The document discusses performance management in international environments. It outlines the objectives, definitions, importance, phases and issues related to managing employee performance across borders and cultures. Cultural differences can influence how performance is measured and managed in different countries.
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Week 8 Lecture - International Compensation
The document discusses performance management in international environments. It outlines the objectives, definitions, importance, phases and issues related to managing employee performance across borders and cultures. Cultural differences can influence how performance is measured and managed in different countries.
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MGTM15: Week 8
International Performance Management
Issue for consideration…
• Managing performance-it’s the same
the world over, isn’t it! Objectives • To appreciate changing perspectives on the importance and role of performance management (PM) in contemporary IEs
• To understand the nature and purpose of performance
management and performance appraisal in IEs, including the impact of cultural values on PM design, implementation and evaluation, and the characteristics of a successful PM system
• To outline the stages involved in designing a performance
management system in IEs What is International PM? Briscoe et al (2012: 344)
‘A designed, implemented and evaluated intervention of an
MNE for the purpose of managing the performance of a global workforce so that performance (at the individual, team, and organisational level) contributes to the attainment of strategic global objectives and results in overall MNE desired performance’. What is International PM? • PM traditionally been seen in terms of performance appraisal
• PM evolved away from this ‘appraisal’ model
• A comprehensive system of PM may incorporate other
initiatives: coaching, counselling, and performance-related pay
• IE will need to evaluate how employees are doing on
assignment, and how to maintain and improve performance Phases of PM • Performance Agreement: defining objectives, identifying development needs
• Performance Monitoring: reviewing performance
• Performance Reinforcement: recognising and rewarding
performance
• Performance Enhancement: coaching, counselling,
training and development A Performance Management Model PM in IHRM • Integrated set of techniques which have an independent existence under their own names, eg performance appraisal/PA (Lewis 1998)
• Bundle is at core- eg link to strategy, goals, feedback,
• In IEs, PM more complex as multiple boundaries-national,
cultural, functional, organisational Importance of PM • Fombrun et al (1984): goal of HRM to drive ‘performance’, as defined by corporate strategy
• Appraisal plays a crucial role in rewarding and incentivising
higher performance/informing the IE of employee training and development needs
• Sophisticated PM systems can generate useful information
on performance for informed placement, promotion, career development, training and development, reward and other decisions Importance of PM – 2
• PA also informs wider IE corporate strategy process, helping
organisations address:
• What should be our strategic focus/core competences?
• Should we diversify?
• Should we make acquisitions/mergers?
Importance of PM – 3
• Appraisal information helps specify/define what needs to be
done to what level to implement a strategy successfully • Helps identify necessary changes in skill- mix to implement long- term strategic plans • Helps address: • What do managers/staff need to do differently to make necessary strategic changes? • How can we align HR capabilities with strategic business goals? • What training and development is necessary to help an IE realise strategic goals? Importance of PM – 4 Helps organisations facilitate cultural change if staff appraised against set of organisational core competencies, framed in behavioural terms Helps define what meant by ‘strategy implementation’ at level of individual objectives and behaviour, making explicit what constitutes effective behaviour, and helping communicate shared vision of organisational purpose, values and expectations Helps sustain and enhance effective performance by clarifying what constitutes high performance/how employees need to achieve it, enhancing motivation Helps make accurate HRM decisions Common Purposes of PM Managerial Control: eg set/review objectives
Performance Improvement: what and how
Identify Training and Development Needs
Identify potential for promotion, secondment, talent
management…exit?
Basis for reward
Improves communication-dialogue with managers, stakeholders
Does PM Rhetoric Match the Promise? ‘Arguably the most contentious and least popular among those who are involved. Managers do not appear to like doing it, employees see no point in it, and personnel and human resource managers as guardians of the organisation’s appraisal policy and procedures have to stand by and watch their work fall into disrepute’ (Bratton and Gold, 1999:214) Grint (1993: 64): 'Rarely in the history of business can such a system have promised so much and delivered so little' PA remains contentious and unpopular; muddle and confusion still surrounds theory and practice Does PM Rhetoric Match the Promise? – 2 Does PM offer ‘the potential to reverse past trends, so that it is viewed less of a threat and a waste of time and more as the source of continuous dialogue between organisational members’ (Bratton and Gold 2017, 244)
PA seems inherently linked to management control
Barlow (1989, p500) ‘Institutionally elaborated systems of
management appraisal and development are significant rhetoric's in the apparatus of bureaucratic control‘ Performance management process in context
Brewster et al, 2022:250
Issues in International PM • Cultural differences – some collectivistic cultures may prefer team rather than individual appraisal: uncomfortable with direct face-to-face feedback or criticism
• Some high power – distance cultures may be
uncomfortable with feedback from direct reports
• Cultural differences in terms of attitudes to extrinsic
rewards, group performance, specific formal appraisal methods, employee involvement, the role of off-job behaviours, and attitudes to respect Issues in International PM – 2 Observability: in IEs, much behaviour is unobservable by headquarters; how much involvement should local subsidiary managers have?
Conflicts of loyalty between the HQ and subsidiary may
exist; should IEs foster dual allegiance?
Is it motivating to link performance and reward?
How easy is this in complex/multiple legal/employment
contexts, such as joint venture/different cultures? Issues in International PM – 3 What mix of organisational and individual performance criteria should be used?
Assignments may involve multiple goals: eg filling a
position/delivering results/developing individual for bigger role/transferring technology/mentoring and developing locals
Eg, volatile environments, separation of IE from employees
by time/distance, variable maturity/goals of different markets, difference between multi-domestic and global industries, mix of short/long-term measures Issues in International PM – 4 Additional dimensions: eg need for employees to act as envoys/diplomats; family circumstances; importance of interpersonal skills; cultural/language differences
Need to balance global consistency and local conditions
Requires local variations: single, standardised practice,
or divergent systems to reflect local conditions?
Who conducts PA, and how?
Issues in International PM – 5 The corporate HQ/local affiliate/regional HQ? conflicts?
What performance data should be used?
‘Objective/Subjective/goals and targets/Competence profiles?
Who counts as ‘international’?
All employees in IEs ‘international’, ‘thinking global’?
Examples of Cultural Influence: China • Power-distance and collectivism in particular seem to affect PM
• Chinese organisations increasingly adopting PM, but often
informal, with significant consideration given to issues of moral behaviour, ‘face’ and ‘guanxi’, especially in public sector.
• Lack of strategic HRM: appraisal as formality, subjectivity in
appraisal all remain challenges PM in Mexico • Appraisal rarely used as incentive for individual performance; managers tend to overrate performance.
• During economic downturns/downsizing of the 1980s/1990s,
firms linking rewards to performance evaluation suppressed level of rewards; used PA to downsize, leading employees to develop negative perceptions of PA
conflict PM in Mexico – 2 • Social relationships: intense communication and face to face interaction valued, so PA used for employee expression (eg to express career aspirations) rather than compensation
• Costs of employee dismissals encourage inaccurate
performance evaluations
• Some firms implemented modern PA practices, yet ‘the
effectiveness of these practices is determined by the country’s economy, work culture and organisational structures, all of which affect the purpose and acceptance of PA systems’ (Davila and Elvira 2008: 123) PM in Mexico – 3 • Individual merit-based PA often threatens culture of collectivism and group loyalty; employees ‘associate assessment with a threat to personal or private interests… rather than as a potential source for individual or collective development…some supervisors treat the process as a superficial artefact or an informal task to complete at the last minute, quickly and carelessly’ (Davila and Elvira 2008: 126) PM in India • Also shows influence of culture on PM: recent years have seen change
• Use of PM systems, once under-emphasised, increasing
• PM faces several challenges: transparency, linkages with
rewards, influence of plethora of labour laws
• Shifts from closed/confidential performance evaluations
towards open dialogue/discussion PM in India – 2 More qualitative, development-oriented PM incorporating peer evaluation (often web-based) now more common, especially in IT and private sector more generally
More emphasis on performance-based/merit pay linked
to performance evaluations: strongly data-driven, with little rated involvement, perhaps reflecting high power- distance
PM in local firms/public sector more affected by
hierarchical, power-oriented, top-down culture PM in UK • Less emphasis on precise overall rating, perhaps because of perceived ‘demotivating’ effects (Bach 2005) • Often use PA to identify training needs, but only minority use for reward decisions • Covers increasing proportion of workforce, not just managers, sales staff and professionals • Extended to many public services: universities 1980s, schools 1990s. • Company directors often excluded, despite concerns with corporate governance PM in UK – 2 Shifts from top-down ‘objectives’ in 1980s to more competence- based, development agenda in 1990s
Issues of values, person-organisation fit, mutuality and
engagement (Sparrow 2008)
Recent concern with strategy and coherence with other
agendas, eg Talent Management
Low uncertainty avoidance/low power distance facilitate joint
problem-solving/psychological contracting
Key challenges: work-life balance, employee diversity, and age
discrimination legislation PM in France • More hierarchical and conflict-intensive governance than Germany • Social factors, class, broad general education, technical knowledge and educational selection for the prestigious ‘’Grande Ecole’ system play greater role in career systems • French labour laws allow some flexibility in assessing performance, within merit-based, non-discriminatory framework • France: ‘moderately-regulated’ country, PM in Germany • ‘Highly regulated’ system: complex labour laws, contractual agreements with unions/co-determination
• Participation, consultation/information rights for workers:
works councils need to approve PMs changes
• Larger range of explicit legal/institutional factors affecting
PM: traditions of collective bargaining, co-determination/vocational training PM in Germany – 2 Greater employee input/consensus-building, long-term career focus/emphasis on specialised technical knowledge and expertise/‘technik’ Day-to day-informality with explicitly formalised roles, standards, criteria, regulated by co-determination Performance-based pay slower to gain acceptance, given emphasis on long-term goals and development Lower power-distance associated with employee input into objectives, openness, and informal dialogue between superior and subordinate Higher uncertainty-avoidance associated with highly- regulated work environment/formalised rules on PM PM in Germany – 3 Feedback: open confrontation/long-term orientation associated with long-term employment relations, seniority/relative lack of career mobility outside firm More northern ‘egalitarian’ tradition of Germany; legal expertise important German PM a strong ‘developmental’ role, but more modest role in performance-related pay, except in MNCs Greater internationalisation: adoption of more ‘Anglo- Saxon’ PM practices, often transferred from German foreign subsidiaries in process of ‘reverse diffusion’ Perlmutter (1969): International Orientations and PM • Ethnocentric: parent-country PMS designed/implemented by corporate HQ: standardisation, integration/economy of scale goals, but not cultural responsiveness goals. • Polycentric: locally-responsive PM systems taking cultural, institutional, market conditions into account: difficult to compare performance across different countries for TM, leadership development/succession planning • Regio-centric: regionally-standardised processes allow comparisons across region, facilitating intra-regional mobility;little standardisation or comparison between regions, creating ‘regional silos’ Performance Criteria: Organisation-Level
• Whole vs. part decisions
• Incomparable data • Volatility of environment: adapt • Separation by time/distance • Variable market maturity and goals • Eg multi-domestic vs. global industries • Simultaneous, different unit strategies? • ST focus on accounting measures Individual Level Criteria
• Additional Dimensions: eg envoys, diplomats,
families, interpersonal skills
• Recognise cultural/language differences
• Balanced Scorecard? Performance Appraisal
• Observation and judgment: evaluation and development
• Balance global consistency and local conditions: eg
local variations in PA
• Cultural differences: extrinsic rewards, group
performance, specific formal appraisal methods, employee involvement, off-job behaviours Other Issues in IPA