A performance appraisal is the formal process through which an organization measures, documents and communicates how well an employee has performed against agreed expectations during a defined period. When done well, it creates a shared understanding between the manager and the employee, recognizing strong performance and providing a constructive path forward for those who need to improve.
This guide walks through every stage of a structured performance appraisal cycle, from objective setting and KPI measurement through to ratings, development planning and the appeals process.
What Is a Performance Appraisal?
A performance appraisal, also called a performance evaluation or performance review, is conducted annually or bi-annually through a structured meeting between the employee and their direct department head. It is not a standalone event. It is the culmination of a full performance management cycle that begins with objective setting at the start of the year, continues through ongoing coaching and a formal mid-year review, and concludes with a final rating and development conversation at year-end.
According to the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM), performance management is the system of maintaining or improving job performance through planning, coaching, mentoring and continuous feedback. The appraisal is where that system produces a formal, documented outcome.
Key Terms
Understanding the following terms is essential before working through the appraisal process.
Eligibility and Enrollment
The performance management process applies to all full-time equivalent employees. The point at which an employee enters the cycle depends on when they joined or changed their role.
New hires joining with less than three months remaining in the current cycle are required to set objectives for the remainder of the year but will not be formally evaluated until the following cycle. They enter the full process at the start of the next year.
New hires joining with between three and six months remaining set objectives for the remainder of the year and participate in the mid-year review. Their year-end evaluation may be adjusted accordingly.
New hires joining with between six and twelve months remaining enter the full process immediately, with planning and review deadlines confirmed on a case-by-case basis.
When an employee changes role mid-cycle, the employee and their new department head agree revised objectives for the new position. The incoming manager discusses the employee's performance history with the departing manager before making any adjustments. Where the previous manager is no longer available, the new manager gathers relevant information from other department heads and stakeholders before meeting with the employee.
Governance and Roles
A performance management process works only when accountability is clearly distributed. Four stakeholders each carry defined responsibilities.
The CEO drives the overall process, acts as a role model with direct reports, establishes performance standards and ensures that communication about strategic progress flows throughout the year.
The Department Head provides ongoing feedback to employees throughout the year, leads objective setting, monitors performance, conducts appraisal meetings and is ultimately accountable for the ratings assigned and for communicating them clearly and fairly.
The Employee actively participates in setting and reviewing objectives and in preparing their development plan. They work with their department head throughout the cycle, not just at formal review points.
The HR Department administers the process, enforces deadlines, maintains records and provides guidance and support to all parties involved.
The Three Performance Meetings
The appraisal cycle is built around three formal meetings. Each has a specific purpose, timing and expected output. All meetings should be conducted in a private, quiet environment and typically take between 30 and 45 minutes.
Performance Meeting Do's
- Do prepare in advance
- Do focus on performance improvement
- Do start with the positive achievements
- Do give specific reasons for ratings
- Do decide on specific steps to be taken for improvement
- Do reinforce desired behaviors
- Do focus on future performance
- Do consistently ask the employee’s viewpoint
- Do keep the performance evaluation confidential
Performance Meeting Don'ts
- Do not do all the talking & lecture the employee
- Do not mix performance evaluation and salary or promotion issues
- Do not concentrate only on the negative achievements
- Do not feel it is necessary that both parties agree in all areas
- Do not interrupt or get distracted while the employee is talking
- Do not share the performance evaluation with other employees
All three meetings should be genuine two-way conversations. The department head should consistently ask for the employee's viewpoint, avoid mixing performance evaluation with salary or promotion discussions and refrain from concentrating only on negative outcomes. The evaluation must remain strictly confidential.
Setting SMART Objectives
Objectives are the foundation of the entire appraisal process. They define what each employee is expected to deliver and form the basis on which performance will be measured and rated at year-end.
Department heads are responsible for ensuring that individual objectives align with departmental and organizational goals through a process called cascading, described in the next section. Each employee must set a minimum of two and a maximum of five objectives per cycle.
Once objectives are agreed, each is assigned a weight percentage that reflects its relative importance. The sum of all weights must equal 100%. These weights are used in the final score calculation at year-end.
Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)
A KPI is the measurement mechanism attached to each objective. Defining it well removes ambiguity about how results will be assessed and ensures that both the employee and the manager are working from the same definition of success.
To define a well-constructed KPI, the department head and employee should work through the following questions at the performance planning meeting.
- What specific outcome should be accomplished?
- What weight does this objective carry relative to the others?
- What is the simplest KPI that accurately measures progress toward the objective?
- What unit of measurement will be used: a percentage, a count, a number of days, a monetary value?
- Where will the data come from: an internal report, a database, a customer survey, a project tracker?
- And how frequently will performance be measured and reported: monthly, quarterly, bi-annually or annually?
Objective Cascading
Objective cascading is how the organization's strategic priorities are translated into meaningful individual goals at every level of the business. It ensures that what each employee works on is directly connected to what their department and ultimately the organization is trying to achieve.
The process works top-down. Once the organization's goals for the year are finalized, they are broken into departmental objectives. Department heads then work with each of their direct reports to identify individual objectives that support the department's goals. The result is a coherent chain of accountability, from the CEO's strategic priorities down to every employee's day-to-day deliverables.
After objectives are agreed, the department head and employee should also discuss the specific tasks and activities needed to deliver each one. The department head plays an active support role here. Identifying the resources, access and guidance the employee needs to succeed is as important as defining the objectives themselves.
The Rating Scale
Performance is assessed using a four-level rating scale. Ratings are applied at the individual objective level. Each objective receives a rating between 1 and 4 at the year-end evaluation meeting. The department head carries final accountability for the ratings assigned, though both the manager and the employee are responsible for ensuring that ratings accurately reflect actual performance.
Scoring and Calculation
The overall performance score is calculated by multiplying each objective's rating by its weight percentage and summing the results. This produces a single weighted score representing the employee's overall performance level for the cycle.
Formula: Total Performance Score = Sum of (Evaluation Rate x Objective Weight %)
All objective weights must total 100% for the score to be valid. The resulting score falls between 1.00 and 4.00.
As a practical example, consider an employee with three objectives weighted at 50%, 30% and 20%, rated at 4, 3 and 2 respectively. The calculation is (4 x 0.50) + (3 x 0.30) + (2 x 0.20) = 2.00 + 0.90 + 0.40 = 3.30, placing the employee in the Achieved band (2.75 to 3.49).
The final score determines the employee's overall performance rating, which feeds directly into the HR decisions described in the People Management Integration section below.
Development Plan
Every employee may be required to have an individual Development Plan, prepared jointly with their department head at both the performance planning meeting at the start of the year and the year-end evaluation meeting. The plan identifies the training, learning and development activities needed to improve current performance and support future career growth.
Development plans should be realistic, achievable within the agreed timeframe and clearly linked to the employee's objectives. Activities can include formal training and certifications, coaching and mentoring, job rotation, special project assignments and attendance at workshops or professional forums.
When building a development plan, the department head and employee should consider the following questions.
- What new skills are needed in the current role, and which existing skills need strengthening?
- Are there areas in the employee's objectives where improved capability would directly improve results?
- Are there skills that would support longer-term career development?
- Will the employee be involved in new projects requiring capabilities they do not yet have?
- Were there performance challenges in the past year that are likely to recur without targeted support?
At the year-end meeting, the previous year's development plan is reviewed to assess what was accomplished and what, if anything, should carry forward into the next cycle.
Performance Improvement Plan (PIP)
A Performance Improvement Plan is a formal, structured document developed for employees who receive a Partially Achieved or Not Achieved rating. Its purpose is not punitive. It is designed to give the employee a clear, supported pathway to reaching the required performance standard.
Before designing a PIP, the department head should understand what is driving the underperformance. Lack of capability or skill should be addressed through targeted training. Lack of motivation or engagement may require a coaching conversation to identify the root cause. A poor fit between the employee and their role may mean that a different position would be a better match for their strengths. Where personal circumstances outside work are affecting performance, the conversation should be sensitive and supportive, potentially including a temporary adjustment to workload or responsibilities.
The PIP should be discussed in a private, one-on-one meeting. The conversation should inform the employee that the plan is being issued to support their improvement, involve them in identifying the changes needed and set specific, measurable actions with clear deadlines. The department head and employee both sign the completed PIP form. The department head retains the original for the duration of the plan and provides the employee with a copy.
Once the PIP period concludes, the department head assesses whether the employee has satisfactorily reached the expected standard or whether further corrective action is required. The completed PIP is then forwarded to HR for retention in the employee's personnel file.
People Management Integration
Performance ratings directly inform consequential HR decisions across the employee lifecycle. The table below summarizes how each rating level translates into outcomes across five key HR processes.
Employees should understand this framework before the appraisal cycle begins so that the connection between their performance and these outcomes is clear and transparent throughout the year.
The Appeals Procedure
An employee may appeal the outcome of their performance evaluation when they receive a Not Achieved rating on a majority of their objectives or in their overall performance rating. The process is structured in two stages and is designed to ensure a fair and documented resolution.
Before initiating a formal appeal, employees are encouraged to have an informal conversation with their department head, expressing disagreement with specific ratings and providing additional context or supporting documentation. Many concerns can be resolved at this stage without the need for a formal process.
Stage 1: Department Head Review
If the informal discussion does not resolve the matter, the employee may submit a formal written appeal to their department head within five business days of receiving their evaluation. The appeal must include a completed Performance Evaluation Appeal Form stating which specific parts of the evaluation are disputed and why, a copy of the original evaluation form and any relevant supporting documentation or evidence.
Stage 2: Human Resources Review
If the Stage 1 appeal is not resolved, it is referred to the Head of Human Resources for a final decision. The HR Head reviews all materials submitted at Stage 1, together with the written response from the department head, and issues a final written decision to the employee. This decision is binding.
All appeal documentation is retained in the employee's personnel file upon conclusion of the process.
Recommended Resources
- Explore our Performance Appraisal Methods for a comparison of the different types of employee appraisals.
- Access our Free Performance Management Manual to download your copy and streamline your appraisal process.
- Once you have your performance ratings in place, the Short Term Incentive Calculator shows you how those scores translate into actual bonus payouts across all employee levels based on company profit and performance.