Loading…

A Critical, Objective Review of Performance Feedback

Providing information to employees about their past performance is a widely used strategy in organizations. The effects of performance feedback, however, have not been previously systematically evaluated. A total of 126 applications of feedback in organizations was reviewed. Each feedback applicatio...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of organizational behavior management 1985-12, Vol.7 (3-4), p.65-89
Main Authors: Balcazar, Fabricio, Hopkins, Bill L., Suarez, Yolanda
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Providing information to employees about their past performance is a widely used strategy in organizations. The effects of performance feedback, however, have not been previously systematically evaluated. A total of 126 applications of feedback in organizations was reviewed. Each feedback application was evaluated in terms of the consistency of its effects. Effects were differentiated according to whether feedback was used alone or in combination with rewards and/or goal setting procedures and according to selected characteristics of feedback. The results of this review indicate that (1) feedback does not uniformly improve performance; (2) adding rewards and/or goal setting procedures to feedback improves the consistency of its effects; and (3) some characteristics of feedback are more consistently associated with improved performance than others. An analysis of the ways in which feedback might operate and consideration of basic research suggest that it will be effective to the extent that it is related to functional, differential reinforcement. The implications of these findings for using feedback and for needed research in organizational behavior management are discussed.
ISSN:0160-8061
1540-8604
DOI:10.1300/J075v07n03_05