Performance Appraisal System

 

 

 

 

Prepare a 3-4-page plan that states your recommended course of action and analysis to leadership for selecting a performance appraisal system in the provided scenario.

Workplace appraisal systems are extremely challenging and the differences among appraisal systems are quite significant. Although intended to be beneficial for HR-related decision making and a vehicle for determining raises, promotions, training, retention, and much more, most people see workplace performance appraisal systems as an uncomfortable and disagreeable process. The reasons for these perspectives by employees, supervisors, and HR professionals typically have to do with incomplete or inaccurate choice of performance appraisal methods. In this assessment, the SHRM behavioral competencies of Leadership and Organizational Navigation and Consultation and Critical Evaluation as well as the HRM content knowledge areas of Workforce Planning and Employment and Human Resource Department will be important for supporting your recommendation for a new performance appraisal system.

Introduction
Scenario
You are a newly hired HR professional in a medium-size community hospital, which is in a growing mid-western city. The hospital is a general health care services setting with no competition in the local area. The hospital has board-certified fellowship medical professionals who offer superior care to all the hospital’s patients. The mission of the hospital is to support a comprehensive range of health care for the local community and surrounding area.

The hospital has grown from two HR staff members to six HR professionals supporting over 700 employees and the same performance appraisal system has been in place for several years. The hospital administration team is not all that comfortable with any system of appraisal but has accepted that one is required.

The hospital currently has a healthy employee engagement program. Part of the program is a yearly organizational satisfaction survey that over time has provided employee input about what they perceive as a lack of performance appraisal effectiveness. Some employees feel the current performance appraisal system is not capable of identifying struggling employees. The same small group of employees feel that the current performance appraisal system is inflated. At the same time, it is also described as not having the capacity to recognize the best performers in the organization. There is a stated desire from a small minority of employees for a performance appraisal system that can better differentiate performance outcomes. This is particularly important in an organization with a broad spectrum of health care professionals who range from surgeons to custodial staff, all essential to the hospital’s success.

The current performance appraisal system is similar to the traditional academic evaluation system and it has five levels of performance: superior, outstanding, contributing substantively, developing, and needing improvement. The leadership in the hospital insists that a new three-level (3-superior, 2-contributing substantively, and 1-needing improvement) will favorably respond to the employees’ viewpoint. This new appraisal system that tracks the assignment of each performance level by employee would limit how many threes would be given every year, thus most people in the organization would fall into the category of proficient. This has led to loud feedback from a majority of employees who feel they are not accurate recognized or valued. In fact, the new performance appraisal has negatively impacted overall employee morale.

Your Challenge
As an HR professional in the organization, you desire the best outcome for your organization and its employees, and are not sure if this three-level system would be best. Your challenge is to select the best course of action among the following options and recommend that action to the leadership team. You can recommend 1) they retain the current five-level performance appraisal system, 2) they adopt the three-level system with forced-distribution preferred by the leadership team (3-superior, 2-contributing substantively, and 1-needing improvement), or 3) they adopt an alternative appraisal system from any source.

Instructions
Prepare a 3–4-page plan that states your recommended course of action. Along with your recommendation, include the following:

Analyze how your proposed HR solution to an HR challenge contributes to organizational goals and strategies.
Identify 5–6 performance appraisal systems and their attributes and then select one type for the third alternative in this scenario before making a decision.
Weigh the impact on each group as you consider the three options. The majority did not complain about performance appraisal inflation and the minority did. What are the implications of rejecting the minority’s request for what they see as a rational and effective system? What are the consequences of having a majority or employee-rated system?
Include the barriers, consequences, or outcomes that you see for the course of action you have chosen.
Explain the role of the HR practitioner in advancing a proposed HR solution.
Briefly explain the role you will take to influence the eventual outcome. Consider aspects of leadership, negotiation, and consultation.
Discuss the application of any SHRM behavioral competencies to the process of solving an HR challenge.
Which SHRM behavioral competencies do you think are most directly applicable to a successful resolution of this challenge, and why?

 

Sample Solution

Bryan Norton, in particular, proposes the idea of transformative value, which offers respectable and defensible approaches to protecting species and ecosystems. Transformative value has the ability to sort human demand values in a way that provides environmentalists a solid way to not only criticize modern society’s rampant overconsumption and materialism, but also creates a way to defensibly advocate for wild species and ecosystems.

To begin with, transformative value is the ideology that a person’s experience in nature can alter their real-life preferences, specifically in relation to consumption of goods and their ecological footprint. Aesthetic value splits into two different approaches, both of which fall in line with transformative value. Lilly-Marlene Russow follows a traditional approach, which is based on the value of physical experience in nature. People highly value experience; it is why people spend years planning on trips to Greece or to see the Mona Lisa in person. People do not travel across the planet because they have never seen a country or piece of artwork before but because the process of experiencing those things in person is so revered. Species and ecosystems evoke those same kinds of feelings. Visually appealing organisms like birds of paradise or African elephants and similarly appealing ecosystems like coral reefs and tropical rainforests evoke a sense of awe and admiration that is valuable to people, so individuals are more likely to protect them.

The desire to physically see these organisms or habitats further intensifies these feelings. While any person can look up pictures of sloths or vibrant coral, the potential to be close to the physical organism drives a desire to preserve them and their habitats. This also explains why endangered species have more done to protect them when compared to healthy species. Since there is a higher threat of losing the potential experiences forever, more work is put into saving and rebuilding those species rather than a well-populated one. The value of experience creates a ranking system that scientists are able to use to deter

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