Performance Appraisal: Methods, Errors, Feedback and 360-Degree Appraisal
Meaning and definition of performance appraisal
Performance appraisal is the systematic evaluation of an employee’s job performance and potential against predetermined standards, followed by providing feedback for improvement and decisions related to rewards and development.
Objectives/importance of performance appraisal
- Performance improvement: identifies strengths and weaknesses and guides improvement.
- Training and development: identifies training needs and competency gaps.
- Rewards and compensation: basis for increments, incentives and recognition.
- Promotions and transfers: supports career decisions and succession planning.
- Employee motivation: feedback and recognition improve morale.
- Organisational control: ensures performance aligns with goals and standards.
- Documentation: provides records for HR decisions and grievance handling.
Performance appraisal process/steps
- Set performance standards: clear, measurable standards based on job analysis.
- Communicate expectations to employees.
- Measure performance using appropriate methods and evidence.
- Compare actual performance with standards and identify gaps.
- Appraisal discussion/feedback interview: provide constructive feedback and set improvement plan.
- Corrective actions and follow-up: training, coaching, targets, rewards; review progress.
Methods of performance appraisal
Traditional methods
- Confidential report (CR): supervisor writes report on performance; common in government.
- Essay method: narrative description of strengths and weaknesses.
- Ranking method: employees ranked from best to worst.
- Paired comparison: each employee compared with others.
- Graphic rating scale: ratings on traits/behaviours (quality, punctuality, cooperation).
- Checklists: rater checks statements describing behaviour/performance.
Modern methods
- Management by Objectives (MBO): goals are jointly set; performance evaluated based on achievement of objectives.
- BARS (Behaviourally Anchored Rating Scales): rating scale anchored with specific behavioural examples.
- Assessment centre: evaluation through simulations, exercises, interviews (mostly for managerial roles).
- 360-degree appraisal: feedback from multiple sources (superiors, peers, subordinates, self, customers).
- KPI/Key result based appraisal: performance measured using key metrics and outcomes.
Errors/biases in performance appraisal
- Halo effect: one positive trait influences overall rating.
- Horn effect: one negative trait influences overall rating.
- Leniency error: giving consistently high ratings to everyone.
- Strictness error: giving consistently low ratings to everyone.
- Central tendency: rating everyone around average to avoid extremes.
- Recency effect: overemphasis on recent events, ignoring overall performance.
- Personal bias: favouritism or discrimination (gender, caste, friendship).
- Similarity effect: rating people similar to rater more favourably.
- Contrast error: rating depends on comparison with previous employee rated.
Performance feedback and appraisal interview
Feedback means communicating appraisal results to employees to improve performance.
Characteristics of effective feedback:
- specific, factual and based on evidence
- timely and regular (not once a year only)
- balanced (strengths + improvements)
- focused on behaviour and results, not personality
- includes action plan and support (training/coaching)
Appraisal interview (discussion):
- create a positive environment and clarify purpose
- discuss achievements and gaps with examples
- listen to employee’s viewpoint
- set goals and improvement plan
- agree on training/development support and follow-up
360-degree appraisal (meaning, features, merits, limitations)
Meaning: 360-degree appraisal is a multi-source feedback system where performance information is collected from supervisors, peers, subordinates, self and sometimes customers/suppliers.
Features:
- multiple raters and wider perspective
- focuses on competencies and behaviour
- usually includes structured questionnaires
Merits:
- reduces single-rater bias to some extent
- improves self-awareness and development
- provides richer feedback on teamwork and leadership
- supports learning culture and openness
Limitations:
- time-consuming and costly
- possible politics, revenge ratings and biases
- requires strong trust and HRD climate
- may confuse employees if feedback is poorly communicated
Measures to improve appraisal system (important)
- Define clear job standards and measurable criteria.
- Train appraisers to reduce rating errors and bias.
- Use multiple sources of data (records, KPIs, feedback) and documentation.
- Provide regular feedback and counselling, not only annual evaluation.
- Ensure transparency, fairness and employee participation.
- Link appraisal with training and career planning, not only with punishment.
- Review system periodically and improve based on feedback.
Quick recap (1-minute revision)
- Appraisal = systematic evaluation + feedback.
- Objectives: improvement, training needs, rewards, promotion, control.
- Methods: traditional (rating scale, ranking) and modern (MBO, BARS, 360-degree).
- Errors: halo, recency, leniency, central tendency, bias.
- Effective feedback + appraisal interview are key for development.