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Published byOpal Preston Modified over 9 years ago
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Performance Management and Development System - PMDS
Performance Management in Ireland The Irish Civil and Public Service
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Outline of Presentation
Overview of PM in the Irish Civil Service Effectiveness of PM Key Changes to PMDS for 2013 PM in the sectors The managerial challenge
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Overview of PM in the Irish Civil Service
Individual PM(PMDS) introduced in 2000 for all civil servants Significant investment in training staff and managers with focus on: formal setting of goals ongoing management formal appraisal Committed to continuous and ongoing strengthening of PM system
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Main elements of PMDS Goal setting (restricted to key goals)
Competencies included 5 point rating scale (linked to award of increments ie annual salary increase and eligibility to apply for promotion) Focus on learning and development Includes upward feedback One size fits all with strong central input!
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Vertical Integration Strategy Statement Business Plan Individual PM
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Horizontal Integration?
PMDS Increments Salary Career Development Promotion L&D Talent Management
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Distribution of Ratings 2011
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Effectiveness of PM in the Civil Service?
Main findings from our evaluation surveys and review of compliance carried out in 2010: Underperformance is not being dealt with The process is overly bureaucratic with emphasis on form filling Lack of consistency and fairness of standards for performance and ratings i.e. too many high ratings Developmental aspects are weak
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Performance Management
Conventional trends Annual event Top down Owned by HR Annual appraisal oriented Reliance on single measurement Uses manager feedback Evolution of performance management concepts Contemporary trends Strategic alignment of individual goals with business goals Line manager driven (not HR) Continual daily performance management Multi-source measurement systems Manager as coach Emphasis on employee development & engagement Use of competencies Emerging trends Knowledge management Contributing added value Self directed learning Employee ownership of performance Acquiring & retaining talent Manager actively involved in career development Integrated use of competency framework
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Key Changes for 2013 Simplification Forms Automation Alignment –
Grade Based Competency Framework and Guidelines Fairness and Consistency New evaluations of performance – focusing on differentiation Calibration of evaluations Comprehensive review
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Key Changes for 2013 ‘Fully Achieved Expectations’ performance rating required for award of increment (i.e. has fully met all of the role requirements to required standard and performance is at a fully acceptable level) Address Underperformance – guidelines agreed and training of HR Managers/Workshops delivered
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PM in the Public Service
In all sectors – exception Education Commitment in draft Public Service Agreement to strengthen PM Introduce in all sectors Managerial accountability Procedures to deal with underperformance – including discipline Introduction of management performance agreements
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Challenges for PM in the Civil Service
Dealing with underperformance Senior management engagement and customised PM Engagement of line managers Changes to pay and increments Shift to employee engagement ePMDS Performance Metrics
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Central role of DPER in PM
Design of system in consultation with management and unions Development of forms and guidance notes Updates on our website Review effectiveness of PM and determine future direction
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