rayspick.com rayspick.com
  Main Page -> About Us -> Place Your Link -> Privacy -> ToS -> Submit Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

Software & Networking

Online & Indoor Games

Jobs & Employment

Sports

Shopping & Auction

Health & Hygiene

News & Events

Medicine & Treatment

Automotive

Policies & Law

Companies & Business

Children & Teens

Realty & Property

Art & Creative

Self Management

Technology & Science

Investment & Finance

Music & Entertainment

Travel & Accommodation

Family & Home

Academics & Learning

Food & Recipe

People & Communities

Lifestyle & Fashion


 

  Main Page –› Companies & Business –› Leadership & Supervision
   
 

Effective Performance Management

   

Recently the Aberdeen Group completed a study on performance management. They found that companies with best-in-class employee performance management systems produce 50 to 70 percent more revenue than those that dont have a good system. That finding gets my attention.

We also know, from earlier studies, that top performers are four times as productive as the weakest performer in an organization.

Bob Rogers, the president of Development Dimensions International (www.ddiworld.com), has said, The majority of the workforce is randomly trying to achieve success without any real understanding of how success is measured for them in the organization. The need for an effective employee performance management system is clear.

An effective employee performance management system establishes goals and measures results regularly.

A major performance management problem in organizations today is ignoring poor performance. Ignoring poor performance tells everybody that mediocrity is acceptable. In a hyper-competitive world this is deadly. The negative impact on even the top performers is only a matter of time.

Typically, managers can identify poor or mediocre performance, but they choose to ignore it. Very often these managers have past experiences when they did not receive positive support from higher management when they attempted to confront poor performers. A lack of high level support leads to a culture of looking the other way.

Senior leaders in the organization set the tone for performance expectations. Developing managers throughout the leadership pipeline requires training and rewards for effective performance management. Managers must be trained and evaluated on their ability to provide feedback to employees about performance. Developing employees is a critical task for all managers.

Organizations must make the role of every employee clear. At Dell Computer, the companys The Sole of Dell program shows how every employee contributes to the success of the company. Michael Dell believes individual accountability begins with his role and the roles of senior management.

Every organization must make performance expectations and performance measurements clear. Only with clear expectations and measurements can we compete in any field.

Author: Michael Beitler
 
Author Bio:
Michael Beitler is a champion in this field. Michael has written several articles in the past on this topic.
This article can be searched using: project management, risk management, small business administration, performance management
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
9 Strategies for Writing Accounts Payable Procedures
 
The Art of Persuasion
 
15-Minute Marketing: Lots of Results in Little Time
 
Marketing Strategy - Spell Out Your Unique Value
 
What is Business Process Automation?
 
8 Tips to Build Trust Between you and the Customer
 
Lessons from the Wedding Mafia
 
What is Your MSP?
 
MLM Pyramid Misunderstanding, It's Actually Inverted and Fair
 
Success With MLM Leads
 
 
 
   Main Page -> Privacy -> ToS
© 2008 www.rayspick.com All Rights Reserved.