Skip to main content

01 Batting for the Middle Order

This is the first of a series of my LinkedIn posts about operational performance management in Services. As part of my job, I get to advise and work with companies on their daily operations and several aspects of business through the COPC Performance Management Framework. I get to see a lot of interesting things, from a vantage point that is insightful as well as amusing.

It is my endeavor to share some of these insights and, also the fun, without sounding preachy. For this purpose, I will employ one chart at a time for each post and try to weave the narrative around it. Hopefully this will also help in data appreciation among the readers.

The first one here is about the distribution of performance among team members.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

01 Batting for the Middle Order

Very often, we see that the performance management in a team or an organization at large is done by management and leadership through what is called “Management by Objectives” (MBO) – set a target, hold people accountable for it, reward them if they meet (and then set a higher target); and if they don’t meet it, either put action plans in place or punish them with some measures, like withdrawing bonuses.

While in theory this is good and works most of the time, in our zeal to drive performance and reward the top performers, we tend to forget that the bulk of the team performance actually comes from the middle order. We reward the top performers, the outstanding stars; but what about those in the second quartile – people who have done better than most others, and yet get precious nothing for their effort and their performance?

Consider the following. Here is an example of a program or a team that measures the performance on some metric – let’s say Customer Satisfaction (measured as the percentage of customers who respond “satisfied” or “very satisfied” to a survey). The measure is not the point here, it can be any performance measure or KPI (key performance indicator).


Now see the distribution of the performance. It follows a typical normal curve, with some doing very well, and others doing poorly. Surely for all businesses, there will be action plans for the bottom performers, that is the ones marked in red to the left. They are about 10% here. We will visit these ‘bottom quartile’ action plans in a later post.

Now look to the right. About 12 to 15% of this team, marked in deep green, are the ones who are over and beyond the stretched expectation of performance set out by the management, which let’s say in this case is to be over 85%. So, these are the people who will be celebrated, given rewards and incentives, even considered for promotion.

This is all good, no doubt. But now look again. There is a sizable group, about 35 to 40% in this case, that is marked in light green and golden. The guys in golden are better than most others, have been consistent, and are in fact even better than the program average across the enterprise. (This is a classic case of a business where the target is rather steep, and only a handful actually make it. But the general principle is true even if the performance is close to target).

Look at the guys in the light green. They are even better than the guys in golden. They are in fact better than the expectation on paper (in this case it is about 82%). They are so close to 85%, and yet since they have not crossed the line yet, they do not qualify for any reward or incentive.

They do not get anything for being better than others, because they are not ‘the best’.

Now you might say, ‘hold on just a second. It is the fact that they have not met their target. It is righteous that they should not get rewarded anyhow’. You might even go one more step further and say, ‘which is exactly what will motivate them to stretch further the next time, and push to meet the targets’. So, let’s not moan about the ‘also-ran’s and the ‘almost-there’s.

But look at it from the employee’s point of view. Say you are Anaya, one of the staff members in this program. Out of many teams for this program, she is part of a 15-people team. She is in the golden group or the light green group. Say her score is 83%, so light green group. She asks around and finds that others are also with her with similar scores. She seems to be better than others, yet she knows she is not in deep green.

But when the incentives are announced, and reward functions are held, she sees that the incentives are lapped up by one or maybe two people most of the time. She asks around, and finds none of her friends get anything any time. Slowly it starts to feel as if the rewards are unachievable, meant only for the elite few, for the stars. She starts getting disenchanted. This happens month over month.

And the next thing you know is that the rewards lose their ability to motivate. As Victor Vroom would say (in his expectancy theory), the rewards should be felt as ‘achievable’ in order to motivate people. And here we are, thinking that the stretch goal is driving performance, whereas in reality it is only driving anxiety, stress and disengagement.

Even as leadership and management, consider this. We are looking for a consistent, sustained performance, more than super stars. Like cricket, this is a team sport. We need those who make hundreds of runs, but we also need those who keep ticking during the slog overs so that the average keeps building – to keep the sports analogy going. So, if 40% of your team is now the Anayas of the world, it is not going to be long before your overall team average starts slipping.

This is a slow ticking time bomb. We need to do something about it.

So, what should we do? This is a people management issue, so we normally do not have a silver bullet. Some things work sometimes, while some don’t at other times. But, here are three things that I have seen work better usually.

Look at the spread – not just the top order but also the middle order.

Remember that the bulk of the performance comes from the middle two quartiles, and it is the second quartile that is usually the key for the overall team performance. Study the folks in this group, see what profile they are from, what they do, how they do their work, and what can be done to just get them move a few notches up.

Most often we have specific action plans for the guys in red, but not for this group. Having specific action plans, coaching, mentoring for this group usually goes a long way in staff performance as well as their engagement and motivation. I have seen it at least in two clients and it has worked well in getting a sustained, steady improvement in performance with these employees.

Give the ‘almost-there’ group a label.

It is almost always true that the motivation gets driven first and foremost by recognition than by monetary rewards. I have found in a couple of places that I work with that the leadership team gives this middle group catchy, aspirational names – like the ‘road warriors’, ‘seekers’ etc. – and it turns out great.

The reason to name the group thus is to recognize two things – that they are better than average, and yet they are not ‘achievers’ of the goal. Naming them also indirectly indicates that you recognize that they are the ones who are driving the overall team performance ahead.

Make some action plan for the group as such. Get them together. Have them share their ideas. Let them buddy up with top performers and learn from them. Let them also teach the people in the third and quarter to improve, because although they are not the best, they are still better.

Spread the love.

At the cost of sounding cocky, I would like to say that you need to look at your outflow of incentives. There are several problems we see in the industry with this. In some cases, managers try to be thrifty thinking that they are doing the company a favor. I have seen situations where half the annual budget for rewards and recognition is saved up, and moved to the next fiscal year as savings.

In some cases, the outflow is so wonky that only 2% people get the incentives. I am not saying you should look at the genie index like they do in economics, but maybe you should. The point is, this is not about increasing the outflow in rewards, but having a more equitable distribution – such that it drives and motivates people – they think it is achievable and they strive for a better performance.


So, in summary, by looking at the middle order, by giving them recognition and rewarding them (even marginally) would go a long way in getting the overall performance up and sustain it for your business. You will also start seeing an improvement in the employee morale for the bulk of your team.

Shreekant
01 May 2018

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Re-discovering Lin Yutang

It was a perfectly useless afternoon – like the one that Lin Yutang urges you to spend in a ‘perfectly useless’ manner. The chilly winter breeze of Northern India and its accomplice the dense soupy fog had made commutation redundant and I was confined to stay at home. It was then that I turned to my old bookshelf, rummaged some of the lesser accessed shelves and blew away dust from atop some of the volumes and made a nice pile on the center table. I had read some of these works partly earlier a long time ago, and the others I had kept for leisure reading. It was like meeting a handful of school friends once again after years – not at the planned alumni meeting, but while you are out shopping your week’s supplies – by sheer chance. I pulled out a mid-sized volume with a yellow cover that shows a man playing flute by the river and a few others listening to him, leisurely resting on the nearby rocks and trees. It was ‘The Importance of Living’ by Lin Yutang – a work I had discovered i

What Should I Read?

Like one of Douglas Adam's characters in the Dirk Gently series, I truly believe that the time spent in commuting is better spent in doing something worthwhile, so you can multitask. And just like the fellow in the story used to record his thoughts on a tape recorder and then have his steno type them out for him later - here is an attempt to write a post through a dicta-phone while driving from Delhi to Gurgaon and then converting it to text. Many times my students and other people ask - what should I read. What should one read? .. A lot of times I give some perfunctory answer and let that question pass. Or sometimes I give a very generic response to this question. But mostly I am not very comfortable when confronted with this kind of a question. And although I have always had this sense of discomfort, I was not sure why it was so. Recently, again, one of the students asked this question, and I decided to think a little bit more about it. Now when I started thinking about it,

Doing what you like and Getting paid for it

It is one thing for people to say 'do what you like and get paid for it, so that every day at office will feel like a vacation'. It is quite another to actually find a profession that you are passionate about. Most of us spend our lives in writing software, or sending invoices - or most likely - writing software for sending invoices. In effect, we usually spend days in writing emails, making phone calls, and attending meetings. There are reasons for this. Firstly, most people do not know what they are passionate about most of the time. Ask any person, especially the one who is preparing for a job interview or for an MBA entrance exam, and pat comes the grammatically incorrect reply: "listening music". Whoever invented this phrase deserves to be in the list of Nobel laurets. This is the most you can get without giving any real information or even any real thought to the question - what do you like to do? I mean, what kind of music? -- Any kind! -- Any specific genr