Leaked Microsoft documents detail an employee performance review system where managers are quietly asked to adjust workers' results to limit the highest ratings
Its because they don't want to raise their pay, and also want the employee to blame themselves for not getting the pay raise/promotion instead of their greedy employer.
another reason I heard is it's also another tool to give the company wiggle room to say they're not in the best state they could be, that there's still room for growth. under the current system, companies have to keep growing and keep appearing to have the potential for growth, or die
I was actually told during a review that they couldn't rank me higher because then they'd have to give me more money. My boss said I deserved it, but they didn't have the money to give it to me.
I had something similar! But my manager was a former dev that I worked for that didn't know how to manage and tried to convince me that I didn't deserve it.
Slave must work hard but slave must not be rewarded for that labour... That's holy profit and it belongs to shareholders after top execs get their cut obvi.
This is why every day more people are finding out that providing good service is for idiots who have no self respect.
The priest caste of capitalism - the economists - do not understand why lowly humans will not sacrifice their lives to the Great Eternal and Unaging Corporations.
It's why I focus on work life balance over everything else. No point in giving away weekends and nights for an average review. Average is perfectly rine with me, but that's also what I give now.
Yes. I work at a power plant in a large department. The best “ratings” that dictates our bonus multiplier is limited to five people because there are certainly only five people whose performance exceeds expectations. /s
The reason why is more that you have to justify top performmers against their peers and against their role responsibilities. That takes work and many managers dont want to do it.
Employees are rated like Uber drivers -- 5 stars is good, 4 stars neutral, anything else is bad.
But the companies forbid giving 5-star reviews.
If they didn't, they'd have to admit their expectations are too high for the pay they are offering. Exceeding expectations is the expectation and therefore you cannot exceed expectations. And since you aren't exceeding expectations, minimum or no raise for you.
Yeah. I thought this was the norm, so I don't know why this is news. At my company everyone is a 3 or 4. A 5 literally means you're going to be promoted to the next level. There's absolutely no other way to get a 5 and promotions are obviously rare.
Same here. When I was a manager I had to give most people a 3 regardless of higher performance. We only got (1) 4 for my team of eight people. No 5 was allowed. This rating determines bonus and raises. Rate everyone for their individual performance my ass. I rotated the 4 around every year. It was a fucking joke.
Yes, but it's not documented, so it's not actionable, and the people not in management who end up getting the bonuses or raises in any given year often actively work to undermine any efforts to speak out or organize against these practices.
They pick enough people to actually get the pat on the head to keep the workers collectively destabilized and worried about what each other are saying.
I once had a manager -- who was new to being in charge of reports -- just outright admit in my annual review that he had to find negatives to ding me with when I asked him why no one had ever mentioned any of the issues he was bringing up to me at any time before the review. But when my closest co-workers (who were in other departments) were the ones who got the 5-star ratings and the raises, it would have just come across as sour grapes if I had said something.
It's not that hard to socially engineer an environment where it looks like individual efforts are encouraged and rewarded while simultaneously discouraging those efforts and refusing to reward them when they pay dividends.
It's not that hard to socially engineer an environment where it looks like individual efforts are encouraged and rewarded while simultaneously discouraging those efforts and refusing to reward them when they pay dividends.
You literally described my last gig to a tee. What everyone said and actually did couldn’t be farther apart. Basically gas lighting 101.
A climate change induced superstorm could destroy an American bootlicker's home, and they'd blame the local homeless population.
It's the sunk cost/gamblers fallacy, they've been licking that boot their whole lives, with the promise that one day they'll be granted access to the club for their doting licks, and god damn it, they'll keep licking until they are!
Just keep licking... just keep licking... just keep licking...
We did this at target. I had 5 hourly managers under me, 4 were amazing and went above and beyond every day and 1 that was complete ass. I was assigned a number of ratings I could give, each out of 3 (3 being best). It was 3-2-2-1-1 so I one of my best had to get the worst score possible while one other at the exact same level the best. It made no sense and I hated that.
I've known several people in management in my industry (I've changed jobs a fair amount plus I'm in a consulting industry) who became managers and then either self demoted or moved over to equivalent technical roles specifically because they were forced to basically lie and say their great employees were average or even below average, couldn't give bonuses that matched performance, and couldn't give raises that matched performance.
It literally made them depressed to have to treat hard working people unfairly. So they stopped doing it.
Now that just brought the question to my mind: what does that mean about the people who do that and keep doing it? Are the just psychopaths? Sociopaths? Evil? Trapped?
I think the important thing to do is find the people who are forcing these dishonest review systems and challenge then directly on why they're making managers lie about employees performance. Contact the ombudsman if they have one and point out the dishonesty.
Quietly? Lol. My manager told me to my face. He said upper management only allowed so many "exceeds expectations" regardless of performance. He never bullshitted me. Miss that boss.
I've heard a podcast interview of a very talented person. He said that he left MS because of "internal politics". I thought it was personality conflicts or something, but stack ranking might explain a lot.
It's called forced distribution and it's bad for the workers and for the company. It's far easier to sabotage others in your workgroup to bring them a lower/average rating than to try to get that one excellent rating that is probably going to go to the managers golf buddy anyway.
I feel like a lot of companies do this. Managers are usually incentivized to give their reports good rating so they can show how good they are at developing talent, so companies force them to grade on a curve.
Some of us actually have respectful managers who value their employees. Sorry it's been shitty for you, but I've been fortunate enough to have a fantastic manager the last few years whose consistently went to bat for me, and rated me the highest possible rating he can in my performance reviews knowing that my skills and my attitude are assets to have on the team, and my performance in my role is worthy of recognition. I'm also a firm believer in working only full time, and completely disconnecting outside work hours. 40 and no more. My boss respects that.
Are there times where I have to be flexible? Sure. I've had to work outside my normal hours, I've also been able to make up my time and take off early to offset and prevent getting overtime. Have I always been able to? No, my boss understands that when I'm off the clock it's not a guarantee that I'm available. It isn't held against me.
I get the knee jerk reaction to assume high performers are ass kissers. And I'm sure some of them are, but it's reductive to assume everyone who is a high performer is a bootlicker. Plenty of people just do their job, and do it well. Sometimes you just get a role where your skill set, team, leadership, and job responsibilities all coalesce into you being able to easily have exceptional performance. I'd say the majority of people are just out here trying to do their job and go home, and that's all I am trying to do.
You know what the real trick is? The actual percentage increase to your pay wage is in no way reflective of your performance review. I've had high performing reviews that've had less pay increases than my lower performing reviews.
The original intent of corps was to be progressive. They would close after a job was completed. Somewhere our elders decided no, we should keep them open and shovel trash into peoples lives and keep them down with employee abuse and corruption.
Side note:
My favorite corruption story was when that oil platform blew up and years before we found out that the MMS (which oversees contracts between O&G and the US GOVT) was having sex and cocaine parties in the offices.
O&G and ALL INFRASTRUCTURE should be nationalized and heavily regulated.
The real villains, the owner class, are untouchable, they won and are effectively destroying human habitability of earth unopposed to keep running up their ego scores in the face of the Armageddon of their making, unless you count empty rhetoric.
There's no victory to be had, and no hope if you're paying attention.
So yeah, I'll take a little joy when the truth is inflicted on their doting Stormtroopers who enact their sociopathic orders, who will still believe in the cause no matter how hard daddy capitalist slaps them around.