90 day prob period w/out written eval?
sohappytobe
53 Posts
Our company policy used to do written evals after a 90 day probationary period, however, they no longer want to deal with the paperwork involved. They now want to continue the 90-day probationary period without having a 90 written evaluation - they only want written annual evals. They plan to do 90-day written evals only on those employees with whom they are dissatisfied, but not with those employees who have successfully completed the 90 period. Would that fly? Or is that discriminatory? It's my gut feeling that nothing good could come from this type of procedure.
Tx,
Tina
Tx,
Tina
Comments
I guess I've gotten to ole to fight these young managers to do the right thing; and they wonder why the labor pool doesn't care. It is a direct correlation to the care of the managers and how well they bring the ee into the fold.
PORK
"They plan to do 90-day written evals only on those employees with whom they are dissatisfied, but not with those employees who have successfully completed the 90 period." If you find a majority of women, people over 40, people of differing origin, etc. wind up in the "employees with whom they are dissatisfied" category - yep, it's discriminatory. Otherwise, if you get a good mix of folks in the category, it's not - the employees just aren't working out.
My fear from your post is that there may be a lack of trust between these supervisors and HR - are there concerns about discrimination from other conversations you've had with them? Do they do a poor job of documentation? Do they seem to have 'favorites'? If any of this is true - you need to meet with the supervisors & spell out your concerns with moving to this new policy & see if you all can get into agreement.
Finally, 90-day evals are a pain the behind, but if it's the only time you tell the employee how they are doing & how you are rating their performance - you better not get rid of it. "Surprises" showing up in the annual review cost a lot in lost productivity (Employee upset, employee talks to co-workers, co-workers talk to others, HR involvement sorting the mess out, meeting with supervisor to find out why, resolution meeting, etc. = $$$$). Maybe if you spell out the costs, these supervisors would understand your reluctance with the proposal. Good luck.
Ah - I just read Don's post - very good advice there!
Finally, if you are getting dismissed as just 'legal' and told to 'relax' then you should have a meeting with your boss/CEO to find out why the company thought it was necessary to have HR in the first place. Don't whine or cry or act outraged - just ask why they thought it was important. Prepare yourself for three responses - administrative function, real HR, and smoke. I say smoke because they may not even have a clue why they need HR - they just thought it would be 'cool' to have a HR department (in small companies - this can happen). Prepare your case for each response. In HR we can tend to get preachy & long winded - make sure you make your case with no more than 10 bullet statements for each. This is tricky - but it will also help you to define how you see HR operating in the company as well. One other tip: to bring home the importance of HR - sometimes you have to bring in some outside help. Contact your insurance broker, eap rep, 401(k) rep or anyone else you can find that can come in and scare these folks into action (the ones I mentioned usually do it for free (well there is that commission rate). Sometimes going outside for this assistance (I always prep my outside rep's before they come in x;-)) can go a long way. Good luck.