Performance Appraisal Biases - A Source
of Conflict
A Performance Management Bias
And Error Glossary By Robert Bacal
Summary: We all have biases -- biases that
can affect how we perceive and appraise performance
during performance appraisal. Biases that are
unexamined tend to create larger disagreements
between employee and manager during performance
reviews. Here are the most common biases that
both you and your employee may be applying.
Performance appraisals are always sticky for
everyone. While managers make an effort to be
as objective as possible, there are always concerns
about specific performance appraisals, and their
accuracy. If you are going to evaluate your staff,
then it is wise to be aware of factors that may
affect your assessments. In this short article
we outline a few factors you should be aware of,
so that you can examine your own assessment processes
to ensure that they are as free from bias as possible.
Halo Effect
The halo effect is the tendency to rate someone high
or low in all categories because he or she is high or
low in one or two areas. Results in appraisals that
do not help develop employees, because they are two
general or inaccurate as to specifics. Evaluating someone
lower is sometimes also called the "devil effect".
Standards of Evaluation
If you are using categories such as fair, good, excellent,
etc, be aware that the meanings of these words will
differ from person to person. In any event, the use
of these categories is not recommended because they
do not provide sufficient information to help employees
develop.
Central Tendency
The habit of assessing almost everyone as average.
A person applying this bias will tend not to rate anyone
very high or very low.
Recency Bias
Tendency to assess people based on most recent behaviour
and ignoring behaviour that is "older".
Leniency Bias
Tendency to rate higher than is warranted, usually
accompanied by some rationalization as to why this is
appropriate.
Opportunity Bias
Ignoring the notion that opportunity (factors beyond
the control of the employee) may either restrict or
facilitate performance, and assigning credit or blame
to the employee when the true cause of the performance
was opportunity.
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False Attribution Errors
We have a tendency to attribute success or failure
to individual effort and ability (at least in
North America). So when someone does well, we
give them credit, and when someone does less well,
we suggest it's somehow their fault. While there
is some truth in this, the reality is that performance
is a function of both the individual and the system
he or she works in. Often we misattribute success
and failure and assume they are both under the
complete control of the employee. If we do, we
will never improve performance.
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