The employment
environment, nowadays, is becoming increasingly competitive (Thurston et al.,
2012). Organizations are confronted with new challenges concerning their human
resource management (Bogaert & Vloeberghs, 2005).
Organizations are faced
with fast-paced change and the need to ensure ongoing change intervention
success (Fuchs & Prouska, 2014). Potential employees
not only become more and more diverse with respect to socio-demographic characteristics
but also with respect to their needs and expectations (Berman, 2002).
Personnel management is
vitally important to the maintenance and preservation of the administrative
state and its democratic institutions (Stivers & Hummel, 2007). Appraisal of
employee performance is among the most controversial management practices (Anisseh et al., 2011). Performance evaluation
processes are situated in an organizational context (Miller et al., 2014).
The long-term viability of
a business organization depends on its ability to evaluate the performance of
the employees and to examine the contribution of its personnel in achieving the
assessed goals (Grigoroudis & Zopounidis, 2012). The
importance of evaluating an Employee Assistance Program (EAP) cannot be
overestimated (Sithole & Khorombi, 2009).
Performance
evaluation is critically essential for the effective management of the human
resource of an organization and the evaluation of staff that helps develop
individuals, improve organizational performance, and feed into business
planning (Ahmed et al., 2013). Performance appraisals
(PAs) are a reality in organizations of all sizes and types (Clausen et al., 2008).
Employers worry about
whether employees will devote sufficient effort to work, and employees are
concerned about whether employers will compensate them appropriately (Fisher et al., 2005). The evaluation results
provide the basis for the human resource management department to develop a
staff satisfaction promotion strategy (Li & Wang, 2014). Semantic technologies
provide to human resource management issues an integrated approach to assess
both employee performance and learning outcomes as a result of competence
evaluation (Fuchs & Prouska, 2014).
Every day more
organizations recognize that their people are a source of competitive advantage
(Cabrera & Cabrera, 2003). Perceptions of
effectiveness are positively related to job attitudes (i.e., job satisfaction,
engagement, perceived organizational support; Wilson & Narayan, 2016).
While
individual characteristics, such as personality and core self-evaluation, are
good predictors of job-related attitudes and performance, they cannot be acted
on in a human resource development (HRD) capacity (Thurston et al., 2012). PA has been the focus
of considerable research for almost a century (DeNisi & Pritchard, 2006). The sheer scale
and speed of the shift of payment system from time-based salaries to
performance-related pay (PRP) in the British public services provides a unique
opportunity to test the effects of incentive pay schemes (Marsden et al., 2000). PA is a western
management concept that is meant to improve individual and, concomitantly,
organizational performance (Bai & Bennington, 2005).
Employee performance
evaluation study finds that although there is clarity around the performance
criteria on which public employees in welfare offices are evaluated, the
measures are not linked to one of the principal goals of welfare
reform—“welfare-to-work”: moving people off welfare and into jobs (Riccucci & Lurie, 2001). The mathematical
evaluation shows that the correct evaluation of employees by the system
effectively motivates employees in favor of the industry (Kaur & Sood, 2017).
Change
is frequently mentioned as a defining quality of the new workplace and, in
turn, employment relationships (Chaudhry et al., 2009). Employee compensation
moderated the relationship between the types of employee participation and
employee retention (Khalid & Nawab, 2018).
HRD can play a key role in
helping employees foster social capital, leading to employee voice in the
organization (Cumberland et al., 2018). Employers every year
struggle to find just and fair ways to identify the best performers as it is a
quite subjective task (Mittal et al., 2009). Multidimensional
constructs of trust and service climate were developed using the literature in
the trust and service management domains (Chathoth et al., 2007).
An important issue
discussed is how employers can ensure the anonymity of employees in surveys
used for management and human resources (HR) analytics (Frederiksen, 2017). Strategic compensation
theory argues that rewards should be used to encourage employee activities that
support organizational goals, but reward strategies often have confounding
effects on employee attitudes and behaviors (Howard & Dougherty, 2004).
Employee
evaluation is one of the soft topics that play a chief role in the total
efficiency of human resource management (Nobari et al., 2019). Research support results
in a reform process that minimizes “deadly combinations” and maximizes
“powerful connections” rather than simply transplanting personnel practices
from the private sector onto the public sector (Huff, 2011).
We find that pay knowledge
has an independent impact on organizational outcomes, rather than being
mediated through pay satisfaction (Sweins et al., 2009). The model for training
and managing scientific personnel tends to change (Petroni et al., 2012). The findings of the
investigation suggest that sales managers were more likely to make internal
attributions for failure when the salesperson had a poor, rather than a good,
work history and external attributions when the salesperson had a good, rather
than a poor, work history (Dubinsky et al., 1989).
Personnel management is
rooted in the Tayloristic concept and has to be revisited before it can join
the changing conditions and contribute to these fundamental changes (Sluijs et al., 1991). Surveys of government
personnel have shown that they are much more likely than their counterparts in
business firms to say that it is hard to fire a poor performer, to raise the
pay of a good performer, and to base promotion on performance (Jin & Rainey, 2020).
Source : SAGE Journals
If the actual personnel evaluation scores are found to have
an effect, these results will suggest that objective evaluation, apart from
assessment effectiveness measurement tools, is important in reviewing the
appropriateness of the personnel evaluation system rather than the factorial
structure of the evaluation effectiveness. In this study, the personnel
evaluation score given by the person’s direct supervisor was used as an
indicator, as an objective evaluation concept. The evaluation effectiveness factor
is shown in Figure 1.
References
Ahmed, I., Sultana, I.,
Paul, S. K., Azeem, A. (2013). Employee performance evaluation: A fuzzy approach. International Journal of Productivity and Performance
Management, 62(7), 718–734.
Clausen, T. S., Jones, K. T., Rich, J. S. (2008). Appraising employee
performance evaluation systems. CPA Journal, 78(2), 64–67.
Grigoroudis, E., Zopounidis, C. (2012). Developing an employee evaluation
management system: The case of a healthcare organization. Operational Research,
12(1), 83–106
Stivers, C., Hummel, R. P. (2007). Personnel management: Politics, administration, and a passion for anonymity. Public Administration Review, 67(6), 1010–1017.
Thurston, P. W., D’Abate, C. P., Eddy, E. R. (2012). Mentoring as an HRD
approach: Effects on employee attitudes and contributions independent of core
self-evaluation. Human Resource Development Quarterly, 23(2), 139–165



Agreed with you Saliya.The basic objectives of performance evaluations are two-fold: firstly to reward employees for meeting organizational objectives and secondly to identify which objectives are not met and to develop action plans to ensure they are achieved in future (Islam and Rasad, 2006)
ReplyDeleteHello Chulanga,
DeleteThanks for the feedback,
Employee evaluation is one of the soft topics that play a chief role in the total efficiency of human resource management (Nobari et al., 2019)
HI Saliya. Comprehensive post. The design and deployment of such systems necessitate significantly more than a haphazard effort on the part of the organization's decision-makers. The conceptual, human relations, and technical areas must all be addressed if worthwhile performance evaluation systems are to be implemented (Stronge, 1991).
ReplyDeleteHello Ashanthi,
DeleteThanks for the feedback.
Agreed & Employers every year struggle to find just and fair ways to identify the best performers as it is a quite subjective task (Mittal et al., 2009)