Human Resources is responsible for providing a comprehensive and co-ordinated personnel service to the College community consistent with employment legislation and best practice.
Performance management is the
systematic process by which an
agency involves its employees, as
individuals and members of a group,
in improving organizational
effectiveness in the accomplishment
of agency mission and goals.
Employee performance
management includes:
planning
work and setting
expectations,
continually
monitoring
performance,
developing
the capacity to perform,
periodically
rating
performance in a summary
fashion, and
rewarding
good performance.
In an effective
organization, work is
planned out in advance.
Planning means setting
performance expectations and
goals for groups and
individuals to channel their
efforts toward achieving
organizational objectives.
Getting employees involved
in the planning process will
help them understand the
goals of the organization,
what needs to be done, why
it needs to be done, and how
well it should be done.
The regulatory requirements
for planning employees'
performance include
establishing the elements
and standards of their
performance appraisal plans.
Performance elements and
standards should be
measurable, understandable,
verifiable, equitable, and
achievable. Through critical
elements, employees are held
accountable as individuals
for work assignments or
responsibilities. Employee
performance plans should be
flexible so that they can be
adjusted for changing
program objectives and work
requirements. When used
effectively, these plans can
be beneficial working
documents that are discussed
often, and not merely
paperwork that is filed in a
drawer and seen only when
ratings of record are
required.
In an effective
organization, assignments
and projects are monitored
continually. Monitoring well
means consistently measuring
performance and providing
ongoing feedback to
employees and work groups on
their progress toward
reaching their goals.
Regulatory requirements for
monitoring performance
include conducting progress
reviews with employees where
their performance is
compared against their
elements and standards.
Ongoing monitoring provides
the opportunity to check how
well employees are meeting
predetermined standards and
to make changes to
unrealistic or problematic
standards. And by monitoring
continually, unacceptable
performance can be
identified at any time
during the appraisal period
and assistance provided to
address such performance
rather than wait until the
end of the period when
summary rating levels are
assigned.
In an effective
organization, employee
developmental needs are
evaluated and addressed.
Developing in this instance
means increasing the
capacity to perform through
training, giving assignments
that introduce new skills or
higher levels of
responsibility, improving
work processes, or other
methods. Providing employees
with training and
developmental opportunities
encourages good performance,
strengthens job-related
skills and competencies, and
helps employees keep up with
changes in the workplace,
such as the introduction of
new technology.
Carrying out the processes
of performance management
provides an excellent
opportunity to identify
developmental needs. During
planning and monitoring of
work, deficiencies in
performance become evident
and can be addressed. Areas
for improving good
performance also stand out,
and action can be taken to
help successful employees
improve even further.
From time to time,
organizations find it useful
to summarize employee
performance. This can be
helpful for looking at and
comparing performance over
time or among various
employees. Organizations
need to know who their best
performers are.
Within the context of formal
performance appraisal
requirements, rating means
evaluating employee or group
performance against the
elements and standards in an
employee's performance plan
and assigning a summary
rating of record. The rating
of record is assigned
according to procedures
included in the
organization's appraisal
program. It is based on work
performed during an entire
appraisal period. The rating
of record has a bearing on
various other personnel
actions, such as granting
within-grade pay increases
and determining additional
retention service credit in
a reduction in force.
Note: Although group
performance may have an
impact on an employee's
summary rating, a rating of
record is assigned only to
an individual, not to a
group.
In an effective
organization, rewards are
used well. Rewarding means
recognizing employees,
individually and as members
of groups, for their
performance and
acknowledging their
contributions to the
agency's mission. A basic
principle of effective
management is that all
behavior is controlled by
its consequences. Those
consequences can and should
be both formal and informal
and both positive and
negative.
Good performance is
recognized without waiting
for nominations for formal
awards to be solicited.
Recognition is an ongoing,
natural part of day-to-day
experience. A lot of the
actions that reward good
performance — like saying
"Thank you" — don't require
a specific regulatory
authority. Nonetheless,
awards regulations provide a
broad range of forms that
more formal rewards can
take, such as cash, time
off, and many nonmonetary
items. The regulations also
cover a variety of
contributions that can be
rewarded, from suggestions
to group accomplishments.
Managing Performance
Effectively.
In effective organizations,
managers and employees have
been practicing good
performance management
naturally all their lives,
executing each key component
process well. Goals are set
and work is planned
routinely. Progress toward
those goals is measured and
employees get feedback. High
standards are set, but care
is also taken to develop the
skills needed to reach them.
Formal and informal rewards
are used to recognize the
behavior and results that
accomplish the mission. All
five component processes
working together and
supporting each other
achieve natural, effective
performance management.