BY DAVID MURRAY
The swing to remote and hybrid work demands a new approach to the employee-performance review, says this founder of an HR tech startup.
There is a theory called “Dunbar’s number” that the maximum number of people we can really know or relationships we can really manage is 150.
But when a company moves to remote or hybrid work, CEOs and other executives lose that peripheral vision—they only see who they’re actively in meetings with. And that Dunbar’s number shrinks; some theorize it changes to about 50.
With remote and hybrid work, it becomes very difficult for executives to really know all of their employees well enough to become the sole source of information on their performance and contribution to the company. And, unfortunately, most traditional performance reviews take a top-down, hierarchical approach, where feedback on performance is based on a single manager’s opinion and, possibly, cherry-picked 360 peer reviews (input from colleagues, peers, underlings, etc).
This new way of work robs managers of the clues they may have used to assess employee performance—like noticing how early an employee comes in or how late they stay, if they’re engaging in meetings or having watercooler conversations, or if they are socializing at their desks. This sort of peripheral vision that managers have had has been lost—and honestly, that’s a good thing. Because time in the office doesn’t equate to output, sometimes watercooler conversations are more productive than meetings, and sometimes that employee who always has people coming by their desk to chitchat is actually enabling their coworkers with important expertise and institutional knowledge.
ORGANIZATIONAL NETWORK ANALYSIS
What is needed is a completely new approach to employee reviews that accounts for this network model. Thankfully, one has existed for decades in academia. It’s called Organizational Network Analysis (ONA), in which every person at your company is asked questions like who they go to for help and advice, who they see as an outstanding contributor, and who they have concerns about, and why. In this way, any person at your company can review anyone else, briefly, and that review can be positive or negative.
ONA is a data-driven approach to reviews in which manager reviews are augmented by feedback from the network, ensuring that what wouldn’t have been revealed otherwise about each person is revealed to those who need to see it to make critical talent decisions.
We are working in a new world since COVID-19, and companies with remote and hybrid employees need to face the reality that traditional performance reviews don’t match how we currently work. This means removing the bias from performance reviews, making them more accurate, and taking into account that the new way of working now is often remote, or at least hybrid, for most employees.
With the current labor shortage since the pandemic, it’s also important that executives don’t fire or overlook someone who is really key to the organization—this insight can all be captured with better performance reviews. This important piece on letting go of the bell curve talks about the 80/20 rule and the idea that a small number of people at an organization typically account for the most impact, making it even more critical to retain those high performers and identify any that may be a flight risk.
There are a lot of opinions on how remote and hybrid work can affect productivity, culture, and engagement in the new workplace, but we think that it can at least be an impetus to change performance reviews for the better.
Source: Fast Company