DocumentCode
1126003
Title
The philosophy of performance evaluation
Author
Oxer, J. Paul
Volume
30
Issue
4
fYear
2002
Firstpage
119
Lastpage
120
Abstract
When engineering company revenues decline the typical reaction is to cut costs. At engineering companies, that means layoffs because the primary cost in engineering is staff salary. Work is priced with salary costs as a foundation. Other costs-indirect, overhead, and general/administrative-are layered on to generate the multiplier that determines the cost of each hour charged to the customer. So cost cutting begins with payroll and the inevitable performance evaluation or forced ranking. At its core, competitive evaluation based on costs often denies the employer and the employee the benefits of the potential collaborative value creation in a team and pits one individual against another, placing an inherent limit on cooperation. To be fair and to minimize abuse, the process must be as objective as possible. Results should not be a surprise to those being ranked who are aware of criteria. To be valuable, however, it must allow some subjective assessment of value creation but provide enough subjectivity in a ranking process to identify and consider the value of creativity that opens it up to potential compromise. Too often the mandate to cut costs is used to justify targeting those who have fallen from grace in their managers´ eyes, and such a ranking process becomes the tool of choice.
Keywords
engineering; management; personnel; competitive evaluation; cost cutting; engineering company; forced ranking; performance evaluation; potential collaborative value creation; staff lay-offs; team; Aggregates; Business continuity; Companies; Cost accounting; Engineering profession; Knowledge management; Mice; Recruitment; Safety; Time measurement;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Engineering Management Review, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0360-8581
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/EMR.2002.1167292
Filename
1167292
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