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Appraisals need a fresh look
As
year draws to an end, employees in many, if not all, work units begin to
get nervous. Companies and government organizations start to sack
employees graded last in their work performance assessments. The policy
is commonly known as “eliminating the last-graded (ELG)”.
This method of employee management originated in Western countries and
was introduced to China in mid-1990s. Under this system, all employees
are graded from excellent to very poor in a comprehensive assessment of
their work performance. Those at the tail end are fired.
Ever since its introduction, the practice has been blamed for being
“inhuman” in terms of labor-management relations because it places all
employees in constant fear of being surpassed by co-workers. Managers,
however, favor the system because they claim it stimulates employees to
keep improving in their work.
Controversy aside, the system is not rational, and does not result in
the effective management of human resources.
First, the system is illogical.
It determines an employee’s qualification by comparing his/her
performance with that of others rather than gauging the performance
against certain standards. In evaluating performance, some standards
must have been adopted, hence the different marks every employee is
given. It is highly probable that all employees measure up to the
standards though there are differences.
The ELG system, however, eliminates those who rank last in disregard to
their having met the standards. This means that no matter how hard one
works, one cannot avoid being eliminated if others have done better.
Second, no method of evaluation is absolutely objective. Many subjective
factors interfere in an assessment and conditions are usually too
complicated for rules to be applied without discrimination.
For instance, a person who is more enthusiastic and responsible about
work tends to undertake more work or insists on co-workers abiding by
the standards, hence there are more chances of making mistakes and
inviting jealous resentment.
Third, as ELG is conducted on the basis of individual departments, it is
highly likely that one who ranks last in one department outperforms many
others who work in another. Then, is it fair to fire this person simply
because he ranks last in a better-performing department?
ELG derives from the so-called quantized management, which applies
mathematical models to all links in the process of management and
translates the assessment of all aspects of work performance into
digits. Quantized management makes final evaluation easier and more
objective. It is based on a comprehensive, scientifically structured
system and meticulous observation of every detail of the rules and
standards.
Scientific management is a good thing but it also imposes higher
requirements on managers. To ensure more reasonable and effective
management, especially of human resources, managers should improve their
abilities and work harder rather than rely on a sluggard’s magic
formulae, such as ELG.
Otherwise, they will be eventually eliminated themselves.
—The Daily Mail, China Daily news exchange item |