Deloitte revamped performance management system


Topic : Deloitte revamped performance management system.

Source: Harvard business review

Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited commonly referred to as Deloitte, is a multinational professional services network. Deloitte is one of the "Big Four" accounting organizations and the largest professional services network in the world by revenue and number of professionals.
An internal survey at Deloitte India served as an eye opener for revamping their performance and management techniques. It revealed the need for a more real-time and individualized performance management framework that focused on future requirements, rather than assessing past results. The company then launched ‘Reinventing Performance Management’ (RPM) — a system that abandoned the once-a-year review and even 360-degree feedback tools. The essence of RPM lies in its speed, agility, engagement focus, and the one-size-only-fits-one approach. As 80% of the company’s workforce comprises millennial's, RPM’s ability to provide individualized real-time performance feedback has been received well by employees.

How Deloitte Reinvented Their Performance Management:

Deloitte is the largest professional services network in the world in both revenue and number of professionals. In 2013–14, they earned a record of $34.2 billion US Dollars in revenue. So, when one of the biggest companies in the world takes on reinventing performance management, they do it with a bang.

Marcus Buckingham and Ashley Goodall described the process and findings of the large-scale Deloitte performance management survey in the Harvard Business Review. We also examine how Deloitte changed their approach to performance management. In addition, we review the practical takeaways from Deloitte's case study. The goal is to re-examine our own performance management system and how we can change it.
Old vs. new approach to performance management
Deloitte found that their current approach to performance management, annual 360 feedback, was wasting a shocking 2 million hours per year. Even more significant, they realized that their system wasn't engaging employees at all. Performance levels were also dropping drastically. In an effort to combat this, Deloitte built something much more nimble, real-time, and individualized. They wanted something that was focused on fueling performance in the present rather than assessing it in the past.
Performance management: First, let's look at how Deloitte needed to change.
With 360 feedback, goals were set once a year and reviewed once a year. The problem with this approach is that annual goals are too "batched" for real-time situations and a lot of time is wasted on performance ratings. Instead, this time should be spent on talking to people about their performance and careers consistently.
Their next realization was that assessing someone's skills is always subjective.  The process says much more about the evaluator instead of the person being evaluated. This is called an idiosyncratic rater effect.

The discovery left Deloitte puzzled. They knew that in order to get the best feedback, it needs to come from a team leader. But how do you deal with the idiosyncratic rater effect

Note: "Ratings reveal more about the rater than they do about the ratee."
Before deciding how to deal with biased assessments, let's take a look at another insight Deloitte discovered. They used the Gallup 1.4 million employee study to see what the similarities are between high and low performing teams.

The most powerful characteristic was that the high-performing team members felt they were doing their best to accomplish meaningful goals. On that basis, Deloitte identified 60 high-performing teams from their own ranks. Using these teams, they conducted a six-item survey to find out what their own high-performing teams had in common.

Note: The most powerful commonality between Deloitte's highest performing teams was the belief that "I have the chance to use my strengths every day."
When the results came back, the most common trend was that their own high performing team members felt that they had the chance to use their strengths every day.

So, what can we learn from these results?
Deloitte set out a clear goal: "We want to spend more time helping people use their strengths."

So, Deloitte was able to recognize the strengths in performance but the concern came with evaluating it. They also now knew that the best insight comes from the immediate team leader, but how can they do provide it without the idiosyncratic effect getting in the way? That's the million (or even a billion) dollar question.

Note: "The key is that people rate other people skills inconsistently, but they are highly consistent when rating their own"
We also know that everyone rates other peoples' skills inconsistently. To combat this Deloitte did not ask team members what they think of each team member. Instead, they asked team leaders to rate their own future actions regarding each team member.

Here are the statements Deloitte asked leaders to select about an employee in order to overcome the idiosyncratic effect:

·       Given what I know of this person's performance, and if it were my money, I would award this person the highest possible compensation increases and bonus – this measures the overall performance and unique value.
·       Given what I know of this person's performance, I would always want him or her on my team – this measures ability to work well with others
·       This person is at risk for low performance – this identifies problems that might harm the customer or the team on a yes-or-no basis
·       This person is ready for promotion today – this measures potential on a yes-or-no basis
Note: In effect, they are asking what the team leaders would do, not what they think.
This evaluation is called "process performance snapshot." The big difference is that it evaluates performance in real-time. Now they had the system to measure the performance.
One factor stood out the most from Deloitte case study – frequency. Deloitte points out that the optimal frequency of these new performance reviews should be weekly. They also suggest that the best way to ensure frequency is to have regular check-ins about near-time work initiated by team members.
To conclude, Deloitte realized that traditional, once-a-year, 360-reviews were inefficient. They also do not give a transparent view of the current working situation. It is time to reinvent the performance management process. Ask your team leaders to assess their team members through statements that describe what they do, not what they think.
Employee performance snapshots should be regular and weekly.

Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Performance Management in Pepsico

PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT PRACTICE OF ROYAL DUTCH SHELL

PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT AT HINDUSTAN UNILEVER LIMITED