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Can you describe some of the really positive performance reviews that you you have had in your career?

What about those reviews made you feel like they made a difference in your career?

[I am collecting information and ideas to improve our performance review process. I hope this will help others in the same way.]

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please gawd no!... – Mitch Wheat Jul 30 at 11:41
Surely a question for HR-overflow? – Lazarus Jul 30 at 11:44

closed as not programming related by Mitch Wheat, Jonathan Sampson, Neil Butterworth, JB King, jjnguy Jul 30 at 19:54

4 Answers

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Rands in Repose, in his book, has a hilarious story about that. He was about to give performance reviews to two of his indirect underlings, one who was a competent hotshot, and one who was lazy and apathetic. Only, he somehow messed up and switched the reviews. He gave the competent one a bad review and praised the lazy one.

How it turned out? Great! The hotshot guy thanked him for the criticism saying he realized he was becoming complacent lately -- and started working even better. The lazy guy was expecting the worst, but upon hearing praise he got a new wind in his sails, got more motivated and also became a good employee.

I'm not sure if it's a real story but it sure is a good yarn of Rand's. Why not try it? :-)

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The only time a performance review has ever had any impact on me was when they decided I couldn't get my full bomus as I hadn't completed the task of going on a training course. They didn't seem to care that the only reason I hadn't done any training was because they wouldn't let me due to time and budget restraints. I found a better job a few weeks later. – MrPeregrination Jul 30 at 11:57
hmmm... Bomus is obviously BoNus. Fat fingers are a real disability in my line of work. – MrPeregrination Jul 30 at 11:57
This seems like terrible advice :), but I love Rands so +1. – David Coufal Jul 30 at 17:50
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I have found the majority of performance reviews, and I have been on both sides of the table, to be a sham pretty much from top to bottom.

Mostly people just want to know what their raise is going to be and the managers are worried about how to deliver bad news.

The reality is that the managers have a (usually inadequate) pot of money to be spread around their group. They often need to nitpick about ridiculous things to justify making people feel as if their X percent raise was really carefully considered. In reality the difference between top performers and everyone else will be negligible because the money pot was puny.

It's good that you want to improve the process but you'll find yourself caught between a rock and a hard place. No matter how carefully considered your review, most people are just going to carry away the number, especially if they are unhappy with it. Which almost everyone will be.

It is a particularly tough walk for your best people. It hard to say "you scored excellent in all 12 categories and went beyond the call of duty abandoning your family for 3 months to work on-site in East Cowpatty...here's a 4 percent raise."

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In my opinion, what works well is to separate as much as possible the performance conversation from the money conversation.

The performance conversation should be an on-going conversation that happens on a regular basis throughout the year. An employee should never be surprised about his/her annual review. It should just be a formalization of what is already known.

It is very tough to separate the performance and money conversations. However, if you at least separate them physically (e.g. performance reviews are in April, salary adjustments are in June), you get people actually paying attention to what is happening in the performance review and not just waiting impatiently for the salary adjustment memo.

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There's really not a better feeling that getting a genuinely good performance review from a respected superior.

I think the key to positive performance reviews (and I suppose negative as well) is respecting the person giving your review. It's much more of a compliment, or much easier to acknowledge, when coming from someone who's opinion you value.

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