1
Chapter 15
Selecting, Appraising, and Disciplining
Employees
After reading and studying this chapter, the student
should be able to:
Explain who is responsible for selecting,
appraising, and disciplining employees.
Describe the steps in the employee selection
procedure, including the proper orientation of
new employees.
Explain what employee performance appraisal is
and who performs it.
Explain why training and developing employees
is important
State why performance-appraisal interviews are
difficult for both the employee and the
supervisor.
Define discipline and explain why it is necessary.
Describe how discipline is imposed under due
process.
Brief Outline
Responsibility for Selecting, Apprais-
ing, and Disciplining Employees
A Shared Responsibility
The Supervisors Role
Selecting Employees for Specific Jobs
Requisition
Preliminary Screening
Application Form or Résumé
Preemployment Testing
Preemployment Interviewing
Checking References and Records
Preliminary Selection by the Supervisor
Final Selection
Physical Examination
Job Offer
Orientation
Training and Development
The Role of Performance Appraisals in
Supervisory Management
What Is a Performance Appraisal?
How a Performance Appraisal Operates
Purposes of the Performance Appraisal
The Role of the Appraisal Interview
The Need for Discipline
What Is Discipline?
Discipline as Due Process
How Disciplinary Due Process Oper-
ates
The Supervisor and Discipline
The Supervisors Disciplinary Role
Principles of Effective Discipline: The
Hot-Stove Rule
Applying Discipline
Supervisors Personal Liability for Dis-
ciplining Employees
Learning Objectives
SUPERVISORY MANAGEMENT Instructor’s Manual
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2
Adrian Grubb: Getting the Most from Employees
When hiring someone for a job, it is important to achieve good person-job fit, which is when the
individual’s knowledge, skills, abilities, and experiences fit with the requirements of the job. Adrian
Grubb, currently the Training Manager with the Alabama Port Authority, has over 18 years management
experience in the hospitality industry, manufacturing sector, and now port management. Earlier in his
career, he specialized in new restaurant openings for a Fortune 500 “casualesque restaurant chain.” Their
protocol was to hire only people who had the experience for each job. When they opened a store in a
smaller college town, Adrian ignored the protocol and started hiring applicants, if they had the right
attitude and aptitude for the job even, even if they didn’t have the experience. He rotated them around
throughout the course of training until they found the best spot for that employee. According to Adrian an
employee will excel at his or her job if care about the organization, the job, and the opportunity that they
are given. He said, “You are not going to experience immediate dividends off an employee, but if you
believe in them, take your time to nurture them and help them grow, they will.”
I. Responsibility for Selecting, Training, and Disciplining Employees
An organization can be successful only if it has the right number and types of people to do the
required work.
A primary duty of all supervisors is the proper selection, placement, training and development,
compensation, and utilization of competent employees.
How wellor poorlysupervisors perform these functions is a major factor in their success or
failure.
A. A Shared Responsibility
Like almost all aspects of supervision, selecting, appraising, and disciplining employees are
shared tasks, though the primary responsibility should be left to supervisors.
In general, the responsibilities are divided as follows:
o Top managers set human resources objectives, establish policies, and do long-range
planning and organizing.
o Middle managers control the operating procedures needed to achieve these objectives and
carry out personnel policies.
o Supervisors interpret policies for employees and carry out the organization’s wishes as to
selecting and training employees.
Teams are often used at all three of these levels.
B. The Supervisor’s Role
Preview
Lecture Outline
CHAPTER NOTES Chapter 15
Employees interpret their supervisor’s actions, attitudes, and methods as representing those of
all managers, supervisors are probably the most important people in achieving an organization’s
human resources objectives.
Supervisors usually have the final word in selecting, appraising, and disciplining employees.
They supervise and control the employees’ daily activities.
II. Selecting Employees for Specific Jobs
A suggested procedure for selecting employees is shown in Exhibit 15-1. Individual employers
may find it desirable to modify this procedureor depart from itunder certain conditions.
A. Requisition
Selection begins with a requisition from the supervisor to the human resource department.
This requisition is the authorization the department needs to recruit applicants for the position(s)
available.
All aspects of the procedures must conform to the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission’s (EEOC) and should also comply with your Affirmative Action Program (AAP)
for hiring people from various groups.
B. Preliminary Screening
Whether formal or informal, some form of preliminary screening helps weed out those persons
who do not seem to meet the employer’s needs—thus saving their time and yours.
This step deals with such obvious factors such as educational background, training, experience,
physical appearance, grooming, and speechif these are relevant to job performance.
Also, the applicant should know something about the organization and the job being sought.
C. Application Form or Résumé
The applicant usually lists such information as former employers, titles of jobs held, and length
of employment with each one. Background, education, military status, and other useful data are
listed.
The form should be carefully designed to provide the information needed about the applicant’s
potential performance; it should not be a hodgepodge of irrelevant data.
The EEOC and many states have restrictions concerning the kind of questions that may be
included on an application form.
D. Preemployment Testing
Preemployment testing, especially “personality” or psychological testing, is growing in use by
industry.
SUPERVISORY MANAGEMENT Instructor’s Manual
These tests can reduce turnover.
1. Types of Tests
IQ tests are designed to measure the applicant’s capacity to learn, to solve problems, and to
understand relationships.
Aptitude tests are used to predict how a person might perform on a given job.
Vocational interest tests are designed to determine the applicant’s areas of major work
interest.
Personality tests are supposed to measure the applicant’s emotional adjustment and
attitudes.
Probably the most effective tests the supervisor can use in selecting operative employees are
achievement, proficiency, or skill tests, which measure the applicant’s knowledge of and
ability to do a given job.
One type of proficiency test is a work sampling or work preview, in which the prospective
employee is asked to do a task that is representative of the work usually done on the job.
Some organizations now test for drug use, a controversial, but legal in most states, practice.
2. Validity of Tests
If tests are used in making the selection decision, employers must be prepared to demonstrate
their validity.
Validity is demonstrated by a high positive correlation between the applicant’s test scores
and some objective measure of performance on the job.
Tests must also have reliability.
That is, the results will be the same if thetest is given to the same person by different testers
or by the same tester at different times
All selection techniques are subject to scrutiny by the EEOC.
E. Preemployment Interviewing
In preparing for the employment interview, which is the only two-way part of the selection
procedure, the supervisor should use the information on the application form and the test results
to learn about the applicant.
A list of questions should be prepared before the interview can help you avoid missing
information that might be significant in judging the applicant.
The interview can provide impressions about the candidate’s abilities, appearance, and attitudes
toward work.
This is also an opportunity to provide the candidate with information about the company and the
job.
The interview maybe carried out individually by the supervisor or in cooperation with someone
else a team member, the human resource manager, or some other senior manager.
It may be structured or unstructured.
CHAPTER NOTES Chapter 15
o Structured interviews are standardized and controlled with regard to questions asked,
sequence of questions, interpretation of replies, and weight given to factors considered in
making the value judgment as to whether or not to hire the person.
o In unstructured interviews the pattern of questions asked, the conditions under which they
are asked, and the bases for evaluating results are determined by the interviewer.
F. Checking References and Records
Reference checks provide answers to questions concerning a candidate’s performance on
previous jobs.
Many potential employers find that former employers, fearing lawsuits, tend to say nothingor
only nice thingsabout past employees. In fact, most former employers will only give dates of
employment and position(s) held.
Reference checks made in person or by telephone are preferable to written ones.
The type of information you are allowed to seek is restricted by laws, but you can check on
dates and terms of employment, salary, and whether termination was voluntary and whether this
employer would rehire the candidate.
Many organizations also use credit checks to obtain information about prospective employees,
but the candidate has the right to see the report.
G. Preliminary Selection by the Supervisor
By this point in the selection process, the supervisor has narrowed the number of candidates to
one or a very few.
If more than one candidate is qualified, a review of the information collected should reveal the
best choice.
H. Final Selection
Human resource officers are usually brought in to make sure that all laws and regulations, as
well as company policies are followed.
I. Physical Examination
The final step in the selection procedure may be a physical examination to see if the applicant
can do the job.
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Genetic Information Non-Discrimination
Act have limited the use of the physical exam.
Employers now may not require an exam before a preliminary job offer is made or ask an
applicant if they have a disability (or the nature of an obvious disability).
J. Job Offer
The job offer to applicants for nonmanagerial and nonprofessional positions is usually made by
SUPERVISORY MANAGEMENT Instructor’s Manual
the human resource office.
Those not hired should be notified and kept in mind for future openings. It is common courtesy
to notify them that someone else has been selected, and a diplomatic rejection will maintain
their goodwill.
K. Orientation
The first day on a new job is confusing for anyone. Therefore, a new employee should be given
a proper orientation.
Orientation involves the procedures of familiarizing a new employee with the company
surroundings, policies, and job responsibilities.
A job description should be given to him or her and explained in detail. Proper instructions,
training, and observation will start the employee off on the right foot.
A tour of the facilities and a look at the firm’s product or service will help the new employee
understand where he or she fits into the scheme of things.
The new employee needs to know the firm’s objectives, policies, rules, and performance
expectations.
Frequent discussions should be held with the new employee to answer questions and evaluate
his or her progress.
A formal interview with the new employee may be appropriate during the first week.
Other interviews can be held during the probationary period, which is usually from three to six
months.
After orientation is completed, a checklist is usually reviewed with the new employee. Then, the
employee and a representative of the employer sign it, and it is placed in the employee’s file as
proof of knowledge of rules.
L. Training and Development
Employee training and development is important for both the organization and the employee.
Training is the process by which employees are taught knowledge, skills, and competencies to
improve their capabilities, competencies, productivity, and/or performance.
Supervisors tend to perform a significant amount of on-the-job training, especially for newer
employees, but employees are also provided with many off-the-job training opportunities.
For training to be effective and learning to take place, the employees need to be motivated to
learn. Keller’s ARCS Model offers a motivationally centered approach to instruction and
training
Gaining your employees’ attention so they are “plugged in” is critical. This can be
accomplished in a variety of ways including presenting a problem to be solved, a troubling
statistic, an unexpected action or image, or simply varying your approach to training.
Making the training relevant to your employees can also be challenging.
o The ARCS model contains four motivational categories: attention (A), relevance (R),
confidence (C), and satisfaction (S).”
o These four categories represent sets of conditions that are necessary for a person to be
CHAPTER NOTES Chapter 15
fully motivated, and each of these four categories has component parts, or subcategories.
The third aspect of motivating trainees is building their confidence levels. The key is to set
training objectives that are appropriate for the employee given the subject or skill to be learned.
o Human beings are goal-oriented, and as such, we tend to learn better if we set SMART
training goals (Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Rewarding, and Time defined).
o SMART goals motivate us to learn new knowledge, skills, and competencies because we
have something to shoot for.
o The level and types of goals will vary depending on the type of skill or subject as well as
the employee’s current level of knowledge, skills, abilities, competencies, and
experiences.
Satisfaction, the fourth category, is necessary to sustain your employee’s motivation to perform
the new task.
o Employees need to be recognized for their success. Recognition might take the form of
verbal praise, a certificate of completion, a grade, a monetary incentive, a promotion, or
additional responsibility to demonstrate their acquired skill.
III. The Role of Performance Appraisal in Supervisory Management
Most employers have already developed some kind of formal program for improving employee
performance, growth, and development.
Reviews can be positive and motivational if conducted they are conducted with an attitude
designed to improve performance and help each employee move toward maximizing his or her
potential.
The performance appraisal should be constructive and future oriented.
A. What Is Performance Appraisal?
A performance appraisal is the process used to determine to what extent an employee is
performing a job in the way it was intended to be done.
Some other frequently used terms for this process are merit rating, efficiency rating, service
rating, and employee evaluation.
B. How a Performance Appraisal Operates
If employees’ output can be physically measured, then their rewards can be based on their actual
output and there is little need to formally appraise them.
For jobs that cannot be physically measured, the supervisor determines what personal
characteristics an employee has that lead him or her to have satisfactory performance.
The process works as follows:
o an employee’s personal qualities,
o lead to job behaviors,
o that result in work performance
o which the manager appraises, and
o and that appraisal results in some kind of personnel action.
SUPERVISORY MANAGEMENT Instructor’s Manual
An employee’s qualities are his or her abilities, attitudes, interests, skills, knowledge, and
values.
o These qualities lead the employee to take certain actions that result in output or
productivity.
The manager appraises the employee’s performance and then may reward the employee.
Most human resource departments use management staffing and development programs,
computerized files that should include appraisal criteria and ratings, along with consistent
definitions of skills, level of experience, and development activity
C. Purposes of the Performance Appraisal
Some specific reasons for appraising employee performance are:
o To recognize “good” performance
o To point out areas that need improvement
o To validate selection techniques to meet eeoc/aap requirements
o To provide a basis for administrative actions
A well-developed appraisal system can help detect problem managers in time to take
appropriate action.
Performance appraisals can also be used for communications and motivational purposes.
D. The Role of the Appraisal Interview
Most organizations cannot afford poor performance, and workers cannot afford poor reviews.
One way to satisfy both these requirements is for the supervisor to conduct an appraisal
interview to communicate the results of a given performance appraisal to an employee.
Conducting the appraisal interview is the job aspect that supervisors like least.
The interview is often handled poorly, damaging relationships between supervisors and
employees.
Interviewers are expected to aim at cooperation, constructiveness, and greater understanding,
rather than simply tell the person the results of the appraisal.
The conventional approach to the appraisal interview is emotionally upsetting for both the
supervisor and the employee.
Supervisors and employees both tend to feel anxiety over performance appraisal.
Most employers require managers to discuss their appraisals with employees.
Supervisors who suffer the double-barreled discomforts of performance appraisal. These
supervisors dislike being appraised by their own bosses, and they dislike appraising their
employeesor at least telling them the results. All this may lead to appraisal inflation.
Performance appraisals should contain aspects of career planning for the employee.
The appraisal interview presents both an opportunity and a potential danger for the supervisor.
The supervisor should emphasize the positive aspects of performance, while discussing ways to
make improvements.
The way the supervisor conducts the interview influences whether or not the employee takes
corrective action.
CHAPTER NOTES Chapter 15
IV. The Need for Discipline
Effective job performance requires that both managerial and nonmanagerial employees maintain
discipline.
Most employees would rather work with a group that is well organized, well trained, and well
disciplined.
A. What Is Discipline?
Good discipline is based on good leadership.
The term discipline will be used in this chapter to refer to any of three concepts:
o self-control,
o conditions leading to orderly behavior in a work environment, or
o punishment for improper behavior.
Discipline is training that corrects and molds or perfects knowledge, attitudes, behavior, or
conduct.
B. Discipline as Due Process
The 14th amendment to the U.S. Constitution guarantees every citizen due process under the
law.
Essentially, the following conditions ensure that an individual receives justice in the form of
due process:
o Rules or laws exist.
o There are specific, fixed penalties for violating those rules.
o Penalties are imposed only after a hearing has been conducted for the accused, at which
time the extent of guilt is determined after considering the circumstances of the situation.
Unions insist that this process be used within organizations when employees are
disciplined.
Most arbitrators will uphold a disciplinary action if it can be shown that:
o The rules were reasonable
o The penalty is related to the severity of the offense
o The worker was given a fair hearing
Due process also assumes that the employer has the right to administer discipline when rules are
violated.
Employers can avoid employee grievance proceedings by developing equitable and objective
discipline procedures.
C. How Disciplinary Due Process Operates
As indicated earlier, disciplinary due process involves three steps.
o Rules are established.
o Fixed penalties are set for each rule that is violated.
SUPERVISORY MANAGEMENT Instructor’s Manual
o The penalty is imposed only after the employee has been given a fair hearing.
1. Establishing Rules of Conduct
2. Determining Penalties
The types of penalties, as well as the ways they are used, generally are determined in
consultation with the union.
What usually results is termed progressive discipline, because it involves a graduated scale
of penalties. If there is no union, the penalties stem from management’s philosophy of how
to treat employees, as well as from its fear of the entry of a union or government action.
The normal steps in a progressive discipline policy are:
o Oral warning that does not go into the employee’s record.
o Oral warning that goes into the employee’s record.
o Written reprimand.
o Suspension, which usually consists of a layoff lasting from a day to a number of
months.
o Discharge, the ultimate penalty which constitutes a break in service and wipes out the
employee’s seniority.
Unions, personnel managers, and most supervisors favor using a graduated scale of
penalties, under which punishment for a given violation becomes progressively more severe
each time the violation is repeated.
However, when the disciplinary problems are of such a drastic, dangerous, or illegal nature
that they severely strain or endanger employment relationships, they are called intolerable
offenses, and the first time one is committed, the employee is discharged.
3. Imposing the Penalty Only after a Fair Hearing
Discipline must be properly administered in accordance with established and announced
rules and procedures.
The charges and their underlying reasons should be definite and provable.
There should be provisions for a prompt hearing, witnesses, protests, and appeals.
Adequate remedies should be available to employees whose punishment has failed to meet
the requirement of “fair play.”
The main requirements for a proper disciplinary procedure are:
o To make definite charges
o To notify the employee, in writing, of the offense
o To have some provision for the employee to answer the charges either by protest or by
appeal
CHAPTER NOTES Chapter 15
V. The Supervisor and Discipline
Regardless of whether supervisors work in unionized firms, they must exercise discretion when
recommending or imposing penalties on employees.
In dealing with mistakes, supervisors must consider what the mistakes were and under what
circumstances they were made.
Honest mistakes should be corrected by counseling and positive discipline, not by punishment.
Supervisors need to be proactive in establishing boundaries, identifying problems, counseling
employees, and taking corrective actions.
Violent behaviors are usually caused by a series of events that occur over time and that come to a
head.
First-line supervisors are the key to preventing workplace violence.
A. The Supervisor’s Disciplinary Role
One of the primary duties of supervisors is to maintain discipline.
A supervisor must instill a desire for self-discipline in employees.
When applying discipline, the supervisor must consider these points:
o Every job should carry with it a certain margin for error.
o Being overly concerned with avoiding errors stifles initiative and encourages
subordinates to postpone decisions or avoid making them altogether.
o A different way of doing something should not be mistaken for the wrong way of doing
it.
Supervisors are more likely than higher-level managers to avoid giving severe disciplinary
action because of the likelihood of generating undesirable effects.
Supervisory managers are more inclined to consider individual circumstances and behavior than
are top managers.
B. Principles of Effective Discipline: The Hot Stove Rule
Four important principles of effective discipline are discussed in this section.
These principles are often referred to as the hot-stove rule, because they draw a comparison
between touching a hot stove and experiencing discipline.
1. Discipline Carries a Clear Advance Warning
There must be a clear warning that a given offense will lead to discipline.
There must be a clear warning of the amount of discipline that will be imposed for an
offense.
2 Discipline Is Immediate
The supervisor should begin the disciplinary process as soon as possible after notices a
SUPERVISORY MANAGEMENT Instructor’s Manual
violation.
This is important for several reasons:
o An employee may feel that he or she is “putting one over” on the supervisor and may
try to violate other rules.
o An employee may assume that the supervisor is too weak to enforce the rules.
o An employee may believe that the supervisor doesn’t consider the rule important
enough to be enforced. Thus, all the other employees may be encouraged to break or
stretch the rule as well.
3. Discipline Is Consistent
For similar circumstances, similar discipline should be administered.
4. Discipline Is Impersonal
A supervisor should be as objective as possible when administering discipline.
After administering discipline to an employee, try to retain a normal relationship with that
person.
The focus should be on getting the employee’s work behavior to be consistent with the rules.
C. Applying Discipline
Two of the more unpleasant aspects of the supervisor’s job are:
o Laying off a worker for disciplinary reasons
o Discharging an unsatisfactory employee
1. Disciplinary Layoff
If an employee has repeatedly committed major offenses and previous warnings have been
ineffective, a disciplinary layoff, or suspension, is probably inevitable.
Such a layoff involves a loss of timeand payfor several days.
Because this form of discipline is so serious, most organizations limit its use to at least the
second level of management.
Not all managers believe the layoff is effective.
2. Discharge
In 1884, a Tennessee court established the termination-at-will rule whereby an employer
could dismiss an employee for any reason, unless there was explicit contractual provision
preventing such action.
Subsequent legislative enactments and court decisions, as well as union rules and public
policy, have limited the termination-at-will rule.
Most union agreements have a clause requiring “just cause” for disciplinary discharge and
CHAPTER NOTES Chapter 15
detailing the order in which employees can be laid off.
Since discharge is so severe, supervisors can only recommend it; the discharge must be
carried out by top managementusually with the advice and consent of the human resources
manager.
D. Supervisors’ Personal Liability for Disciplining Employees
Recent court decisions holding supervisors personally liable for discharging disabled employees
are making some supervisors reluctant to exercise their judgment in hiring, promoting, and
firing employees.
Supervisors have been held individually liable in some blatant and serious sex and race
harassment cases.
VI. Chapter Review
The PowerPoint slides correlated with the Lecture Outline above are available on the Instructors CD-
ROM and on the product support website.
PowerPoint Slide 15-1 Chapter 15 Title
PowerPoint Slide 15-2 Learning Objectives
PowerPoint Slide 15-3 Learning Objectives (continued)
PowerPoint Slide 15-4 Responsibility for Selecting, Appraising, and Disciplining Employees
PowerPoint Slide 15-5 Flowchart of a Suggested Selection Procedure
PowerPoint Slide 15-6 Requisition, Preliminary Screening, and Application Form
PowerPoint Slide 15-7 Topics to Avoid when Interviewing Applicants
PowerPoint Slide 15-8 Types of Preemployment Tests
PowerPoint Slide 15-9 Validity and Reliability of Tests
PowerPoint Slide 15-10 Preemployment Interviewing
PowerPoint Slide 15-11 Checking References and Records
PowerPoint Slide 15-12 Preliminary Selection by the Supervisor and Final Selection
PowerPoint Slide 15-13 Physical Examination and Job Offer
PowerPoint Slide 15-14 Orientation and Training and Development
PowerPoint Slide 15-15 Performance Appraisal
PowerPoint Slide 15-16 How Performance Appraisals Operate (Text Exhibit 15-3)
PowerPoint Slide 15-17 Appraisal Interview
PowerPoint Slide 15-18 Hints for the Appraisal Interview (Text Exhibit 15-4)
PowerPoint Slide 15-19 Discipline
PowerPoint Slide 15-20 Steps Involved in the Disciplinary Due Process
PowerPoint Slide 15-21 Supervisor’s Disciplinary Role
PowerPoint Slide 15-22 Applying Discipline
PowerPoint Slide 15-23 Supervisors’ Personal Liability for Disciplining Employees
Visual Resources
SUPERVISORY MANAGEMENT Instructor’s Manual
PowerPoint Slide 15-24 Important Terms
1. What is performance appraisal, and what are some of the other names for it?
2. Explain why performance appraisal is such an important part of the management process.
An important part of any supervisors job is evaluating and appraising workers. This should be an
3. What are some of the purposes of performance appraisal? Explain.
and (4) to provide a basis for administrative actions.
4. Name and explain the steps in the suggested procedure for selecting workers for specific jobs.
The steps in selecting workers for specific jobs are as follows:
i. A requisition from the supervisor to the human resources department gives the job description
and the personal requirements needed to do the job.
ii. A preliminary screening weeds out the obviously unsuitable applicants.
Solutions to the Questions for Review & Discussion
CHAPTER NOTES Chapter 15
ix. A physical examination may be done only to determine whether the worker can do the job
5. What is discipline?
6. Why is discipline so very important in organizations?
7. What is the due process of discipline, and why is it so important?
and (3) penalties are imposed only after a hearing to determine extent of guilt.
8. What is the unions role in the disciplinary process?
9. Why should disciplinary layoff and discharge decisions be restricted to higher levels of
management?
Both forms of discipline are very serious and involve an enormous penalty. These are the types of
decisions that are best made by managers with greater authority and responsibility. Also, these
managers are not involved with the employee on a day-to-day basis, as the supervisor is, and may
view the disciplinary procedure with more objectivity.
Solutions to the Skill Builders
SUPERVISORY MANAGEMENT Instructor’s Manual
Skill Builder 15.1
What Would You Do?
Works with SCANS competencies: Resources
When students are considering what to do, have them keep in mind that the best determinant of future
performance is past performance. Which applicants background indicates a good work ethic? The rush
work is a temporary situation. Point out that the person they hire will be with them well after the job is
completed.
Skill Builder 15.2
What Do You Want From Your Job?
1. What does your ranking tell you about your motivation now?
2. Is there any change in the second and third periods?
3. What changes are there, and why did you make them?
In five to 10 years, employees have matured and want different things from their jobs. Grievance
Skill Builder 15.3
Gloria Rogers Appraises Her Employees
Works with SCANS competencies: Information, Resources
Instructions:
Assume that you are Glorias supervisor (manager.) How would you advise her to improve her
performance appraisals?
CHAPTER NOTES Chapter 15
One obvious improvement would be to ask Rogers to let the employee do more of the talking. She seems
to be monopolizing the appraisal interview, not allowing the employee to respond until the interview is
almost over. Review the hints for the appraisal interview given in Text Exhibit 15-4 and in PowerPoint
Slide 15-18. Ask students how Rogers can apply the dos to her appraisal techniques. Does she use any
of the donts?
Case 15.1
When the Transfer Backfires
1. What are the facts Trent must consider now?
2. What avenues are now open to Trent? What does this case say to you about the need for supervisors
to act morally?
3. Do you believe that some supervisors are untruthful where recommendations are concerned?
Explain
4. What three functions are salaries meant to perform?
5. To what extent should employee appraisal be used in salary adjustments? Explain.
Solutions to the Case