Beware the Inaccuracies of Self-Perception in Self-Assessment
Potential Pitfalls of Self-Assessments
Most employees will stay within or close to their comfort zones. They’ll use self-assessments to justify their conduct rather than change their behaviors. That’s understandable, because the thought of change can generate fear, anxiety, and insecurities—feelings that are uncomfortable. Therefore, out of self-protection, people tend to stick with the status quo. They won’t change because their self-perception is skewed.
Self-perceptions can mislead managers, too, biasing them into giving higher scores if an employee has a higher self-perception than the current reality.
Comparing Self with Peer-Assessments
In a 360 review process, peers evaluate each other’s performance. Throw a self-assessment into the mix, and you have a recipe that could either separate or mix. Why? Rarely are self-assessments in line with the results of peer evaluations. That differential—that gap—is one that the employee may subconsciously try to close because they want to be perceived as they perceive themselves.
One Page Talent Management further identifies these problems with self-assessments. They:
Can wound an employee’s self-esteem, possibly causing them to resist change further
Can lead the employee and manager to change the “wrong” behaviors—those that may need attention but that will have little impact on performance
Focus on what is, rather than what will be, in the future.
Here’s What Managers Should Do
In addition to incorporating self-assessments into 360 reviews, which can potentially create a situation where a manager may try to avoid conflict resulting from perception gaps, ensure that managers can truly help employees understand their performance based on others’ experiences and observations. The review should focus on the peer and manager’s feedback, and the employee can then use self-assessment as a benchmark and reality check about their development gaps.