The technology sector has consistently been ranked as the No. 1 industry with the highest turnover, and it comes down to the one thing that sets digital advertising apart from traditional advertising – metrics.

Metrics and KPIs are important in evaluating employee success, but using only the number of phone calls taken or emails sent often fails to present a full picture of what employees are achieving and the value they bring to the business.

In fact, these statistics and data points often foster
a culture that can promote efficiency and profitability but can hurt the bottom
line in deep and irreversible ways.

Employers are
well advised to ditch the metric-based evaluation approach and instead, opt for
a holistic review of employee performance if they want to create a culture that
empowers their employees and benefits business initiatives.

A zero-sum game

Company
cultures driven by metrics often play to the idea of “winners” and “losers” and
create a zero-sum game. While there are aspects of competitiveness that can be
used for positive motivation and encouragement, many of these zero-sum cultures
can drive employees to hide, rationalize, minimize, or cover up—all to avoid
failure.

This becomes especially complicated when metrics are introduced as a way of measuring this success. For example, if a company begins to measure success based on the number of customers an employee speaks to over the phone per week, the duration of the call, how many customers are onboarded, etc., this can lead to an unconscious realignment of goals that is often in direct conflict with overall business objectives.

Rather
than ensuring that each customer has their questions answered and a full
understanding of how to use the product or service, employees are now being incentivized
to speak to more customers and spend less time on the phone with them. As a
result, the quality of interaction goes down, but the frequency of low-quality interactions
skyrockets.

While
there are metrics that show specific insights into employee performance, it’s
important to remember that these metrics provide a very limited view of
“success”, and a holistic review is going to be far more insightful when
examining overall performance.

It’s worth noting that you can use these
metrics as indicators. Just be sure to combine them with other indicators for an
overall business health score.

Understanding people

Creating a positive company culture that enables your business (and bottom line) to thrive, starts with focusing on the deeper issues connected to how people feel and understanding how that impacts how they behave within a work environment

Cultures based on
a people-first approach enables employees to learn and grow through their
weaknesses, acknowledge shortcomings, and grow rather than unconsciously
expending energy to meet KPIs—many of which can often be misleading when it
comes to demonstrating actual value.

Understanding how
employees feel, and how they make others feel (both internally and externally)
can often prove to be more valuable than what is it they know.

There are three
central ideas that need to be considered when building a culture based on
people rather than numbers:

Invest in them and
they will invest in your clients

Understanding
and investing in employees’ goals and passions are an integral part of building
a company culture based on people rather than metrics. When employees feel that
their needs are being met, and that their goals and dreams are aligned with the
company’s overall success, they can focus their energy on making those goals a
reality.

Allow for learning

A key
tenant of creating a people-first culture is understanding that employees are,
in fact, human. Humans make mistakes, and employees will too. Allow for
learning experiences and reward those that make mistakes and then bounce back
with new solutions and stronger experience. Sometimes failure can be just as
important as success when it comes to learning and growing as a team. By establishing a non-punitive culture,
a company can then truly foster teamwork where employees learn from their
experiences in a positive way. The team then desires to improve, using creative
problem solving to ensure other team members avoid similar pitfalls.

Open and Honest
Communication

Providing and encouraging open communication, honest feedback, and complete transparency is an essential part of driving a successful culture that puts people first. In order to empower employees to achieve, they need to have a clear understanding of their responsibilities and what is expected of them, along with the freedom to share their ideas and opinions with managers and team members. Team members must feel enabled to provide feedback to their leadership in a respectful way so that the business can not only serve its clients, but team members too.

The post Performance management based on people not metrics appeared first on HR Morning.

Resources
Post Your Resume to 65+ Job Sites
Resume Service

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post