These two articles caught my attention recently and struck a chord.
10 Management Practices to Axe
Yes, Everyone Really Does Hate Performance Reviews
He's definitely still in the late-19th Century.
10 Management Practices to Axe
8. 360-Degree Feedback Programs
I have a second-grader, and if my second-grader has something to say to his little friend Dylan, I encourage him to say it directly. I don't tell him, "Fill out this form, and we'll have the other kids fill out forms, too, and then we'll tell Dylan what all the kids think of him, anonymously." Apart from the fact that my kid doesn't know what "anonymously" means, this is very bad coaching for a budding communicator. The 360-degree feedback system is a crutch for poor managers. We need more forthright discussion among our teams, not sneaky group feedback mechanisms masquerading as career development tools. What to do instead: Ditch the 360 system and teach your employees how to give one another constructive criticism. (Teach your managers how to do it, too.)
Yes, Everyone Really Does Hate Performance Reviews
The *ahem* person who writes my performance evals has a screw loose as well as a reputation for being difficult. I've rarely had problems with evaluations until I had to start reporting to him, and was warned by others when I transferred. After dealing with his pissy attitude, I decided one day "Fuck it" as he's sabotaged my ability to transfer within the company and blatantly stated that he starts everyone in the middle of the rating range and that we "have to work really hard to impress him".It's time to finally put the performance review out of its misery.This corporate sham is one of the most insidious, most damaging, and yet most ubiquitous of corporate activities. Everybody does it, and almost everyone who's evaluated hates it. It's a pretentious, bogus practice that produces absolutely nothing that any thinking executive should call a corporate plus.
And yet few people do anything to kill it. Well, it's time they did.
Don't get me wrong: Reviewing performance is good; it should happen every day. But employees need evaluations they can believe, not the fraudulent ones they receive. They need evaluations that are dictated by need, not a date on the calendar. They need evaluations that make them strive to improve, not pretend they are perfect.

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