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Derek Irvine

Globoforce

Senior Vice President of Global Strategy

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Blog: Would you consider crowdsourcing staff performance feedback?

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Recognise This! — You can’t have a meaningful discussion about performance, goals, and successes in an environment of fear, dread and anxiety.
How do you feel about performance reviews? Personally, I think the annual performance review (as most commonly implemented) is broken.
 
It’s too infrequent, too fraught with anxiety and fear (for the manager as well as the employee), and too ineffective at doing what it is supposed to do – deliver solid, actionable praise and feedback on employee performance for a year’s worth of work (not just the work completed within the last week or so).
 
What’s the solution? I recently shared two case studies from companies that kicked the annual review to the kerb quite successfully. But the answer really isn’t as simple as that.
 
One benefit of the annual review is it forces managers to have conversations with employees about their work. But everyone hates and dreads them. And if you go into a meeting full of fear, dread and hate, are you really in any position to hear what is being said in a constructive way?
 
Of course not. Several peers of mine from various organisations providing HR services chimed in on this topic in an article appearing today from SHRM: “Inviting the Masses to Rate Employee Performance” (Membership required for access).
 
Crowdsourcing
 
In the article I speak in favour of crowdsourcing feedback and performance, commenting: “It’s hard to see the downside to crowdsourcing because it’s tremendously important to give employees a voice."
 
Another commenter voiced concern about inappropriate comments and passive-aggressive behaviour, but I don’t think this should preclude people from considering crowdsourcing feedback. As I say in the article: “It’s the same as inappropriate comments in an email or team meeting. There are HR processes for people who don’t act with integrity.”
 
This idea is very different from 360 degree feedback, a difference aptly explained by Scott Erker, senior vice president of DDI: “360 is a single point in time and is typically structured around a competency model. People answer questions only in that structure. It’s a process that sits in a box. Crowdsourcing, on the other hand, is always on, every day, and it lacks structure. It’s going to be much more organic.”
 
How do you get to crowdsourcing feedback and performance? Social performance management is an important factor, allowing anyone – peers, colleagues and managers alike – to share their detailed feedback and praise on the achievements and behaviours of their fellow employees.
 
Folding this informal crowd-sourced feedback into more formal processes is the trick that brings value and insight into the true performance of employees.
 

Do you see a place for crowdsourcing feedback or do you prefer the more formal annual review process? 

Derek Irvine is senior vice president of global strategy at HR software provider, Globoforce.
 

We really welcome any and all contributions from the community, so please feel free to share your views and opinions with us, your colleagues and peers via our blogs section.

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One Response

  1. great post

    Social media provides you with tools to make crowdsourcin engaging and fruitful for both parties involved. Use gamification, contests and mulitmedia content to get your online community motivatd to help you find the answers you are looking for. Make sure whatever platform you use allows you to capture information effectively. 

     

     

    — Dave Evans, commercial director at accessplanit, specialising in training administration software and learning management system.

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Derek Irvine

Senior Vice President of Global Strategy

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