vonsteimel
Mechanical
- Oct 19, 2010
- 132
Greetings,
I've been trying to resolve an employee evaluation problem that I'm sure is common in any medium/large company.
At my company, employee evaluations are directly tied to raises. It starts once a year when, to leave out the complicated details, the accountant and the CEO decide on a lump sum of raises that can be distributed (i.e. 10K year.etc)
The supervisors then evaluate each of the employees that they supervise using a standard form, which results in a number score. This number score is then input into a formula which decides what percentage of the "lump sum" each employee will get.
The problem occurs when you have multiple supervisors conducting evaluations. Because supervisor "A" may be giving out a 4.5 average when supervisor "B" is giving out a 2.9 average. This problem is amplified by the fact that each score is going to have a direct effect on the amount of raise each employee will get.
Some companies go to a flat "across-the-board" type of raise but we don't want to go to such a system. We want to reward hard-work.
I assume this problem is fairly common. How do bigger companies solve this?
I have written a formula for "equalizing" or "curving" the scores. (See the attached file)
I wanted to see what other companies were doing & seek suggestions before I implement this.
Thanks,
VS
I've been trying to resolve an employee evaluation problem that I'm sure is common in any medium/large company.
At my company, employee evaluations are directly tied to raises. It starts once a year when, to leave out the complicated details, the accountant and the CEO decide on a lump sum of raises that can be distributed (i.e. 10K year.etc)
The supervisors then evaluate each of the employees that they supervise using a standard form, which results in a number score. This number score is then input into a formula which decides what percentage of the "lump sum" each employee will get.
The problem occurs when you have multiple supervisors conducting evaluations. Because supervisor "A" may be giving out a 4.5 average when supervisor "B" is giving out a 2.9 average. This problem is amplified by the fact that each score is going to have a direct effect on the amount of raise each employee will get.
Some companies go to a flat "across-the-board" type of raise but we don't want to go to such a system. We want to reward hard-work.
I assume this problem is fairly common. How do bigger companies solve this?
I have written a formula for "equalizing" or "curving" the scores. (See the attached file)
I wanted to see what other companies were doing & seek suggestions before I implement this.
Thanks,
VS