It’s time to stop checking the annual appraisal box and start measuring performance beyond productivity “outputs."
For years, organizations have been talking about
reinventing performance management, but new ways of working since the pandemic
— particularly the rise of hybrid work models and the desire
for employees to be seen as people, not just workers — make
this a critical moment to rethink the purpose and value of performance
management programs.
“In the
future, leaders and managers will move beyond just measuring employees’
outcomes and consider the context in which employees’ outcomes are achieved:
their personal goals, the circumstances in which they work, the teams to which
they belong and the type of work they complete,” says Blakeley
Hartfelder, Director, Gartner.
We
predict that over the next three to five years, employers will shift to a
performance management approach that views performance differently in six ways:
No. 1 Goals will be personal as well as
professional
Goal-setting and feedback conversations
are meaningful when they help employees directly link their contributions to
the organization’s goals. However, personal context is also important.
Eighty-two percent of employees polled in the Gartner 2021 EVP Employee Survey
said they wanted their organization to see them as people, not just employees.
82% of employees polled say they want their
organization to see them as people, not just employees.
In the next evolution of performance
management, HR leaders will seek to integrate personal goals, such as
wellbeing or acquiring skills not directly related to their work. Fostering an
environment in which employees can openly and honestly discuss these personal
goals with their managers will include equipping employees with self-assessment
tools to evaluate their progress against both personal and professional goals.
No. 2 Performance reviews — and pay decisions —
will shift to be project-based
Many
organizations and employees alike have moved toward a project-based work model.
Coupled with a rise in the shift to contingent workers, these new work models
are influencing many organizations’ postpandemic planning.
In a
world of project-based work, employees want leadership to evaluate their
performance after each project — and they expect to regularly see the explicit
link between evaluations and compensation. For organizations, assessing
employee performance regularly allows the making of staffing and resourcing
decisions as projects conclude. This shift will:
·
provide
employees with feedback, evaluation and rewards based on their
project-to-project performance.
·
evaluate
employees based on outcomes achieved and critical feedback from peers and
clients.
·
clearly
define and explain how employees’ performance on each project affects their
pay.
No. 3 Performance ratings will reflect more context
and empathy
Context
affects outcomes, and performance reviews will begin to more accurately reflect
that. Did a top-performing employee take on a new-in-kind role on a project to
learn new skills? Did an employee find it hard to focus on work because of a
personal tragedy? Are teams struggling to achieve their goals due to recurring
hiccups in collaboration technology?
Designing
more empathetic performance ratings, such as “learning new skills'’ (for the
top performer learning new skills in a challenging project) or “focusing
outside of work'’ (so an employee facing tough circumstances at home is not
penalized) will be especially important to attract and retain high performers
looking to grow their career at a given organization.
No. 4 Feedback and development will become more
automated
Employees
understand, even better than their managers, the kind of feedback and
development support they need to improve their performance, but they often lack
the facility to participate actively in the process.
Many
organizations have increased investment in employee-productivity-monitoring
technologies, especially in our hybrid world. Automated data
collection and analytics around employees activities can be powerful for
helping individual employees understand how they are performing and where there
is room to improve. In the future, this technology will automate feedback
processes and provide timely, data-based feedback to employees.
No. 5 Managers will no longer manage
performance
As the
use of technology grows, and employees become more proactive in day-to-day
management of their own performance, the focus for managers will turn
from performance management conversations to supporting
employee career pathing and development. HR leaders will need to equip managers
with the resources to nurture talent, tackle challenging work situations and
help employees make decisions about their next projects and skills.
No. 6 Team performance management will emerge as a
separate focus
As teams
adjust where, when and how they collaborate in hybrid and distributed environments,
team performance will emerge as a separate focus. Teams will be asked to more
actively work together to track progress against and improve both
project-specific performance and team dynamics. Teams will need tools and
resources to assess important parts of their health, such as inclusivity,
cohesion, accountability and customer centricity, and to diagnose problems.
“Emerging
ways of working have made it urgent for performance management practices to
transform to become more human,” says Karishma Sahai, Senior Specialist,
Gartner. “HR leaders can use these predictions to frame how their organizations
think about performance management moving forward.”