Wednesday Nov 05, 2025
Monday, 15 July 2013 00:59 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
Performance matters
Performance has always been a buzz word in business circles. It matters for both private and public sectors alike. What is performance? The dictionary definition is that it is the execution or accomplishment of work. Moving beyond, it can also be regarded as achieving a planned set of objectives utilising the available resources in an efficient and effective manner.
Performance can happen at three levels in a typical organisation. I would call them triple Is.
Individual Level: This is the core where a person should deliver what he/she is expected;
Interactive Team Level: This is the spill over from the core. When performing individuals collaborate, the interactive team becomes a performing team;
Institutional Level: When such collaborative teams perform, that impacts the organization. Hence, the institution becomes a performing one.
There is one solid “I” needed in order to link the above three Is. That is integration. I have seen individuals getting rewarded for their performance, while the institution is not performing well. Also, the institution may do extremely well, yet depriving the rewards for individual performance. Both these cases highlight the lack of integration. The solution is to have a properly designed performance management system, with the needed inputs from all involved.
Past and present of performance
Performance management began around 60 years ago as a source of income justification and was used to determine an employee’s wage based on performance. According to www.peoplestreme.com, organisations used performance management to drive behaviours from the employees to get specific outcomes. In practice, this worked well for certain employees who were solely driven by financial rewards. However, where employees were driven by learning and development of their skills, it failed miserably.
The gap between justification of pay and the development of skills and knowledge became a huge problem in the use of performance management. The realisation that a more comprehensive approach to manage and reward performance was needed came in 1980s. This approach of managing performance was developed in west, spearheaded by US.
In recent decades, however, the process of managing people has become more formalised and specialised. Many of the old performance appraisal methods have been absorbed into a broader performance management system which aims to be a more extensive and comprehensive process of management. Some of the developments that have shaped performance management in recent years are the differentiation of employees or talent management, management by objectives and constant monitoring and review.
The development of performance management systems was accelerated by the introduction of human resource management as a strategic driver and integrated approach to the management and development of employees. Also, understanding started to grow that the process of performance management is something that’s completed by line managers throughout the year and not a once off annual event coordinated by the personnel department.
Performance management system
Performance management can be regarded as a systematic process of doing few things. They are: