Small and medium businesses (SMBs) in South Africa increasingly recognise that traditional approaches to performance management no longer meet their needs in a world of digital transformation and hybrid working models. Traditional performance reviews are thus starting to give way to more agile, objective, data-driven methods that improve alignment between workforce performance and business strategy.
The Future of Performance Management report from Sage – the leader in accounting, financial, HR, and payroll technology for SMBs — finds that 75% of HR and business leaders believe their current performance management processes are outdated. More than half (52%) of HR leaders say their current strategies aren’t valuable for effectively assessing individual performance.
The survey polled over 1,000 HR and business leaders in six countries, including South Africa. Almost three-quarters say performance management has become more difficult due to hybrid working. Half of South African respondents said they are not fully satisfied with performance management at their company. Sage’s The Changing Face of HR report meanwhile shows HR managers worldwide ranked performance management as second among the things they are spending more time on than in previous years—behind only attracting talent.
From admin to strategy
Sonia Tshabalala, the People Director at Sage Africa and Middle East, says: “Performance management holds the key to a productive, motivated, and engaged workforce that can keep pace with the speed of change in the digital era. Yet performance management has become a box-ticking process in many companies rather than a strategic enabler for driving better performance and talent retention.
“The infrequency and inflexibility of traditional annual performance appraisals have become a source of frustration for managers and colleagues alike. Annual or biannual reviews don’t give managers the timely insights they need to track individual goals in line with business goals and to spot low and high performers. This may limit their ability to provide constructive feedback or incentives at the moments that matter.
“The research furthermore shows that old-fashioned approaches to performance management don’t help companies advance their diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) goals or provide insights to support succession planning. Employees, meanwhile, flounder in the absence of continual feedback about their performance and often feel anxious about the emphasis on negative aspects of performance in the review process.”
To address the needs of a modern workforce, companies need to take a fairer, more objective, transparent and data-driven approach that supports employee feedback and a continual learning process. Yet Sage’s research shows that only one in four respondents agree that their company continuously collects feedback on performance.
Automation and analytics for modern performance management
Tshabalala further adds that one of the barriers to a more real-time and unbiased approach to performance management is a lack of automation and analytics. HR functions can’t link performance to business goals without the right software and track it in real-time.
This picture can be expected to rapidly change as more businesses adopt AI-powered solutions that provide actionable insights and support more personalised employee experiences, says Tshabalala. “Modern solutions empower HR and business teams to collect data in real time and share feedback more frequently,” she adds.
“Managers will have the data at their fingertips to have continuous conversations with their teams, rather than spending hours filling in performance ratings and the dreaded nine-box grid. This will help them focus on business output, support employees with the right training to address competency gaps and deliver compensation and incentives that help them retain their best talent.”
Sage’s research shows that performance management will receive a lot of attention in SMBs over the next few years, focusing on automation and technology. More than half (55%) of HR and business leaders say it has grown in importance on their agenda. Nearly 90% say performance management will be fully automated in the future, freeing up HR’s time from admin.
Says Tshabalala: “With a more data-driven approach, performance management can look forward rather than backwards, emphasising what the employee can do to grow in their role and how they can better support the business’s goals. Performance management can thus help employees to hit their goals and feel like they’re adding value. Managers will be able to focus on strategy and inspiration, helping the business flow better and meet its goals.”
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About the research
Sage spoke to more than 1,000 HR and business leaders from small and medium organisations across the world to get under the skin of how they measure performance in their companies, what’s important to them and how they see the future.
Specifically, the research focuses on:
- Performance management today: what current processes look like
- What the future holds for performance management: what HR and business leaders want for the future
- Solving HR challenges: what companies need to do to get ahead.
The respondents’ answers provide a full 360-degree view of the good, the bad and the ugly of performance management, and what a future with data and technology could hold.
To download the full research report, visit https://www.sage.com/en-gb/blog/future-performance-management-research/
About Sage
Sage exists to knock down barriers so everyone can thrive, starting with the millions of small and mid-sized businesses served by us, our partners, and accountants. Customers trust our finance, HR, and payroll software to make work and money flow. By digitising business processes and relationships with customers, suppliers, employees, banks and governments, the Sage Network connects SMBs, removing friction and delivering insights. Knocking down barriers also means we use our time, technology, and experience to tackle digital inequality, economic inequality, and the climate crisis.