Skip to main content

The Practice of Human Resource Management in Canada: Nine: Performance Management, Discipline, and Termination

The Practice of Human Resource Management in Canada
Nine: Performance Management, Discipline, and Termination
    • Notifications
    • Privacy

“Nine: Performance Management, Discipline, and Termination” in “The Practice of Human Resource Management in Canada”

Chapter 9 Performance Management, Discipline, and Termination

Donald Babcock worked for 12 years as the inventory control manager at a Canadian Tire franchise owned by his father in Bedford, Nova Scotia. Upon his retirement, Babcock’s father sold the franchise to Donald Weickert. Weickert promoted Babcock to the position of general manager on the recommendation of Babcock’s father. Babcock did not receive a job description. He performed his duties for seven months without incident. He did not receive a performance review during that time. Because of a concern about internal theft unrelated to Babcock, Weickert hired an investigator to determine the source of the problem. In the report on the theft issue, the investigator also noted that department managers did not have confidence in Babcock, and this was a serious issue in the store.

Weickert met with Babcock to discuss the severity of the concern and instructed him to meet with the managers, who were to advise Babcock on how to improve his performance. He was told to report back to Weickert with a plan and timeline to fix the issues, which he did. Weickert responded that he would keep an eye on the situation. Shortly after, Babcock went on vacation. While he was gone, Weickert met with the department managers, who agreed that Babcock was not performing his duties adequately. The group decided to give him 45 days to demonstrate his ability to perform the job satisfactorily. Nevertheless, after Babcock returned from vacation, Weickert, on the advice of his lawyer, instead dismissed Babcock for cause. Babcock sued and, on appeal, won. The court ruled that Weickert had not provided sufficient opportunity for Babcock to improve his performance and awarded Babcock the equivalent of five months of salary and his legal costs.1

On the surface, this appears to be a story of an employer acting too quickly to terminate an employee with poor performance. But it was more than that. Weickert’s mistakes started much earlier than his decision to dismiss Babcock. At the outset, Weickert failed to conduct an appropriate selection process (Chapter 6) before he promoted Babcock. He also failed to establish a clear job description (Chapter 3) and performance review system. That system would have monitored Babcock’s performance and identified shortcomings earlier, thereby preventing concerns from festering and increasing the chances for performance improvement. If Babcock’s performance did not improve, then such a system also would have provided evidence that the employer could have relied on to justify the termination. Finally, as the court pointed out, Weickert did not provide Babcock with sufficient opportunity to correct his unsatisfactory performance.

This case highlights the importance of properly managing workers’ performance. As stated in Chapter 2, in an employment relationship, workers agree to give their time to do work directed by the employer in exchange for pay. How productive workers are and how well they perform their work depends, in large part, on the degree to which employers provide effective direction, support, supervision, and evaluation. Performance management is the process by which organizations maintain and improve employee performance through an integrated set of actions, including setting expectations, providing feedback, evaluating and correcting performance, and, if necessary, imposing discipline. As the Weickert case demonstrates, this should be an ongoing process that begins at hiring and involves multiple forms of engagement. Only at the end of the process, if other actions have not succeeded, do questions of discipline and termination come into play. In this chapter, we examine the performance management process and discuss the difficult area of discipline and termination.

Performance Management Purposes, Processes, and Systems

There are three purposes of engaging in performance management:

  • • Strategic: Managing performance helps organizations to achieve the goals set out in their overall strategic plans. Aligning workers’ performance with overall organizational strategy requires establishing clear expectations and feedback systems.
  • • Administrative: Performance management and, in particular, evaluation inform many organizational decisions, including the allocation of pay increases, promotions, and variable pay as well as restructuring, discipline, and termination.
  • • Developmental: Performance management should help workers to improve their performance and develop their skills and abilities to increase their job satisfaction and effectiveness. This can include identifying areas requiring additional training.

Organizations often use performance management only for administrative purposes. A more effective approach integrates the three purposes into an ongoing process. It is useful to view performance management as a five-step process (see Figure 9.1).

  1. 1. Define expectations and goals: Identify and convey which behaviours and outcomes are expected from workers and how their work fits into the organization’s goals. This step should be in alignment with overall organizational strategy.
  2. 2. Provide ongoing feedback: Provide immediate and informal feedback and coaching during day-to-day supervision to shape day-to-day performance.
  3. 3. Undertake performance appraisal and evaluation: Conduct periodic formal evaluation of worker performance to identify strengths and areas that need improvement.
  4. 4. Determine outcomes: Allocate rewards (e.g., performance bonus), consequences (e.g., warning letter), or future actions (e.g., training) to recognize, correct, or improve performance.

This flowchart shows the performance management process from defining expectations through to planning improvements.

Figure 9.1 Performance management process

  1. 5. Plan improvements: Discuss workers’ future development and include planning for career advancement, achieving personal goals, or improving effectiveness and satisfaction.

It is important to keep in mind that, while these steps usually occur in a sequence, they can overlap one another. Each step addresses a different purpose in performance management. In any particular context, one or more of the steps can take on a larger or smaller significance, but it is a mistake to omit or skip any of the steps since together they create a complete process of performance management.

This five-step process can be integrated into organizational processes by establishing a performance management system. This entails developing policies and practices, providing resources, and actively managing the processes necessary to make performance management effective. A performance management system is most effective when clearly linked to the organizational strategy such that, if strategic goals shift, the new expectations will be reflected in the system. It also includes developing and communicating new expectations to workers, ensuring that their behaviours and outcomes change, and updating evaluation criteria and processes to reflect the new goals.

An effective performance management system should recognize the needs of employees as well as those of the organization. Not recognizing employees’ needs can result in workers who ignore or sabotage the system. For example, if workers think that they cannot possibly meet the standards on which they are to be evaluated, then they might choose to ignore the goals implicit in a system of evaluation. Or they might choose to game the performance system. For example, if advertising salespeople are monetarily rewarded based on gross sales and the target is set too high, then they might sell ads to clients whom they suspect or know will not pay their bills. This behaviour lets the salespeople hit the sales target but does not contribute to the underlying organizational goal (probably related to increasing revenue). This possibility also suggests that performance management processes need to be periodically evaluated to ensure that they are working as designed. Performance management systems also need to respect whatever workers’ rights exist in common or statutory law or have been negotiated in a collective agreement by a union.

Defining Expectations

Workers can perform satisfactorily only if they know which behaviours and outcomes their employer seeks. There are two main types of expectations.

  • • Task expectations focus on the specific functions, outcomes, and demands related directly to a worker’s job. They can consist of quantitative goals (e.g., sales targets expressed with a dollar value). They should focus on elements of a job within a worker’s control and be achievable. Task expectations should be informed by organizational goals but need to speak specifically to the worker’s job.
  • • Contextual expectations address aspects of a worker’s job performance that contribute to broader organizational goals, such as fostering better teamwork, improving interdepartmental communication, or achieving better work-life balance. Contextual expectations should reflect a worker’s relative position in the organization. For example, a front-line worker is unlikely to be able to influence corporate-level behaviour (e.g., work-life balance) but can contribute to how clients experience an organization’s service.

Performance management systems flounder when expectations are not communicated clearly. For example, workers might be expected to “just know” what is important to do. Yet, if no one has told them the importance of being a team player or exercising discretion to make every customer happy, then it is not surprising that they might simply focus on doing their jobs well or carefully following organizational rules. Feature Box 9.1 discusses how to create a well-developed set of expectations.

Feature Box 9.1 Developing a Set of Performance Expectations

The underlying logic of performance management systems is that organizations can influence how workers act by identifying important behaviours and outcomes. A major challenge in developing such systems is focusing workers’ attention on the right behaviours and outcomes in the right ways. For example, as shown in the sales target example above, targets set too high focus workers’ attention but do not necessarily generate desirable behaviour. Developing a set of expectations that results in the kinds of performance that organizations desire is tricky work.

A good place to start this process is by identifying the outcomes or behaviours specific to a job that help an organization to meet its goals. For some jobs, this is a straightforward task. For example, an organization that operates an assembly line might require assembly line workers to (1) attend work punctually every day and (2) meet a daily production quota with (3) no defects. Such work performance is relatively easy to understand and assess.

It can be more difficult to identify desired behaviours in jobs with greater scope, complexity, or variability. For these jobs, it can be useful to emphasize general outcomes that the organization wants workers to achieve. For example, a labour relations officer (LRO) for an organization might need to make decisions on which grievances to settle and which to advance to arbitration (see Chapter 10). This decision can involve complicated trade-offs, all of which entail costs to the organization. An organization might evaluate an LRO’s performance (in part) by assessing how well the worker “managed grievances to minimize costs.” This gives the LRO clear direction (keep costs low) and a basis on which to assess performance. But it also gives the LRO discretion to advance or settle grievances based on the specifics of each case. For example, it might be worthwhile for an organization to spend $30,000 to settle a grievance rather than spend $80,000 to fight it (and potentially still lose and have to pay a settlement).

Sometimes it also makes sense to consider outcomes that organizations want to avoid. For example, a personal care attendant (PCA) in a long-term care centre might be assigned a variety of duties (e.g., attending to the feeding, toileting, and dressing needs of residents on a floor). But these demands sometimes might compete with the worker’s attention (i.e., cleaning up residents who have soiled themselves when all residents must be brought to the dining area for lunch). The complexity caused by competing priorities can make it difficult to specify the outcome or behaviour that a worker must meet. In these situations, it might make more sense to give workers the flexibility to juggle the demands and provide them with guidance on how they should prioritize the work. For example, PCAs might be directed to prioritize work as follows: toileting, feeding, and dressing residents. But this set of priorities can come with some caveats about outcomes to avoid. For example, PCAs should organize their work such that no resident’s feeding is delayed longer than one hour past normal meal times unless other residents have soiled themselves.

A second challenge with developing performance expectations is the tendency to ignore citizenship behaviours in the workplace. Such behaviours are enacted by workers to maintain the physical and psychological environment necessary for effective organizational functioning.2 Often, but not always, these behaviours fall outside official job descriptions and performance management systems. In fact, citizenship behaviours often can be identified by asking which tasks in the workplace need to be done but are no one’s responsibility. For example, dealing with dirty dishes and counters in a staff lunchroom, providing emotional support, and replenishing toner and paper in printers are important tasks that are often no one’s responsibility. As discussed in Feature Box 3.5, these sorts of citizenship tasks are often performed by women.

Citizenship behaviours are relevant to performance expectations because workers have a finite amount of time and energy to allocate among job demands. Identifying certain behaviours and expectations can cause workers to reallocate their efforts. Assuming that workers are not willing and able to work harder, they might choose to reduce their citizenship behaviours (often not even a part of their jobs). This withdrawal of effort can create operational and interpersonal friction. Consider, for example, the impact that removing necessary supports might have, whether it be an empty stapler with no spare staples available or no one with whom to talk through problems and frustrations.

A similar dynamic can occur with tasks in a job description but left out of an assessment. For example, as set out in Chapter 2, clear and thoroughly documented OHS paperwork (e.g., a hazard assessment) might meet important organizational needs (demonstrating due diligence). But the completion of a hazard assessment might be burdensome and seen by workers as unnecessary. If an organization implemented a performance management system that ignores such tasks, then workers might rationally choose to expend less effort on this task. This can open the employer to liability should there be an injury or OHS inspection.

In this way, performance management can have unintended consequences as different organizational actors adjust their behaviour in response to it. For this reason, HR practitioners need to consider the potential risks and rewards of altering existing performance management systems. This is particularly the case when material rewards are attached, changed, or eliminated. An important question to ask is whether the potential reward from a change outweighs the risks created by making the change.

Ongoing Feedback

Providing workers with ongoing feedback about their performance means that concerns can be addressed in a timely manner. Such feedback is often provided by supervisors engaged in day-to-day observation, engagement, and direction of workers. The resulting discussions can identify areas for improvement as well as recognize accomplishments and identify paths for further development. The strength of ongoing feedback is its immediacy. It takes place on the spot, close to the moment when a worker exhibits a behaviour or achieves an outcome. This makes feedback concrete and prevents the development of undesirable work habits. This immediacy can also create challenges. Supervisors and workers might find it difficult to provide or receive feedback effectively if emotions are running high. Ongoing feedback is also a useful source of information for later formal performance assessment and evaluation and can be understood usefully as an informal version of this subsequent step in the performance management process.

Supervisor feedback is commonly called coaching. The term coaching emphasizes the importance of teaching and encouraging workers to improve their performance. It is noteworthy, however, that coaching tends subtly to assert that everyone is on the same team and has the same interest in “winning.” This can obscure legitimate conflicting interests between workers and employers as well as the power dynamic in a supervisor-worker relationship. Workers might not want to “improve” their performance (e.g., produce more) if such an improvement makes their day-to-day experience worse (e.g., tires them out, increases their risk of injury, raises long-term expectations).

Another challenge with informal feedback is that supervisors are often inadequately trained on how to provide ongoing feedback. Often individuals are promoted to supervisory tasks based on their experience or performance in a job, not on their skill as a supervisor. Supervisors might be reluctant to engage in conflicts with their subordinates over their performance. Organizations might also have too few supervisors for them to provide an adequate level of oversight and feedback. As a result, supervisors can be either too passive or too aggressive in their supervision and provide feedback that is either too detailed or insufficient. It is important to be mindful that supervision can also be abusive. This can reflect an innocent error, be wilful, or even be a management strategy (see Feature Box 9.2).

Feature Box 9.2 Bullying as a Management Strategy

There is a power imbalance between a worker and a supervisor. That power imbalance can result in supervisors making observations, criticisms, and demands that workers might find unreasonable or even harassing. As shown in Chapter 2, harassment and bullying from supervisors are significant health, safety, and human rights issues.3

Bullying is usually seen as acts or verbal comments that could “mentally” hurt or isolate a person in the workplace. Sometimes bullying can involve negative physical contact as well. Bullying usually involves repeated incidents or a pattern of behaviour intended to intimidate, offend, degrade, or humiliate a particular person or group of people. It has also been described as the assertion of power through aggression.4

Key in the definition of bullying is the use of power to inflict harm on someone. This means that bullying is often perpetrated by those who hold power in the workplace, such as managers, supervisors, or employers. It is important to recognize that, like violence and harassment generally, power is at the centre of the issue. Bullying can take many forms. Some forms—such as insults, threats, and violence—are obvious. Other forms of bullying can be more insidious, such as the manipulation of work schedules, the assignment of tasks, or evaluations to make a worker’s work life more difficult. The effects of bullying on the victim can be severe, causing significant mental, physical, and emotional distress.

It is tempting to perceive bullying as an individual problem attributable to the occasional “bad actor” in the workplace. Bullying, however, can become part of an HR strategy and thus embedded in a workplace culture. Historically, bullying was a common method that employers used to control workers and maximize profits.5 Today’s employers can also benefit from systematic bullying if it increases productivity. A study of workplace bullying suggests that strategies aimed at cost containment and productivity boosts can lead to increased bullying: “Rapid and radical management-led and cost- and productivity-driven change may create workplace climates that are conducive to and may be aided by increased workplace bullying by managers.”6

Although anyone can become a target for bullying, certain groups in the workplace are more likely to be subject to bullying behaviour. In particular, women and workers of colour are more vulnerable to bullying because it can weaponize long-standing stereotypes and prejudices.7 Consider the popularity of crude jokes aimed at women and visible minorities (mean-spirited, targeted humour can be a form of bullying). These groups are not only more likely to experience bullying, but research also shows that multiple forms of harassment lead to compounded negative health effects for the victims.8

Effective ongoing feedback focuses on worker improvement and development and avoids attributions of blame or too much focus on errors or mistakes. There should be opportunities for workers to express their perspectives on what has happened and suggest ways that their performance can improve. These suggestions can reveal barriers to performance outside the worker’s control. Ongoing feedback can also be varied based on a worker’s mastery of job tasks. A supervisor might need to be very hands on to walk the new worker through job tasks. As the worker learns them, the supervisor can become less involved and more passive in making observations. This change is intended to ensure that the worker feels supported when learning and trusted when performing adequately. Training supervisors how to provide feedback effectively can improve how they handle these daily interactions.

Large organizations can become focused on the formal aspects of performance management, such as annual performance appraisals. Too much attention to the formal aspects of the process can cause organizations to overlook the importance of day-to-day interactions between supervisors and workers in improving worker performance. If handled appropriately, then ongoing feedback can offer significant benefits to both the worker and the employer.

Performance Appraisal and Evaluation

Many organizations regularly and formally evaluate the performance of their workers. This might entail quarterly, bi-annual, or annual performance evaluations. There are several approaches to performance appraisal. Selecting among them requires considering the nature of the work being evaluated, the workplace structure, and an organization’s strategic goals as well as any provisions negotiated in a collective agreement by the union. Many organizations utilize more than one approach. Regardless of which approach is taken, the criteria by which workers are evaluated should be linked to established expectations and organizational goals as discussed in Feature Box 9.1.

The simplest approach to performance appraisal is to compare workers with each other to determine their relative ranking from best to worst. This comparative approach can be done in several ways. Supervisors or managers can simply examine the performances of all workers under their supervision and rank them from top to bottom. Slightly more complicated approaches include the following.

  • • Alternation ranking: A supervisor alternates between identifying the best and the worst performers. These workers are then placed at the top and bottom, respectively, of a ranked list.
  • • Forced-distribution ranking: The supervisor allocates each worker into one of several categories (e.g., above average, average, and below average). There is a fixed number of spots in each category, which forces the supervisor to differentiate among the workers (even if the actual differences between any two workers are minimal).
  • • Paired comparison: Workers are compared with every other worker in pairs and given a point every time they are determined to be higher performers. The workers are then ranked based on the number of points that they earn.

The strengths of a comparative approach are its simplicity and directness. The process is easy to implement and forces the manager to make clear decisions about performance. The result is a clear picture of relative performance within the organization. The weaknesses of a comparative approach are that it is highly subjective and can be perceived as unfair. Decisions can be shaped by supervisors’ prejudices and opinions unrelated to job criteria, meaning that this approach can perpetuate inequalities and encourage favouritism. Comparisons can also create divisions within an organization since workers see each other as competitors rather than teammates.

The comparative approach also might not adequately account for intergroup differences. For example, the worst-performing member of a well-performing work group might still be performing better than the best-ranked worker in a different and dysfunctional work group. This approach also, by design, requires someone to be the worst performer in a group, even if that person is working at or above the expectations required of the position. The comparative approach is best utilized in settings where the performance expectations are easily quantified, such as sales figures or production quotas. The criteria used to rank workers should also be transparent to all workers such that everyone is clear on what basis they are being ranked. It is also more effective in smaller work settings since ranking becomes cumbersome and imprecise as group size increases.

An alternative to performance evaluation is the attribute approach. It measures the extent to which a worker possesses certain characteristics or traits desired by the employer. For example, an organization might identify attributes important for a job and in achieving its goals (e.g., leadership, teamwork, independence, interpersonal skills, creativity, problem solving), and supervisors can then rate workers on how well they exhibit each trait. The result is a graphic rating scale, which visually lays out each attribute and the worker’s score on it, usually on a five-point scale (e.g., 1 for poor, 5 for excellent). The scale can be supplemented with qualitative comments. The attribute approach works best in situations in which outcomes are hard to measure or define and the job emphasizes the so-called soft skills required with human interaction. This approach also requires a high degree of one-on-one discussion to place the attributes and the scores in context.

The strength of this approach is that it is individualized, and the worker can easily see areas of strength and weakness. Workers are evaluated on their own terms and not rated compared with others. However, using attributes means that the evaluation is based not on what the worker does but on which personality traits or behaviours the worker displays. The link between possessing an attribute and a worker’s job performance can sometimes be tenuous. For example, someone might display good interpersonal skills but not make much of a contribution to achieving organizational goals. The approach can also become subjective. Attributes are usually vague and the differences between scores hard to define. Considerations unrelated to the job can also creep into the evaluation, creating issues similar to those of comparative approaches. If the attributes are not clearly linked to the job, then the process can lose credibility among workers.

The behavioural approach attempts to overcome the issue of vagueness in the attribute approach by identifying specific desired behaviours and actions. They should be those central to strong performance. Workers’ performance is then evaluated on those behaviours. At its simplest, a behavioural performance appraisal involves the evaluator identifying and recording specific examples of desired (or undesired) behaviours by the worker. This technique, often called critical incidents, provides direct and relevant evaluation and is effective at offering feedback for performance improvement.

Building upon critical incidents are behaviourally anchored rating scales (BARS). Clusters of critical incidents are compiled to create behavioural anchors that define different elements of performance. The BARS process has three key steps.

  1. 1. The evaluator identifies the key performance dimensions of the job (e.g., interactions with customers, store cleanliness, timeliness, etc.) from gathered critical incidents.
  2. 2. The behaviours most representative of good and bad performance on each dimension are identified as behavioural anchors.
  3. 3. The evaluator rates the worker on a seven- or nine-point scale for each dimension based on the behavioural anchors.

An example of a behaviourally anchored rating scale is provided in Table 9.1. This BARS focuses on a worker’s attention to store cleanliness. The worker would be rated on this scale and several other scales addressing key performance dimensions. The worker’s overall performance score is the total of the ratings for all of the scales on which the worker is rated. The ratings for several workers can then be easily compared, either on specific dimensions or overall.

Table 9.1 BARS for store cleanliness

Score

Performance anchor

7

Regularly tidies stock, reshelves material, mops floor, and throws away garbage throughout the shift

6

A few times a shift will tidy, reshelve, and clean store floor

5

When there are no customers will tidy stock and reshelve items

4

At beginning and end of shift will perform specific cleaning tasks

3

During some shifts will perform some cleaning tasks

2

When asked by supervisor will perform cleaning tasks

1

Does not address untidy stock and ends shift without performing cleaning tasks

The advantage of BARS is the close association between the evaluation and the tasks and functions performed in the job. Workers can clearly see expectations against which their behaviour is rated. BARS can also lead to specific feedback on improving performance. There is a risk of disagreement emerging if the worker does not agree with the rating or believes that the behavioural anchor is not reflective of the job duties. Also, this method can only rate directly observable elements of the job. Attitudes, thinking work, and other non-observable behaviours and actions cannot be effectively evaluated so are not considered. Behavioural approaches are best used with jobs that require tangible, explicit behaviours not prone to misinterpretation.

The final approach to performance review is the results approach, which focuses on measurable results of a job or group of jobs. Management by objective (MBO) links performance evaluation to previously established performance goals. At the beginning of the process, the organization’s senior managers establish a set of goals for the organization to achieve. These goals are then translated by lower levels of managers into goals for their departments that will help to achieve the broad organizational goals. These goals are then communicated to individual workers expected either to accomplish individual goals or to work toward departmental goals. Periodically (usually annually), workers’ performance is measured to determine if and how well the workers have met the goals.

The balanced scorecard method evolved out of MBO. It places goals into four categories of performance: financial, customer, processes, and learning. A similar process of goal setting and evaluation takes place. The balanced scorecard aims to be a more refined approach to setting goals by requiring managers (and workers) not only to identify productivity or financial goals but also to consider multiple dimensions of organizational performance. Results-based performance evaluation is best suited to larger, more complex organizations in which aligning the work of different parts of the organization is important. It might also be more appropriate for jobs that have a high degree of complexity or aspects that are difficult to observe directly.

Results-based performance evaluation methods were developed with the goal of creating a more objective, error-free process of review. Clear articulation of and agreement with goals establish a clear basis for evaluation. This approach has the advantage of including aspects of performance not easily observed. It also directly links individual performance to the organization’s broader strategic goals, which should improve organizational performance. The key challenge with this approach is that it can be very top down because senior managers set the goals that start the process. If the goals are set without consultation with workers, then they might not buy in to the process. A second challenge is setting the appropriate goals. If they are too easy to achieve, then the evaluation is meaningless. Conversely, if the goals are too hard to achieve (or their achievement is not within the control of the workers), then they might give up or exhibit gaming behaviours.

Gathering Performance Information

All performance evaluation approaches require accurate information about workers and what they have done. There are five primary sources of performance information.

  • • Supervisors: The most common sources of information are observations made by a worker’s direct supervisor. Supervisors understand the job requirements, observe the worker performing the job, and typically keep and/or have access to records of the worker’s performance.
  • • Co-workers: Other workers performing the same job or working at the same level in the organization might have more opportunities to observe a worker in action regularly and have the benefit of interactions not available to a manager. Peers have excellent knowledge of the job and its requirements, but they also understand the challenges and barriers that someone might confront in the job.
  • • Subordinates: Subordinates are well positioned to provide insights into how a supervisor interacts with workers as well as other aspects of their performance. Using feedback from subordinates can incentivize supervisors to prioritize employees’ satisfaction over other aspects of their jobs, such as productivity.
  • • Workers: Asking workers to self-evaluate their performance can reveal useful insights into why they are performing at a specific level. Self-assessment can increase workers’ engagement and offer workers the opportunity to identify personal strengths, weaknesses, and areas to improve.
  • • Customers or clients: For workers who interact with others as a part of their jobs (e.g., retail or health-care workers), it is possible to solicit feedback from those whom they serve. Satisfaction can highlight both areas of strength and areas for improvement. Some organizations also solicit feedback for so-called internal customers (i.e., parties within an organization who utilize the services of a specific unit or department). That said, customers often lack important information about the job, and their perceptions can be shaped by factors outside the worker’s control (e.g., long lines, high prices).
  • • Technology: Some organizations might have the ability to gather performance-related information from the equipment that workers use. For example, delivery drivers might use GPS-enabled, hand-held devices that track parcel deliveries. This information can be used to assess how productive workers are as well as to monitor their locations. Similarly, call centre technology can produce data tracking the speed of call resolution as well as recording the interaction for subsequent analysis.

Increasingly, organizations are choosing to gather performance information from multiple sources in an effort to gather the most accurate information and to minimize the impact of bias or error. A 360-degree feedback process, discussed in Feature Box 9.3, has become a popular approach to using multiple sources. Whether using just one source or multiple sources, it is important that the selected sources are appropriate for the job being evaluated.

Feature Box 9.3 360-Degree Evaluation

The 360-degree feedback process is designed to draw performance data from multiple sources to create a “full view” of a worker’s performance. The worker performs a self-review using a survey (which can be trait based, behaviour based, results based, or a combination). The same survey is provided to the worker’s supervisor, subordinates, peers, and other relevant parties (e.g., customers or vendors), who submit their feedback anonymously. The results are compiled and shared with the worker, along with recommendations for improvement.

Originally, 360-degree evaluation was intended for use with senior managers for the purposes of career development and self-improvement. Over time, its use has expanded to a wide range of positions and is now often utilized for administrative and HR decisions. Advocates identify several advantages of 360-degree feedback, including increasing worker self-awareness of strengths and weaknesses, using multiple sources of data to understand a worker’s performance, increasing productivity, identifying gaps in training, and increasing organizational transparency.9

Although 360-degree feedback sounds like a good idea, it is useful to consider the assumptions embedded in its mechanisms. The most obvious assumption is that everyone’s feedback on a worker’s performance is valid and reliable. This is clearly untrue. Research has shown that co-workers often do not know enough about those being rated, their job duties, or the circumstances in which their duties were carried out to offer valid evaluation.10 This risk can be attenuated by carefully selecting evaluators, although doing so increases costs and might be practically difficult (e.g., how would a supervisor know if co-worker X is qualified to assess co-worker Y?).

A second assumption is that anonymously given feedback is an effective way to change behaviour in a positive way. In order to be anonymous, much of the detail and context of the feedback has to be stripped away. This can leave workers struggling to understand when or how they should behave differently. Vague feedback might not be very effective in motivating behavioural change that improves organizational performance. It might also incentivize workers to behave in ways that they expect to result in positive feedback rather than in ways that might achieve organizational goals.

For their part, those who give feedback can be skeptical about whether it is actually anonymous, particularly in smaller organizations or work groups. This can make them less forthright in their evaluations. There is also a tendency, when workers are not held accountable for their feedback, to provide overly negative ratings.11 In general, 360-degree evaluation appears to work best when used only for developmental purposes. Its shortcomings become amplified when applying it to pay raises, promotions, and other administrative matters.

Error in Performance Review

Every method of measuring performance is vulnerable to error. The consequences of error in performance assessment are that our evaluations are inaccurate. This can lead us incorrectly to take (or to refrain from taking) action, which in turn might result in serious consequences for an organization. For example, if a supervisor fails to notice poor performance, then it is unlikely that the worker’s performance will change, and thus organizational performance will be lower. Other workers can also be demotivated by poor performance that is not remedied. Conversely, if a supervisor fails to notice good performance and thus fails to allocate expected rewards (e.g., praise, bonuses), then a worker can become demotivated, cease the desirable behaviour, and possibly begin to look for work elsewhere.

There are many potential sources of error.

  • • Validity or reliability error: As discussed in Chapter 3, validity and reliability are important aspects of any organizational decision-making process. A valid measure of performance considers factors relevant to performance. A reliable measure of performance consistently measures the same thing across different workers, jobs, and times. Issues with reliability and validity can occur when HR practitioners do not adequately operationalize the concepts that they are trying to measure. For example, a worker’s ability to operate effectively in a team might be measured by assessing that worker’s contributions to the team’s performance. In contrast, asking whether the worker “gets along well with others” is not a valid measure of that worker’s teamwork ability. Similarly, assessing revenue generated by workers from sales against historical revenues might be an appropriate measure normally but would not be a reliable measure during a pandemic (when sales are affected by factors unrelated to workers’ performance). Sometimes measures are appropriate for one purpose but not for others, as shown in Feature Box 9.4.
  • • Lack of clarity: One of the most common errors is establishing standards or creating measures that are not clear. The “gets along well with others” example above is an unclear standard or measure. What does “gets along well” mean in this context? A more precise phrase (e.g., “offers constructive criticism”) can measure more accurately the desired behaviour. Clarity in scales is also important. What is the difference between “good” and “fair” performance? Terms should be well defined and differentiated. The BARS example in Figure 9.2 shows clear criteria.
  • • Halo and horns effect: This effect is the tendency to allow an assessment of one trait to influence the rating of other traits. For example, someone who does not “get along well with others” might also (and undeservingly) be rated more negatively by a supervisor on other traits, such as productivity or attention to detail, because the initial negative rating affects the supervisor’s judgment.
  • • Recency effect: Weighting more recent observations more heavily than older experiences, whether positive or negative, is another common error. For example, a poor performer who does a great job immediately before an assessment might receive a more positive rating than warranted if behaviour during the entire assessment period is weighted equally.
  • • Central tendency: Psychologists have found that people are more reluctant to score on the extremes of a scale and more likely to cluster their scores in the middle.12 This tendency can affect performance evaluation, with supervisors clustering their ratings in the middle of the scale to avoid being perceived as overly generous or harsh.
  • • Bias: Often evaluations can be shaped by a supervisor’s views about workers’ characteristics unrelated to performance, such as gender, ethnoracial background, or age. These biases can seriously impair the accuracy of an evaluation. Some researchers have found that fewer than half of ratings are related to performance, with most based on idiosyncratic factors.13 If these biases remain consistent, then over time they can become apparent to others and give rise to a human rights complaint. Often supervisor bias is related to a similar-to-me bias (discussed in Feature Box 9.5).
  • • Intentional error: The stakes associated with performance assessment are often material (e.g., wages, promotions). This can result in intentional efforts to distort the results of performance evaluation. Managers might alter their assessment to help a friend, to punish a worker whom they do not like, or to make themselves look good. Workers might work together to “game” a peer review process, giving each other positive scores to subvert management’s efforts to rank them.

Reducing the potential for error in performance assessment starts with carefully designing the evaluation instrument(s). Using quantifiable and objective measures of behaviour and outcomes whenever possible can limit some forms of error. Training supervisors to spot bias and avoid error-creating tendencies helps to reduce error, as does using multiple independent raters. Finally, creating a process of feedback, in which the process of evaluation is regularly assessed, can help to improve the process over time and reduce the likelihood of persistent errors.

Feature Box 9.4 The Promotion Dilemma

In 2019, a study was published that examined the promotion practices of 131 sales firms. The study evaluated sales performance of sales teams before and after a promotion.14 The researchers found that, when firms promoted their best-performing salespeople into management (a logical basis for promotion), the performance of the rest of the team dropped in the months following the promotion.

The researchers theorized that there is a mismatch between the criteria used to evaluate candidates and the job. Essentially, the skills that make a good salesperson do not necessarily make a good manager. They also found that, if the company promoted a worker on the basis of other characteristics, such as friendliness or ability to work collaboratively, then overall sales increased by up to 30% more than teams that promoted the best performer. Interestingly, in those situations, the sales performance of the best salespeople (who were not promoted) dropped significantly. These salespeople were also more likely to leave the company in the months following the promotion because they felt snubbed by being overlooked for promotion.

This study highlights how HR practitioners need to consider whether a performance measure is valid and reliable each time it is applied. Although the level of sales is likely a valid and reliable measure of a salesperson’s performance as a salesperson, it is not necessarily a valid measure of that person’s ability to manage a sales team. And, because of the different context, it is not a reliable predictor of workers’ likely success in a managerial position.

The study also highlights a dilemma for HR practitioners. Although selecting a worker on the basis of past performance (e.g., strong sales numbers) does not necessarily predict success in a new position going forward, workers might not agree with decisions based on more valid criteria. In this example, it appears that salespeople expected that good sales performance would be rewarded with promotions. If promotions are allocated on the basis of other (more valid) criteria, then these workers might perceive the process to be unfair and reduce their performance. This problem can be countered with more effective communication of expectations and the criteria for promotion. To some, this conundrum might seem to be unresolvable. Indeed, the study authors conclude that promotions contain an inherent “trade-off”: that is, each metric used to make the decision has unintended consequences.

Feature Box 9.5 The Similar-to-Me Bias

Research has found that supervisors give higher or more positive ratings to workers with whom they have something in common.15 This reflects the tendency for individuals to be more empathetic and lenient toward those with whom they think they share values, habits, beliefs, and demographic characteristics, such as sex, ethnoracial background, and age.16 This form of bias can result in inaccurate performance assessments. To the degree that these assessments shape future worker behaviour, they can degrade organizational performance.

Similar-to-me bias can also result in structural inequities in the workplace. Those more like the boss are more likely to get raises and promotions. White men make up a disproportionate share of senior managers in many industries. Similar-to-me bias can perpetuate this inequity by rewarding workers who are like the boss and penalizing workers who are not. Those who persist and advance in the organization tend to be those who are most like their bosses, in turn reinforcing the similar-to-me bias. Workers who are not part of the privileged group might reduce their efforts or depart.

It can be difficult for organizations to mitigate the effects of similar-to-me bias. Organizational tasks—such as hiring, promoting, and assessing performance—tend to give actors a degree of decision-making discretion. It reflects that often these decisions are not clear cut and require judgment to be exercised. For example, is Kelly abrasive and difficult to work with? Or is Kelly hard-charging and driven to succeed? These sorts of decisions can be shaped not only by our biases but also by our well-reasoned conclusions.

To reduce the impact of similar-to-me bias, organizations need to structure performance evaluations such that they measure job performance only. This is easier said than done. The key is not to make performance “blind” to identify factors such as sex or ethnoracial background since that actually perpetuates similar-to-me bias. Instead, the problem of racism, sexism, ableism, and ageism in the workplace needs to be tackled openly and directly. Organizations need to acknowledge openly that bias is an ongoing and structural problem, raise awareness of it among managers and workers, and establish clear rules and procedures to minimize its impact.

Although this goal is laudable, it can threaten the power of existing organizational cliques. It is axiomatic that those with power typically want to keep it because it benefits them. For example, an organization with an old boys’ club (i.e., men who have risen to positions of power and have long-standing relationships of mutual reciprocity) might use its formal and informal power to deflect or sabotage organizational efforts (e.g., more transparent performance assessment) that threaten it.

Analyzing Performance and Providing Feedback

Once the performance assessment has been completed and a score/evaluation has been assigned to a worker, a supervisor must decide how to translate the results of the assessment tool into tangible feedback and a preliminary action plan. For workers at the extremes, the conclusion might be clear. For a strong performer who gets high evaluations on every metric, the feedback will be highly positive, and the discussion might focus on finding routes for advancement or more challenge and responsibility. For a consistently weak performer, the focus will be on strategies for improvement or discipline (discussed below).

It is more challenging to develop a plan to provide feedback to a worker who receives a mixed evaluation. A good place to start is for a supervisor to develop a preliminary explanation for any performance that falls below expectations. Figure 9.2 identifies a series of questions that supervisors can ask themselves about the factors driving a worker’s performance prior to meeting with the worker to discuss the performance.

The questions in Figure 9.2 reflect the various barriers that can exist to impede acceptable worker performance. It is easy to attribute poor performance to a lack of effort by a worker (a version of blaming the worker mentioned in Chapter 2). A lack of desire is rarely the full explanation for poor performance. The range and sequence of the questions in Figure 9.2 are designed to identify all of the barriers that can contribute to poor performance. The remedies to each barrier are different.

This flowchart shows the process of assessing performance problems from determining if expectations are clear through to determining if the worker has desire.

Figure 9.2 Process for assessing performance problems

  • • Expectations: Workers can fail to meet expectations because they are unaware of them or do not fully understand them. Clarifying expectations, policies, and processes can eliminate this barrier.
  • • Ability: A worker might lack the knowledge, skills, or abilities to perform work. If this is the case, then training can eliminate this barrier.
  • • Resources: A worker might lack particular resources necessary to perform work adequately. This issue can be resolved by providing resources, such as tools, authority, staff, or funding.
  • • Opportunity: A worker might not have the opportunity to meet the performance expectations. This might reflect a lack of time to perform the work. Or a worker might face uncooperative co-workers or a change in external conditions, such as a recession. All of these circumstances are barriers over which workers have little control.
  • • Desire: A worker might not be interested or sufficiently motivated to perform a job acceptably. This barrier can be addressed by attaching rewards or penalties to a worker’s behaviour. It might also require considering the worker’s personal circumstances and how they are affecting job performance. A temporary or ongoing personal issue might require accommodation or other action by the organization. A job designed in a way that makes it unpleasant to perform or that is poorly compensated can also negatively affect a worker’s motivation.

This preliminary diagnosis of the causes of unacceptable performance can be useful in framing any discussion with a worker. It also allows an HR practitioner to give some initial consideration to which remedial actions are cost effective for the organization and which are not.

Once supervisors have gathered and analyzed performance data, they must communicate the results of the performance evaluation to affected workers as well as other organizational actors. Most of the time, workers receive feedback during a formal meeting with their supervisors, although different methods (e.g., letter, email) can also be used. Feedback meetings should not be seen as a one-off activity but as part of the ongoing manager-worker relationship. Feature Box 9.6 offers recommendations on how to handle the meeting.

Feature Box 9.6 Tips for Effective Feedback Meetings

  • • Feedback should happen not only during the formal evaluation process but also be a regular and ongoing aspect of supervising workers.
  • • If self-assessment is part of the process, then ensure that you have received and read it.
  • • Create a back-and-forth discussion on performance. Avoid a “stand and deliver” approach to providing feedback.
  • • Begin with recognizing positive performance. People are better able to hear constructive criticism when it is preceded by praise or positive assessment. It also increases perceptions that the evaluation is fair.
  • • Minimize the number of items to criticize. To prevent a barrage of negative feedback, select the most important areas for improvement.
  • • Do not personalize criticism. Focus on behaviours or specific actions.
  • • Focus on solving problems. Encourage solutions from the worker.
  • • Establish clear and achievable goals for improvement. Identify specific actions that the worker can take to improve.
  • • Determine which additional supports the worker might need from the organization to achieve the goals.
  • • Follow up. Regularly check in to see how well the worker is meeting the identified goals.

If the evaluation identified areas requiring improvement, then it is important to spend time explaining to the worker which performance is of concern. Building a shared understanding of the issue can lead to a more productive discussion of the underlying reasons. Asking a worker to explain the reasons for the unsatisfactory performance is a useful way to ascertain the validity of the preliminary diagnosis (see Figure 9.2) that a supervisor has completed. This discussion can support the supervisor’s initial thoughts about how to improve the worker’s performance. Or it can identify barriers that the supervisor was unaware of and necessitate rethinking the actions and goals that should improve performance. This discussion can then lead to goal setting with the worker, identifying specific changes or levels of performance on which to base subsequent assessments.

Discipline

Sometimes unsatisfactory performance requires an organization to discipline a worker. Discipline comprises measures designed to alter a worker’s behaviour by attaching consequences to undesirable behaviour. Discipline can take many forms, including verbal warnings, letters of reprimand, suspensions, demotions or transfers, and ultimately dismissal. As discussed below, the exact disciplinary options available to an organization depend on the nature of the employment relationship.

Discipline typically occurs in two circumstances.

  • • A worker is unresponsive to efforts to improve performance. For example, a worker might fail to meet certain performance standards or have an ongoing issue with tardiness. The employer might decide that the inadequate performance stems (at least in part) from a lack of effort by the worker and therefore might attach consequences to the behaviour in the hope of motivating change.
  • • A worker behaves in a way that breaches organizational policy or the employment contract in a manner that warrants some form of discipline. Discipline imposed for this sort of violation is also expected to alter the worker’s future behaviour. It is important to note that discipline can be imposed for actions at the workplace and outside it, even for things posted on social media (see Feature Box 9.7).

One of the paradoxes that HR practitioners face when disciplining workers is that usually discipline is an effort to improve a worker’s behaviour by both punishing the worker and (at least implicitly) threatening further punishment. Consequently, discipline can require HR practitioners to navigate and manage complicated interpersonal dynamics. Workers who disagree that their behaviour warrants punishment can be resentful, and this can reduce the likelihood of meaningful behavioural change (although they might comply in a pro forma manner) and, indeed, result in workers reducing their discretionary efforts.

Supervisors who wish to discipline a worker might see the worker’s behaviour as a challenge to their authority. For example, repeated tardiness by a worker even after a supervisor has directed the worker to show up on time is doubtlessly frustrating for a supervisor and can result in anger, which can then cause the supervisor to impose discipline beyond what is likely warranted. Overdisciplining a worker can undermine the chances that the behaviour will be altered. Overdisciplining can also expose the organization to risk. For example, the worker might complain about being overdisciplined, and this can negatively affect the morale of other workers and make the organization less attractive to potential workers. Workers are also more likely to use legal means to dispute discipline that they perceive to be unfair.

Feature Box 9.7 Common Law, Social Media, and Discipline

A firefighter with the City of Toronto was fired after a series of tweets from his personal Twitter account containing racist, sexist, and homophobic material was published in a newspaper. He also sent out tweets that were derogatory toward homeless people and people with disabilities. These tweets were unrelated to his work, but he did identify himself as a Toronto firefighter on his profile page. The firefighter apologized for the tweets. The union grieved the dismissal. The arbitrator ruled in favour of the employer, stating that it is the grievor’s violation of the [City of Toronto’s] Human Rights policy that specifically reflects the seriousness of the misconduct. His comments denigrated women, ethnic minorities, disabled people, and people of different sexual orientations. By his disregard of the Human Rights policy, he promoted these forms of discrimination and harassment by circulating his comments, photographs and inappropriate jokes. He did this, with intention, among his followers. These included co-workers. He sent messages to at least three members of the public. He did, through recklessness, make this promotion of discrimination available to the general public.17

This case makes the point that workers can be fired for the things that they post on social media. In this case, the posts violated a clear policy of the employer, placing the firefighter in breach of the employment contract. But can a worker be disciplined for posting negative comments about an employer on Facebook? How about for posting images of lewd behaviour at a party? The answer to both questions is yes.

Under common law, employers have the right to impose discipline proportionate to the severity of the incident. As discussed in Chapter 2, common law relies on precedent (i.e., past court decisions) to build a body of rules surrounding legal issues over time, including employment law. One common law rule that emerged in the 1700s is the master and servant doctrine governing the employment contract. Under that doctrine, employees have a duty of fidelity, which means that they are “required to serve the employer faithfully in a manner that advances the employer’s commercial interests.”18

In practice, this duty has been interpreted to mean that employees cannot act in a manner that brings disrepute to their employer, even in their private time and space. For example, an employee convicted of a crime can be dismissed lawfully without notice for damaging the employer’s reputation. There are cases in which employees have been disciplined for insulting their employer in a public space (e.g., a bar). The courts have interpreted social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram as public spaces. As a consequence, workers can be disciplined (including dismissal) if they disparage their employer on these platforms. Furthermore, if social media posts depict a worker engaging in activities that are deemed embarrassing to the employer and thus damaging to its reputation, then discipline can also be imposed in those cases.

As with other forms of discipline, the repercussion must be proportionate to the wrongdoing. The firefighter’s tweets warranted dismissal. A photo showing the worker playing beer pong or being too friendly with a fellow partygoer likely would not merit dismissal but could lead to other forms of discipline.

Discipline is normally preceded by an investigation. The size and sophistication of an organization will shape who performs the investigation, as will any procedural obligations that it might have under a collective agreement. In a large organization, investigations of minor issues might be conducted by a supervisor or manager, whereas more complex issues or those potentially resulting in termination (e.g., harassment or theft) might be referred to a more experienced investigator (e.g., HR practitioner, outside investigator). In smaller organizations, the owner or most senior staff member might end up handling all such investigations.

Typically, an investigator gathers information about the issue(s). This can include reviewing organizational records and taking statements from witnesses. If this preliminary work suggests that indeed there might be an issue warranting discipline or other action, then the investigator might inform the worker of the investigation and, at some point in the process, give the worker an opportunity to hear and respond to the allegations. This approach to discipline reflects broadly accepted norms associated with natural justice. These norms include the right to a fair hearing in which an individual can learn about the case against them and provide a response. Disciplinary processes that accord with broadly accepted notions of fairness are more likely to result in outcomes that all parties will accept.

At some point, the investigator will have enough information to come to a conclusion about whether or not a worker’s conduct warrants discipline. The first step is to decide if the worker did what they were accused of doing. The usual standard for making this decision is the balance of probabilities (i.e., is it more likely than not that the worker behaved in a particular way?). This standard is lower than that of beyond a reasonable doubt used in criminal matters. Since discipline often can be disputed by a worker, an investigator normally creates a written record of the decision and the rationale for it, including any relevant evidence gathered.

If the worker did what they were accused of doing, then the employer must decide (1) if discipline is warranted, and (2) what discipline to impose. In theory, these are separate decisions. In practice, the line between them is blurry. An organization might engage in internal bargaining on these decisions. For example, if there is weak evidence that discipline is warranted, but a supervisor pushes hard for discipline, then the worker might be disciplined, but the penalty imposed might be modest (in the hope that the worker does not dispute the discipline). This type of horse trading reflects that discipline is both a technical process and a political one.

Most of the time, discipline is applied in a series of escalating steps called progressive discipline. Its logic is twofold. If the goal is to correct behaviour, then imposing the lightest possible discipline is most likely to trigger the desired change. If the light discipline is not effective, then increasingly heavy discipline can be applied gradually until the worker complies or is terminated. In this way, progressive discipline serves the goals of being both proportional and non-punitive (i.e., directed toward improving behaviour). It also provides the employer with a written record of repeated efforts to inform and assist the worker. This record can serve to justify any potential dismissal. An example of progressive discipline is found in Feature Box 9.8.

Feature Box 9.8 Example of Progressive Discipline

  • Incident 1: Clerk in a clothing store arrives for work 30 minutes late twice in one week.
  • Action 1: Provide feedback that lateness is not tolerated. Explore possible reasons for lateness.
  • Incident 2: Clerk is late one more time the next week.
  • Action 2: Provide verbal warning that discipline will occur if lateness continues.
  • Incident 3: Clerk is late twice the following week.
  • Action 3: Provide written letter of reprimand and warning of further discipline (suspension).
  • Incident 4: Clerk is late once the following week.
  • Action 4: Suspend employee for one week. Provide written warning of dismissal if behaviour continues.
  • Incident 5: Upon return, clerk is late once more.
  • Action 5: Dismissal.

Although discipline can take many forms, the law can restrict the kinds of discipline that an organization can impose. As stated in Chapter 2, the common law imposes certain rights and duties on employers. One of an employer’s duties is to provide a worker with the opportunity to do the job that the worker has agreed to perform. If an employer prevents a worker from doing that (e.g., by suspending the worker as a form of discipline), then the worker can claim that the employer has breached the employment contract and seek damages for wrongful dismissal. One way around such limitations is for an employer to specify at the time of hiring various penalties that it can impose during discipline. Some organizations do this by writing an employee handbook outlining the process of discipline and penalties and then incorporating the terms of the handbook (as amended from time to time) into the employment contract. Unionized employers can also face limitations on discipline set out in the collective agreement.

Termination

Every employment relationship comes to an end, one way or another. Most of the time, termination occurs through voluntary turnover when an employee initiates termination by retiring or quitting. Involuntary turnover is when the employer decides to end the employment relationship. Under common law, employers are permitted to terminate the employment of non-unionized employees without their consent but must do so in a particular fashion. There are two basic ways to terminate an employee: with notice and for cause.

Employers can terminate an employee at any time and for any reason as long as they provide reasonable notice of the termination. In practice, and in lieu of notice, employers often provide a payout equivalent to the number of weeks of notice required under the common law. Reasonable notice is considered to be an implied term in all employment contracts (meaning that the contract does not have to stipulate a notice period for one to exist). What length of time is reasonable is variable and depends on the worker’s occupation, age, length of service, and availability of other employment. Depending on those factors, reasonable notice can be calculated to be anything up to about 24 months. Legal advice should be sought to determine which notice period is reasonable for each situation.

Some organizations set out in their employment contracts what reasonable notice means. Doing so eliminates uncertainty for both the employer and the worker. Contracts can stipulate that reasonable notice is a fixed period of time or linked to the duration of the employment contract. The only limitation on the agreed-to period of notice is that it must be at least as long as the statutory minimum notice period set out in the relevant legislation (e.g., labour or employment standards acts) discussed in Chapter 2. Organizations that seek to minimize the period of reasonable notice might find that they must make other aspects of the employment offer (e.g., wages) more attractive to offset this potential loss to the worker.

Termination for (or with) cause allows the employer to waive the notice period and dismiss the employee immediately. This form of termination is sometimes called summary dismissal. To terminate a worker for cause, the employer must have a good reason (i.e., cause). Feature Box 9.9 outlines common grounds accepted by the courts to justify summary dismissal. A key legal principle underlying termination for cause is proportionality. The consequence (dismissal) must be proportionate to the severity of the employee’s misconduct.

Feature Box 9.9 Grounds for Summary Dismissal

The rules on summary dismissal reside in the common law, meaning that they are constantly evolving and changing as judicial decisions set new precedents. Over time, some grounds for summary dismissal have become well defined and established.19

  • • Dishonesty and conflict of interest: Not all forms of dishonesty warrant summary dismissal, but lying to one’s employer about something significant can be a ground for termination. Included here are cases of theft or fraud.
  • • Gross incompetence and safety violations: Being a sub-standard worker is not a ground for summary dismissal. Nevertheless, gross incompetence—defined as performance falling far below that of a reasonably competent worker—can be a ground for termination. An ongoing pattern of incompetence or a single act of particularly egregious incompetence would count. Putting others’ safety at significant risk is also a ground for dismissal.
  • • Breach of faithful service: This ground relates to the duty of fidelity discussed in Feature Box 9.7 in that it relates to the on- and off-work responsibility to act in the employer’s economic interests. A significant breach of this duty can be considered a ground for summary dismissal. Running a competing business and revealing an organization’s private information are examples of breaches of this duty.
  • • Insubordination and insolence: Employees have an obligation to obey lawful instructions of their employers. Failure to do so is considered insubordination and can justify summary dismissal. The same consideration is given to insolence or vocal defiance (insults, verbal abuse) of the employer.
  • • Harassment, violence, and threats of violence: Harassment and acts of violence, unless minor or isolated, are usually considered grounds for dismissal. Threatening violence is also considered a valid reason.
  • • Absenteeism and lateness: Not showing up for work or being late for work is not automatically considered a ground for summary dismissal. Nevertheless, persistent, repeated, or extended occurrences can elevate the issue to become a valid reason for termination.

There are other circumstances in which summary dismissal is legal. They depend on the specific facts of the case. In all cases, including those listed here, they are subject to the principle of proportionality. Termination must be deemed to be a reasonable response by the employer to the misconduct.

Workers terminated for cause can dispute their termination by filing a lawsuit alleging wrongful dismissal (unionized employees can have their union file a grievance). The nub of such a suit is the claim that the employer breached the employment contract by not providing reasonable notice of termination. Although the high cost to an employee of filing a wrongful dismissal suit means that they are uncommon, successful suits can entail significant monetary and reputational costs to an organization. To eliminate the risk of such suits, organizations sometimes seek to address conduct that warrants dismissal by getting workers to agree to dismissal. Such agreements (sometimes called a buy-out) often include a monetary settlement, a non-disclosure agreement, and a letter of reference in exchange for a letter of resignation. Such agreements attenuate the risks associated with an involuntary termination for both parties.

A special, and complex, form of wrongful dismissal is constructive dismissal. It occurs when an employer makes a fundamental change to an employment contract tantamount to terminating it. In other words, if a material condition of employment is unilaterally changed by the employer, then the employee can claim that the employer, in effect, wrongfully dismissed them. To make such a claim, the employee would need to quit and sue for wrongful dismissal, ostensibly arguing that they were forced to quit by the employer’s change to the contract. An example is if the employer unilaterally reduced a worker’s salary by 25%. The salary is part of the employment contract, and, by reducing it without specific authority in the contract to do so, the employer has violated the terms of the contract and thereby terminated it. Common situations that can give rise to claims of constructive dismissal include reductions in compensation and benefits, changes to a job assignment (including demotion), reassignment to a different location, temporary layoff, unpaid suspension, and harassment.

Conclusion

Job design (Chapter 3) and performance management are the main HR functions that help organizations to convert workers’ capacity to work into actual work. In this chapter, we outlined key techniques designed to maximize workers’ performance. They include defining expectations, providing feedback, and taking steps to correct deficiencies in workers’ performance. We also explored the related topic of disciplining workers, including terminating them when their performance is unsatisfactory.

In the case of Donald Babcock, the implementation of a structured performance management system at the workplace likely would have prevented the legal troubles that ensued. This vignette highlights the importance of making sure that all aspects of performance management are functioning appropriately. It also shows how crucial monitoring performance is to the smooth running of an organization and the perils that organizations face if they jump too quickly past performance management to discipline and termination. Finally, it illustrates the importance of keeping clear records so that an employer can demonstrate that it took appropriate steps and met its obligations to a worker.

Exercises

Key Terms

Define the following terms.

  • → 360-degree feedback
  • → Alternation ranking
  • → Attribute approach
  • → Balance of probabilities
  • → Balanced scorecard method
  • → Behavioural approach
  • → Behaviourally anchored rating scale (BARS)
  • → Citizenship behaviours
  • → Coaching
  • → Constructive dismissal
  • → Contextual expectations
  • → Discipline
  • → Forced-distribution
  • → Graphic rating scale
  • → Management by objective (MBO)
  • → Natural justice
  • → Paired comparison
  • → Performance management
  • → Performance management system
  • → Progressive discipline
  • → Reasonable notice
  • → Results approach
  • → Similar-to-me bias
  • → Task expectations
  • → Terminated for cause
  • → Voluntary turnover

Discussion Questions

Discuss the following questions.

  • → What are the reasons for conducting performance management?
  • → What are the key steps in the performance management system?
  • → Why is it important to train supervisors how to provide ongoing feedback?
  • → What are the different approaches to conducting performance appraisal?
  • → Which strategies can make feedback meetings more effective?
  • → When is dismissal an appropriate disciplinary action?

Activities

Complete the following activities.

  • → Select a job that you are familiar with. Identify the tasks and contextual expectations that will serve as the basis of performance appraisal.
  • → Using the same job, identify which performance appraisal approach would be most appropriate given the expectations.
  • → Using the same job, create BARS for three performance anchors central to the job.

Self-reflection Questions

Write self-reflections of 200 to 500 words on the following topics.

  • → Think about your current/recent job. How effective was the performance evaluation process? What would have made it more effective?
  • → Have you ever had to supervise someone at work? If so, how did you handle providing feedback? Are there things that you would do differently today?
  • → In your opinion, should employers be allowed to discipline workers for things that they post on social media? What kind of content do you think warrants discipline?
Next Chapter
Ten: Unions and Collective Bargaining
PreviousNext
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). It may be reproduced for non-commercial purposes, provided that the original author is credited.
Powered by Manifold Scholarship. Learn more at
Opens in new tab or windowmanifoldapp.org
Manifold uses cookies

We use cookies to analyze our traffic. Please decide if you are willing to accept cookies from our website. You can change this setting anytime in Privacy Settings.