How would you like it if your spouse or significant other rated your performance, then made his/her findings known to friends and neighbors? In this fantasy wor...
How would you like it if your spouse or significant other rated your performance, then made his/her findings known to friends and neighbors? (That was supposed to be witty. Apologies if this question actually hits home.)
In this fantasy (we hope) world, you would naturally expect and hope that your performance would be rated as superior. As in able to leap tall buildings in a single bound, right? But what if you were rated less-than-satisfactory, as in inadequate, loser, what-was-I-thinking? Would you vow to get better, or would you really rather not even know.
For one thing, what traits, abilities, talents and potential liabilities would go into the most personal of personal ratings? How many points off for snoring.
For the past hundred years or so, Uncle Sam has been wrestling with how best to reward top performers, and to motivate people who need motivation.
The most recent effort — the Bush administration’s defense-oriented National Security Personnel System — was hailed as the solution. Millions were spent on training (using lots of outside contractors), changes, education and moving people from General Schedule grades into pay bands. Federal unions hated it from day one and convinced Congress to unravel it.
Millions are now being spent into squeezing people (many of whom got higher performance-based salaries) back into the old, appropriate GS mold. There are grievances and lawsuits galore.
A new, better, this-time-for-sure system is in the works. The question is: Will it work? Can any system in which humans rate other humans be made completely fair, to the point where those who don’t get straight As buy into it? Answer, probably not. Here’s some comments from been-there-done-that feds in response to Friday’s column on the subject:
“Federal job activity and results are difficult (but not impossible) to measure. I perform policy analysis work and my outcomes are difficult to quantify (How many papers did I write?, Were they 1 page or 50 pages?, Were they used?, What level of management read them?, etc.). I work for a federal agency that contracted with a ‘performance-based’ contractor to help with a reorganization and performance-measurement system. This company employed a number of MBA’s that specialized in quantitative analysis of business metrics (now there’s a mouthful for you!); they developed metrics that in the end, meant nothing as they were attempting to quantify qualitative activity.
“A car dealer can quantify the performance of its employees (How many cars did you sell? What was the profit margin?, etc.). The same is true for many jobs, many of which are not federal. How does the National Cancer Institute measure the effectiveness of a cancer researcher who has researched many cancer regimens that do not work? Did he fail or did some of his work lead to a breakthrough years later? Did his ‘failures’ eliminate some dead-end research path that no longer needs to be explored and thus save money in the long run? Such are the variables that make such performance measurement difficult.” D.S.
“Glad to be out of it.” Rick T.
NEARLY USELESS FACTOID
By Jack Moore
The full name of Cap’n Crunch, the avuncular sea-captain mascot of cereal fame, is Cap’n Horatio Magellan Crunch, according to MentalFloss.
MORE FROM FEDERAL NEWS RADIO
Postal bill amendment seeks to cut backlog ahead of USPS retirement ‘deluge’
An amendment to a Senate bill restructuring the U.S. Postal Service’s financial framework would institute new agency reporting requirements for retiring federal workers, anticipating a “deluge of retirees” from USPS.
Private-sector mentality to blame in GSA scandal, Cardin says
Fingers are pointing in many directions in the wake of the scandal at the General Services Administration. Rep. Mike Turner (R-Ohio) and Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) have expressed outrage at the “culture of waste,” but opinions on who’s to blame for that culture are as divided as ever along party lines.
Bill makes customer service part of feds’ evaluations
Customer service could be a part of federal employees’ performance evaluations if a new House bill passes. The provision is one of many proposals to boost customer service included in the Federal Customer Service Enhancement Act – or H.R. 538 – that passed out of a House committee last week.
Copyright © 2024 Federal News Network. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
Mike Causey is senior correspondent for Federal News Network and writes his daily Federal Report column on federal employees’ pay, benefits and retirement.
Follow @mcauseyWFED