BNET Briefing

What Is Forced Ranking?

Tags: Forced Ranking, Performance Management, Human Resources, Workforce Management, Jennifer Alsever, Management, Performance, Workplace, Termination, Forced Distribution, Jack Welch, Dick Grote, Worker, General Electric Co., Employee, BNET Briefing

Forced ranking is a controversial workforce management tool that uses intense yearly evaluations to identify a company's best and worst performing employees, using person-to-person comparisons. In theory, each ranking will improve the quality of the workforce. Managers rank workers into three categories: The top 20 percent are the "A" players, the people who will lead the future of the company. They're given raises, stock options, and training. The middle 70 percent are the "B" players, steady-eddies who are given smaller raises and encouraged to improve. The bottom 10 percent are the "C" players, who contribute the least and may be meeting expectations but are simply "good" on a team of "greats." They're given no raises or bonuses and are either offered training, asked if they'd be happier elsewhere, or fired.

Key Stats

  • Buzzword coined: 1970s
  • Also known as: Vitality curve, forced distribution, topgrading, rank and yank
  • Practitioners (past and present): General Electric, Yahoo!, Ford Motor Co. Capital One, 3M, Enron, and others
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Why It Matters Now

Although most large organizations refuse to publicly discuss or even confirm whether they're using some form of forced ranking, as many as one-third of Fortune 500 companies use such systems, says Dick Grote, author of "Forced Ranking: Making Performance Management Work." Forced ranking first gained attention at General Electric in the 1980s. The practice lost its glimmer in recent years following Enron's downfall, which has been attributed in part to back-biting spurred by forced rankings. But with unemployment at its lowest level since the 1990s, the talent war has heated up again, making it more important to identify top performers, since they're being more heavily recruited.

Why It Matters to You

Forced ranking tends to be popular with large corporations that have hundreds or thousands of employees and need to systematize their HR processes. If your workplace is one of these—and if the company is in trouble and looking for solutions—forced ranking could be in your future. The long-run impact should ideally be increased productivity, profitability, and shareholder value. But sometimes a company culture can shift due to forced ranking, creating a more competitive atmosphere and decreasing morale.

If you're in the market for a new job, spend some time researching which companies in your industry use forced ranking. Some firms will not openly offer this information to potential employees.

The Strong Points

By identifying their top employees, companies can jolt managers out of complacency, combat artificially inflated performance ratings, and reduce favoritism, nepotism, and promotions that may be based on factors other than performance. Managers can identify top performers—the people they least want to lose—and reward, keep, and train them to be future leaders of the business. Forced ranking also provides a justifiable way to identify and lose workers who may be holding the business back. About 40 percent of "C" players voluntarily resign, which is often a happy outcome for managers, who can then hire better-quality replacements.

The Weak Spots

Companies can inevitably make mistakes using forced ranking, firing someone who might go on to be a super star elsewhere or discouraging excellent performers by ranking them as mediocre simply to fill a quota. Replacing lower-rung employees each year can also be costly and can lower productivity in the early months of adoption. New data, including a study by Drake University professor Steve Scullen, shows that forced ranking loses its effectiveness after a couple of years, since the average quality of workers increases and there are fewer "C" players to identify.

Critics also claim the system creates a competitive environment that can result in cutthroat, unethical behavior; limit risk-taking, creativity, and teamwork; and discourage workers from asking for help or extra training out of fear that they'll be identified as low performers. The strategy has also resulted in legal troubles for such companies as Microsoft, Ford, Goodyear, 3M, and Capital One, which have fought discrimination lawsuits filed by former employees who claimed forced ranking was used to discriminate on the basis of race or age.

Key Players

General Electric: The most famous practitioner of forced ranking in the 1980s and 1990s. Former CEO Jack Welch suggests that forced ranking helped grow GE's revenues to $130 billion in 2000 from $70 billion in 1995.

Yahoo! The Internet company created its own version of forced ranking, called "stack-ranking," to determine how compensation increases are distributed. Managers rank employees from top to bottom and award bonuses and raises accordingly.

Ford Motor Co.: The car manufacturer employed forced ranking until 2001, when Bill Ford took over as CEO. Ford settled a lawsuit for $10.6 million that year when fired employees alleged age discrimination.

Motorola: The phone maker relied on forced ranking between 2001 and 2003 but has since discontinued using the management system.

How to Talk About It

Despite widespread usage, most executives and human resources officials won't use the term "forced ranking" to refer to their own process because the phrase itself seems harsh. People refer to it as their "talent management process" or "leadership assessment procedure."

Relative comparison: An appraisal that compares employees against each other, forcing some to be rated above others, such as, "How did Joe do compared to Sally and Bob?"

Absolute comparison: A conventional performance appraisal, such as, "How good did Joe do against the responsibilities and goals set at the beginning of the year?"

Forced distribution: An appraisal that does not compare people against each other but gives employees ratings such as "excellent," "good," or "needs improvement." A set number or percentage of workers must fall into each category.

Further Reading

Book: "Jack: Straight from the Gut" by Jack Welch

Book: "Forced Ranking: Making Performance Management Work" by Dick Grote

Book: "Hard Facts, Dangerous Half-Truths and Total Nonsense: Profiting from Evidence-Based Management" by Jeffrey Pfeffer & Robert I. Sutton

Blog: Incentive Intelligence

Blog: Compensation Force

 
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  •  
    1

    manvinder24

    03/27/07 | Report as spam

    Asians are not ready yet

    Asian managers used emotional judgement and are not factual even in forced rankings.This is my 13+ years experience.

  •  
    2

    Boxxy

    06/26/07 | Report as spam

    Force Ranking

    I do feel that it is required and it is happening in most of the companies in asian market. Be it manufacturing, general or software industry.

    In software industry, it is hard to understand that advantage is given to tech people specialized in particular domain. You can not roll out in software or any skill required industry

  •  
    3

    indiasfinest

    03/20/08 | Report as spam

    ok

    thats great, but dont speak on behalf of a race of millions of people, your 13 years of experience with those select asians has nothing to do with them on a global, or even national scale

  •  
    4

    manel.garcia@...

    03/27/07 | Report as spam

    How to loose singular brains

    It is part of the human behavior the trend to value as positive those people who agree with us. With this attitude, the result is to get rid of people with different opinions, ideas and behaviors, and promote the ones that say everything the boss wants to hear.
    The arguing people are considered ?negative? and their ideas are systematically ignored.
    Such attitude leads the organization to a homogeneous one, gray, with no new ideas and with a fundamental lack of creativity. The leitmotif is don?t express your opinions or ideas because if they go in a different direction as the official ones, you risk to be considered a underperformer or even worse. Do not undertake new projects, or take new decisions, because you risk to be wrong. No ideas, no errors.

    To those corporation leaders I would recommend reading an small and old book called ?The prince?, by Nicola Maquiavelo. You can take on the role of ?prince? and realize how munch can be learnt from a five centuries old writer.

  •  
    5

    ALENSK

    04/03/07 | Report as spam

    KPI

    As any other "ranking system", this forced system must also have sam official KPI system which must evaluate employees before grouping them into A, B, or C category. KPI system depends on specific business processes, so first You must define logical and improvement criteria KPIs to evaluate employees. After complete logical (profit) evaluation, discussion about grouping can begin.

  •  
    6

    bnetreader

    04/28/07 | Report as spam

    performance criteria and manager competence

    Performance criteria needs to be clear, fair, consistent and well understood by managers. If managers happen to be poor performers themselves, asking them to apply forced ranking will be disastrous to the team, project or company. I've had managers that did not monitor the work or people they managed and used forced ranking. Favoratism and bias were rampant in this company. Anyone who agreed with the manager the most in a visible way always got ranked the highest. Contribution was not used to make the evaluations! Forced ranking has no way to remove the poor performers if managers are not able to make the distiction between good performance and bad performance. Forced ranking is not something I would ever recommend if managers are do well trained or do not work closely with the people they evaluate. I know a very large and well known IT company that is in the process of learning this.

  •  
    7

    DeniseD

    11/22/07 | Report as spam

    RE: What Is Forced Ranking?

    My company does forced ranking and the ranking criteria is completely biased and subjective as their is no published rubrik or scorecard that one can use to quantitatively measure employees and compare against each other. I was at a roundtable recently and was absolutely disgusted. It's even worse to think those conversations are going on about me.

  •  
    8

    caenglish@...

    11/30/07 | Report as spam

    Is your supervisor an informed advocate?

    One point of issue with this system is the 'debate' that ensues between leaders as they defend their employees against others. Will the loudest leader get the higher ranking for his/her employees? You better hope your leader understands your work and the value you have created. It's critical that your supervisor be an informed advocate.

  •  
    9

    joeldi

    01/15/08 | Report as spam

    What if Everyone is a Star Performer?

    I have no ax to bear against forced ranking because I have fared well with it. However, being in the I/O psychology field, I find it disgusting. Steve Scullen's research on it is an excellent piece of work and highly recommended reading. What needs to be done is *absolute* ranking where employees are scaled on Behaviorially Anchored Rating Scales (BARS) where ratings are tied to descriptions. In order to make this work, however, managers must be held accountable, ensuring they are accurately and fairly rating their employees. It is more work, but definitely a better system.

    What if you had a company of 100 people, all star performers? Would you really rate the bottom x% "poor" performers? It just doesn't make sense to me. Joel

  •  
    10

    pramod_recw

    03/09/08 | Report as spam

    Solution - Benchmark

    What is everyone is a star performer in the organization? Great, I would love to be in that company. In such companies "absolute" forced ranking does sound good method of ranking and then there will be some bottom % who have exceeded the responsibilities but not as good as others. GMAT and other competitive examinations have a method "percentile" which will definitely tell us who are not performing upto the standards. Then the company should have a benchmark. Anyone if not meeting to the benchmark may be not performing to the level the company requires. It is just an utopia, I don't think there is any company wherein everyone is a star performer.

  •  
    11

    sellemmt

    01/15/08 | Report as spam

    RE: What Is Forced Ranking?

    The concept of Force-Ranking is legitimate from an HR perspective. However, implementing a successful force-ranking requires an organizational culture that absolutely perfect in its ability to measure and determine the categorization of its workforce. Non-confronting and buddy -buddy culture is the critical ingredients for making force-ranking a big failure

  •  
    12

    An Expat in France

    01/16/08 | Report as spam

    Forced Rankings = Hitting "Refresh"

    Simply put: Forced Rankings moderate the use pre-established objective criteria in employee performance evaluations, with a negative mid- to long-term effect on recruiting and retaining top performers, even if it is only a temporary policy.

    Pros:
    It gives companies the chance to hit the "refresh" button on their staff; underperformers will either leave, be fired, or be fired-up (if they don't have good prospects of finding comparable work outside the company). The company may even begin to attract confident top performers who view it as an attractive individual opportunity.

    Cons:
    The Company weakens the emotional/social contract that it has with each of it's employees - the unspoken agreement that "I'll do my best for you, and trust you to do your best for me" - upon which the Company/employee relationship is based. This relationship becomes increasingly transactional, even for those who receive the top ratings, and loyalty diminishes at all levels, leading to an exit risk among even top performers.

    And in the end, it is the employee who brings the relationship to the table - not the Company. How many times can a company hit this "refresh" button, before it becomes viewed as a grist mill for everyone except those who are deemed "top" performers by managers who appear to "play favorites?"

    Lack of competent new applicants will stifle a company's productivity pretty quickly.

  •  
    13

    AJTarantino

    01/16/08 | Report as spam

    Nothing Wrong with Classification

    I don't understand why people are upset about this type of classification. I work in the financial investment industry and we encourage our representatives to rank their clients from A to D. This way they are able to give more attention to the revenue (ie., most productive) producing clients and marginally handle their lowest producing clients. In turn, my company ranks these representatives from A to D in order that we spend more time with our most productive reps and less time with our most problematic or lowest revenue-producing reps.

    There is nothing wrong with classifing or creating a "forced" ranking of employees. We are too coddled in our society presently and need to break out of a "We are all winners" mentality. We are not all winners and never will be. We are humans and competitive. If those who are giving their time and energy to grow a company are getting rewarded much more than those who are doing nothing, what is the problem? I wouldn't want Joe Schom in my same department getting the same raise as me when he's done nothing for the year and I've stayed later and worked overtime to get my job done correctly and exceptionally.

  •  
    14

    garymary1988

    01/16/08 | Report as spam

    I welcome it

    I am a consistent top performer at the Director level "hidden" in the ranks. This year, I decided to look for a VP or COO position outside the company and informed my VP of this intention. My company has not been recognizing, rewarding and promoting it's own top performers, yet the company is baffled by a leadership turnover rate of 25%. We need to do a better job at keeping our top performing talent and letting go of those who do not serve the mission and vision of the company.

  •  
    15

    ric.sellar@...

    01/16/08 | Report as spam

    Ranking and internal competition

    Those who favour forced ranking normally are not challenged by the results. What this system does, in my view, is create an internal competition mindset where information may be withheld or "forgotten" and may adversely affect someone else. We don't necessarily have to be the best; we just have to ensure someone else is below us. I have worked hard all my career, and put in long hours and weekends on countless occasions. I believe in a need for continuous improvement and comparing process and results to the business and personal plans. There are ways of dealing with non performing employee that enforces accountability without creating the undue stress that can be caused by forced ranking.

  •  
    16

    yogshastri

    01/16/08 | Report as spam

    RE: What Is Forced Ranking?

    This kind of system can be misused. It is in practice in my organization (Incidentally a PSU) and equitable distribution of perks and promotions had often forced the top management to give good grades to the bad performers and vice versa. This system cannot be effective until it is candid and transparent.

  •  
    17

    kcouch

    01/16/08 | Report as spam

    Change is all that matters

    Any style of management, or for that matter, talent management is only good for a limited time. People become aware of how the system works, and then adapt to optimize their outcome. This is evident in that there isn't any one absolute method guaranteed to yield maximum performance consistently which transcends industry or organizational structure.

    It is the role of whoever is managing workforce talent; to be keenly aware of when a system is not achieving an expected result, and replace it with one that will.

  •  
    18

    pramod_recw

    03/09/08 | Report as spam

    Forced Ranking - Biased

    Most of the companies are following forced ranking with different names. I know one company which practises Distributed Forced Ranking method where a certain number of people are ranked A,B,C, etc to satisfy a normal distribution. But the ranking has no partical base, sometimes the performance is compared with another person, sometimes the performance is comparted with the role description, sometime the ranking is given only due to experience and most of the time it is biased towards a couple of people who are dear to the manager not because they are exceptional performers, but just biased (I can't give the true reason). And all these comparisions does not happen before giving the rank, the rank is given by the manager based on (something...) and these comparisions are just explained to the direct report just as a justification. I suggest one should implement a metric based performance management system where in ever factor should be converted to a number.

  •  
    19

    sathyaramanav

    05/02/08 | Report as spam

    RE: What Is Forced Ranking?

    Force Ranking is Good ,

    1.when there are right measuring parameters
    2.Organization is ready to share the performance data of top 20 %

    -- Sathya Ramana Varri

  •  
    20

    WULAIMOT

    05/12/08 | Report as spam

    RE: What Is Forced Ranking?

    There is nothing wrong with creating of a Force Ranking of employees but the Manager should be well trained & work closely with the people they evaluate without bias, favourism etc...
    But I will suggest Absolute Ranking because some employees render Management support services wherein successes are attributed to the manager they work with. In such case, the company may loose good brains if they are not recognised in time.

  •  
    21

    J_Lag

    05/20/08 | Report as spam

    RE: What Is Forced Ranking?

    I think forced ranking is a good thing to make managers more stringent in their yearly evaluation process. I have seen it work really well but also not so well - managers have vastly different views on what a good performance looks like - and have seen someone ranked highly when they were under performing in the eyes of all but their manager (who is also a friend) and this meant someone more deserving gets pushed further down the curve and missed out on bonus/stock/benefits or even a promotion. Great training needs to be given + I think the end decision has to be the MD or HR managers.

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