Here's how performance reviews work at Google
Jun 15, 2015, 20:38 IST
Performance reviews are a critical part of managing any business, but they're often time-consuming and ineffective.To help solve this problem, in the early 2000s, Google adopted an innovative internal grading system known as Objectives and Key Results, or OKRs.Employees set a goal for themselves and outline a series of quantifiable results that will help them achieve that objective. Google's CEO does the same for the entire company.OKRs are the first step in Google's performance-management process.In his book, "Work Rules!," Google's senior vice president of People Operations Laszlo Bock summarizes the rest of the process with a few key components.
Measuring performance
Googlers are rated by their managers on a five-point scale, from "needs improvement" to "superb."Soliciting peer feedback
Googlers and their managers select a group of peer reviewers that also includes employees who are junior to them.The peer reviewers are asked to list one thing the person they're reviewing should do more of and one thing the employee could do differently to have a greater impact on the company.Calibrating
Groups of managers meet and review all their employees' tentative ratings together. This process is designed to reduce managers' bias because they have to explain their decisions to each other.Advertisement
At the start of the meeting, managers are given a handout that lists potential biases, such as the recency effect, which refers to the tendency to disproportionately value an employees' latest behaviors.Keeping those cognitive stumbling blocks in mind, they decide on employees' final ratings.