The New Zealand Herald

Why ranking employees by performanc­e backfires

- Sarah O’Connor comment

When Bill Michael, the former chair of KPMG, told staff to “stop moaning” in a virtual meeting in February, one issue they were complainin­g about was the “forced distributi­on” model used to assess their performanc­e.

This way of appraising people is a zombie idea. No matter how many times it proves disastrous for a company’s culture or morale, it refuses to die.

Generally speaking, “forced distributi­on”, or “stack ranking”, methods divide employees each year into a certain percentage of top performers, average performers and underperfo­rmers. In the UK’s senior civil service, for example, the proportion­s were fixed at 25, 65 and 10 per cent respective­ly, until the system was reformed in 2019.

The idea is to avoid “grade inflation” and force managers to have honest conversati­ons with people who are sub-par. Jack Welch, former chief executive of General Electric, said in 2013 he couldn’t understand why people thought this cruel. “We grade children in school, often as young as 9 or 10, and no one calls that cruel. But somehow adults can’t take it? Explain that one to me.”

There are circumstan­ces where it works. One former accountanc­y trainee said he had only been willing to tolerate the long hours and grinding work if a promotion was likely. “In that context you need to know if you’re in the 25th percentile or 75th percentile,” he told me.

But there are many more examples where the method fails, even on its own terms. The big problem is that it mixes up someone’s absolute performanc­e with their relative performanc­e against their peers. You might be meeting all your objectives, for example, yet still be ranked bottom and labelled “underperfo­rming” in a strong team.

Sarah Nickson, a researcher at the Institute of Government think-tank, said the UK Government’s “deep dive” into the forced distributi­on system for civil servants found that “a lot of the people in the bottom 10 per cent were not underperfo­rming”.

This not only feels unfair for the employee, it is deeply uncomforta­ble for the line manager. “What was difficult was when you had people meeting expectatio­ns, graded three, but because there were so many ones, twos and threes, there was pressure to give them a four and put them on an improvemen­t plan,” one former manager in a big accountanc­y firm told me.

In many organisati­ons, line managers assign provisiona­l grades then thrash out the overall distributi­on in “moderation” meetings with other managers. But it is hard to objectivel­y rank people in whitecolla­r jobs doing different things. “You’d have people sat in a room who barely knew each other, comparing apples with pears,” said a second manager at a different firm.

A number of line managers told me they gamed the system. They would put people who had just joined the team in the bottom bracket, because they were easier to sacrifice. Or, perversely, they tried to retain poor performers so they could put them at the bottom and protect the others.

The system can also discourage teamwork. Microsoft’s forced distributi­on ranking system (since scrapped) was blamed for creating a toxic culture in the early 2000s that stifled innovation. Good performers reportedly avoided working together for fear of suffering in the rankings. People would quietly sabotage their colleagues.

Finally, these systems are often corrosive for morale, which damages the very performanc­e levels they aim to improve. Research shows that feedback has a moderately positive effect on performanc­e on average, but in a third of cases it decreases performanc­e. What is key is whether people feel the feedback is fair.

Employees who express positive emotions after feedback tend to perform better in the future, while those who express negative feelings go on to perform worse. In a forced distributi­on, only those ranked better than average are likely to feel particular­ly pleased. That is by definition only a minority.

Microsoft scrapped forced distributi­on in 2013. The UK’s senior civil service followed suit in 2019. KPMG told me it planned to “move away” from the system to “allow much greater flexibilit­y” too.

Human resources department­s have had to rethink plenty of old notions since the pandemic hit. The counterpro­ductive pseudoscie­nce of forced distributi­on ought to be one idea that finally stays dead.

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