CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
Human
Resources is crucial to organizational survival and it has been acclaimed as
the most important resource available to any organization. In discussing human
resources in any culture or environment, human resources are the major wealth
of any nation. People are the greatest asset of any organization we live in a
people’s world. People are the backbone of any organization.
According
to Banjoko (1996: 142), every organization advocates effective results and
maximum individual employee as crucial to the organization growth and survival
Performance standards or goals are established and all employees are enjoined
to strive individually and collectively towards corporate goal attainment.
Obisi
(1996:114) opines that in our today’s competitive economy characterized by risk
taking organization must survive and the key to such survival is a revitalized
human resources. Neither billions of naira nor the state of art, technology and
machine can do the miracle if human resource is neglected and forgotten. This
can be achieved if an organization nurtures, nourishes and develops its human
resources through performance appraisal. More than anything else, competition,
global trends and other issues have brought up human Resources Management and
especially performance as the surest way of coping with competition. Thus, such
activities as recruitment, selection, placement, rewards are all strategies of
improving performance in order to cope with world happenings and megatrends.
Ovadje
(1998:3 1) is also of the opinion, that is today’s highly competitive and
chaotic environment, if organizations are to survive, they must attract and
retain people who are able and willing to perform and even go beyond what is
required. He went further to say that people are key in organizations, they are
precious, problematic, unpredictable and productive. Nothing can be done in
organization without people.
However,
human beings are the most frustrating out of all the production elements for
managers since they constitute the most difficult variable to control and
predict. Performance appraisal is difficult to objectively and effectively
implement because of the human element involved, yet it is crucial to
individual and organizational growth.
Also
on the part of Managers, there exists that reluctance to objectively appraise
the work of those who report to them. In an activity important as managing, there
should be no reluctance in measuring performance as effectively as we can, nor
in having superior managers appraise the work of those who report to them.
However,
the problem of “Praying God” also exists in a culture where individual
performance has been rated, from the time the person enters kindergarten and
though his school and university life. In almost forms of groups, performance
has been rated in some way.
According
to Walks (1989:210), “the guarantee of all organization measured by performance.”
That is why emphasis is placed performance in most organization. To make
performance appraisal effective in organizations, performance standards or
goals must established and employee performance should be evaluated against
such established goals or specific sets of expected behaviour.
The
modern human resource system is divided into four parts acquisition of human
resources (recruitment and selection), training and development, motivation and
compensation. Performance appraisal involved in all four parts and services to
tie them together by providing feedback information for all of the other parts.
Performance appraisal has been called one of the most important tools for
managing human resources in an organization.
According
to Yodor and Staudohar (1982:101), the importance of performance appraisal
seems from the importance of performance itself. Performance is the umbilical
cord linking partners in the industrial relation system, that is the employers
and the employees.
According
to Moorhead and Griffin (1989:604), performance appraisal or evaluation is the
process by which a manager:
- Evaluates an employee’s work behaviours by
measurement and comparison with previously established standards;
- Records the results;
- Communicates them to the employee.
1.2 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
According
to Kellogy (1969:21), it is difficult for many managers to make their judgment
explicit. It takes a rare combination of courage and tact to come right out and
say what we feel especially when personal judgment and interpretation to
influence our decisions in areas of crucial importance to an employee.
Performance
appraisal system in most conglomerates are thought to be subjective, and favoritism
is prevalent.
According to
Banjoko (1996:142), some superior officers strongly believe in the “Coker is my
cousin” syndrome, ie. There is an element of godfatherism. In view of these
criticism, there is a need to put in place performance appraisal system that is
objective as humanly possible. Performance appraisal system that is dynamic
that produces continuous advances progress. Forward movement both for the
organization and its people. The belief or contention is that if the
performance appraisal systems are objective, they will enhance employee’s
performance and ultimately aid the attainment of organization goals and
objectives.
1.3 OBJECTIVES
OF THE STUDY
The
main objective of this study is to find out the role of the performance
appraisal system in Human Resources Management and how it is utilized.
The study also attempts to look at
sub- objectives :