force, but the twin
needs to humanize work and conserve energy will dampen the demand for goods and
continue to increase the demand for services. The scale of an organization will become an
increasingly important consideration; resources will be treated as capital goods rather
than income; and intermediate technologies will be developed that will be more congenial
to man. In such a society one could envision increasing attention to job redesign, worker
participation, and the like:
• Another view is that technology will solve the prospective energy shortage and greatly
reduce damage to the environment resulting from industrial production and population
growth; and population growth will taper off as economic welfare improves around the
world. Work will retain its role in society, even if more of the traditional production tasks
are automated and a growing proportion of the population is engaged in services or in a
revival of traditional handicrafts. Unmet demands for services will keep labor force
participation and employment high, and the work ethic will continue to have the same
hold that it does today.

• A variant of the first view above is that in the next century the distinction between work
and non-work activities will fade.

• Of a less sweeping and more specific nature is the prediction that the continuing rapid
pace of technological and social change will necessitate a more flexible approach to the
organization of work-to the use of task forces for special projects, for example-and to a
decline in the emphasis on hierarchical organizations. This, in turn, would increase the
need for better trained and more autonomous workers. To make such workers available
would, in turn, require greater emphasis on training, particularly emphasis on skills that
enable workers to adapt more readily to different challenges, and less emphasis on the
specific tasks that now are the focus of training programs. However, in the absence of
successful efforts to make workers more adaptable, the flexibility of organizational
approaches to work might not be universally attractive.

• An extension of the foregoing view is the vision of a more flexible boundary for
organizations-with a greater emphasis on sub-contracting; leasing of office space and
equipment; and, for certain kinds of jobs, perhaps the possibility of more work being
done at home (which could be linked easily to offices through new communications
technology). Workers in such an environment would have a smaller sense of attachment
to employing organizations and perhaps less pressure to conform to organizational
demands for conformity.


http://performanceappraisalebooks.info/ : Over 200 ebooks, templates, forms for
performance appraisal.

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Performance evaluation methods

  • 1. Performance evaluation methods Today it is widely recognized that a manager who wants to improve organizational performance must concern himself with the total environment in which employees work. He must be sensitive to the need for change in the physical and social surroundings in which work is performed, as well as to questions of compensation, hours of work, incentives, recognition, and the like. The importance of the physical setting-plant layout, lighting, ventilation, and so forth-on productivity was an early concern of scientific managers. There is very complex and subtle interdependence of (a) Management efforts to introduce change, (b) Workers perceptions of such efforts, and (c) Organizational efficiency. Unfortunately, the impact of this important insight-as well as a limited understanding of the way space and other aspects of the physical environment affect people-led to inferences that the physical setting hardly mattered. Today space planners and organizational development experts have found in a broader approach to the physical environment natural and fruitful areas for collaboration in their efforts to improve organizational effectiveness. A broad view of the work environment requires a firm to consider the convenience and esthetics of plant or office location just as important as the efficiency and attractiveness of the plant itself, but for most managers plant or office location is a given. For them the more direct and continuing concerns are likely to be light, ventilation, noise level, layout of work space, and the trappings of status. Some of the major considerations are summed up in the following questions. • Is the workplace big enough to give employees easy access to all necessary material and to allow them to perform their jobs without getting in each other's way? • Does the workplace contain all the necessary materials and provide reasonable access to less frequently used resources such as copying machines? • Is there sufficient flexibility in the rooms to accommodate special needs and to permit easy adjustments as conditions change? • How effective is the management of distance in facilitating the flow of work, in needs for privacy, in facilitating essential communication, in establishing a friendly social climate and (if required) conferring status?
  • 2. • Are staff meeting places appropriate? Can one room accommodate the entire staff at one time? • Is the work setting reasonably free of distraction from noise, smells, and interruptions? • Within the constraints imposed by the nature of the workplace, have efforts been made to make the setting orderly and esthetically pleasing through the use of light, color, materials, effective arrangements, comfort of seating, and so forth, that give some semblance of organization and permit logical relationships while providing opportunity for variety? • Within constraints imposed by work flow and other production requirements, is the employee given the maximum freedom to control the arrangement and aesthetics of his work area? • Should more be done to make people sensitive to their setting and to involve them in improving it? One major obstacle to improving physical setting is often passivity rather than active opposition to change. A passive attitude stems from personal characteristics, such as un awareness of what can be changed or an acceptance of the status quo. It results from an absence of any analysis of whether an inherited arrangement has any lack of analysis of the impact of the work setting on performance and the fear of raising questions about issues that may seem to lie outside one's prerogatives. • The importance of work in an individual life will decline, perhaps to the point where other activities will absorb most of his energies and will be the source of self-satisfaction and status. There has been a great decline in the proportion of an employee life that is spent on the job: The workweek is shorter by a third; vacations are longer; and workers generally enter the labor force later and retire earlier than they did in the past. The step from a reduction in hours worked to a substantial decline in the importance of production and distribution activities is admittedly a big one; but in the long run the link between work performance as presently defined, consumption, self-fulfillment, or status could be severed. In such a setting there would be continuing efforts to eliminate the physical and psychic discomforts and hazards associated with work but perhaps less attention to efforts to make work interesting and satisfying since these factors would count for little. • Work will continue to be a central focus for most people in the labor force, but the twin needs to humanize work and conserve energy will dampen the demand for goods and continue to increase the demand for services. The scale of an organization will become an increasingly important consideration; resources will be treated as capital goods rather than income; and intermediate technologies will be developed that will be more congenial to man. In such a society one could envision increasing attention to job redesign, worker participation, and the like:
  • 3. • Another view is that technology will solve the prospective energy shortage and greatly reduce damage to the environment resulting from industrial production and population growth; and population growth will taper off as economic welfare improves around the world. Work will retain its role in society, even if more of the traditional production tasks are automated and a growing proportion of the population is engaged in services or in a revival of traditional handicrafts. Unmet demands for services will keep labor force participation and employment high, and the work ethic will continue to have the same hold that it does today. • A variant of the first view above is that in the next century the distinction between work and non-work activities will fade. • Of a less sweeping and more specific nature is the prediction that the continuing rapid pace of technological and social change will necessitate a more flexible approach to the organization of work-to the use of task forces for special projects, for example-and to a decline in the emphasis on hierarchical organizations. This, in turn, would increase the need for better trained and more autonomous workers. To make such workers available would, in turn, require greater emphasis on training, particularly emphasis on skills that enable workers to adapt more readily to different challenges, and less emphasis on the specific tasks that now are the focus of training programs. However, in the absence of successful efforts to make workers more adaptable, the flexibility of organizational approaches to work might not be universally attractive. • An extension of the foregoing view is the vision of a more flexible boundary for organizations-with a greater emphasis on sub-contracting; leasing of office space and equipment; and, for certain kinds of jobs, perhaps the possibility of more work being done at home (which could be linked easily to offices through new communications technology). Workers in such an environment would have a smaller sense of attachment to employing organizations and perhaps less pressure to conform to organizational demands for conformity. http://performanceappraisalebooks.info/ : Over 200 ebooks, templates, forms for performance appraisal.