Rating errors are factors that mislead or
blind us in the appraisal process. Armstrong warned that “appraisers must be on
guard against anything that distorts reality, either favorably or unfavorably.”
These are the 10 rating errors seen most often. They’re where managers and
other raters are most likely to go offtrack.
1.
Central
tendency. Clustering everyone in the middle
performance categories to avoid extremes of good or bad performance; it’s easy,
but it’s wrong. This isn’t fair to employees who are really making an effort,
and it can be demoralizing.
2.
Favoritism.
Overlooking the flaws of favored or
“nice” employees, especially those whom everyone likes.
3.
Grouping.
Excusing below-standard performance
because it is widespread; “Everyone does it.”
4.
Guilt
by association. Rating someone on the basis of the
company they keep, rather than on the work they do.
5.
The
halo effect. Letting one positive work factor you
like affect your overall assessment of performance.
6.
Holding
a grudge. A dangerous luxury that may result
in your ending up in court. Never try to make employees pay for past behavior.
7.
The
horns effect. The opposite of the halo
effect—letting one negative work factor or behavior you dislike color your
opinion of other factors.
8.
Bias.
Allowing your bias to influence the
rating. Bias can come from attitudes and opinions about race, national origin,
sex, religion, age, veterans’ status, disability, hair color, weight, height,
intelligence, etc.
9.
Recency.
Rating only recent performance, good
or bad. Data should be representative of the entire review period. If you’re
not keeping good notes, you may not remember the whole period. Armstrong noted
that “you want to make sure, again, that you’re keeping records so that you can
adequately describe performance over an entire performance period.”
10.
The
sunflower effect. Rating everyone high, regardless of
performance, to make yourself look good or to be able to give more
compensation.
These and other rating errors can cause your
entire performance review program to lose credibility among your employees.
With consistent analysis of the program, you can work to avoid this situation!
Source: HR
Daily Adviser
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