Posts

Showing posts from 2026

AI in Performance Management: Opportunities and Challenges

Image
A few years ago, the idea of an algorithm sitting in on your performance review would have seemed far-fetched. Today it is standard practice in many large organisations. AI-driven performance tools now track output, flag underperformance, and feed data directly into appraisal cycles — often without employees fully realising it is happening. There is genuine value here. These systems can cut through personal bias, give managers better data to work with, and make feedback more consistent (Mishra, 2024). But the technology is only as good as the environment it lands in. And as the following examples show, that environment varies enormously depending on where in the world you are working. Americas United States: When the Dashboard Becomes the Manager American workplaces have absorbed AI performance tools with relatively little resistance. Employees who have grown up with KPIs, quarterly reviews, and real-time produc...

Standardization vs. Localization in Global HRM: Finding the Right Balance Across Cultures

Image
Every multinational organisation eventually faces a version of the same question: do you run HR the same way everywhere, or do you adapt it country by country? It sounds like an operational detail. In practice, it is one of the more consequential decisions a global business can make. Standardization offers real advantages — consistency, efficiency, and a coherent corporate identity that travels across borders. Localization offers something different: the ability to work with a culture rather than against it. The evidence from international HRM research points fairly clearly toward a hybrid of the two, where a common framework exists but local managers retain enough flexibility to make it work on the ground (Brewster et al., 2016). What that looks like in practice varies considerably depending on where you are. Americas United States: The Pull Toward Uniformity US-headquartered mu...

Communication Styles Across Cultures: Implications for Global Team Performance

Image
Most workplace misunderstandings are not about what was said. They are about how it was said — and what the person hearing it expected. Communication is the thread running through every aspect of performance management: how goals are set, how feedback is delivered, how disagreements surface, and how trust is built or broken over time. In a single-culture organisation, most of this happens instinctively. In a global one, the instincts of one culture can look like rudeness, evasiveness, or incompetence to someone from another — even when everyone involved is acting perfectly reasonably by their own standards (Meyer, 2014). Understanding how communication styles differ across cultures is not a soft skill. For anyone managing people across borders, it is a practical necessity. Americas United States: Say What You Mean American professional communication is built around directness. Opinions are stated plainly, f...

Rewards and Motivation Across Cultures

Image
Most reward systems are designed on an implicit assumption: that what motivates one person will motivate another. Give people money for good performance, recognise their achievements publicly, offer promotion opportunities — and the results will follow. In practice, it is rarely that simple. Expectancy theory tells us that motivation depends on three things: believing your effort will produce results, believing results will be rewarded, and actually wanting the reward on offer (Vroom, 1964). That third factor is where culture enters the picture — and where many global organisations quietly get it wrong. The reward that drives a salesperson in Chicago to exceed their targets may mean very little to a branch manager in Colombo or a team leader in Nairobi. Americas United States: The Bonus as Motivator American reward systems are relatively straightforward in their logic: perform well, get paid more. Financial ince...

Development as a Strategic Tool in Performance Management

Image
Performance management used to be mostly about evaluation — looking back at what an employee had done and deciding whether it was good enough. That framing has shifted considerably. Most forward-thinking organisations now treat development as the more important half of the equation: not just assessing where people are, but actively investing in where they could go. The theory supports this. Kolb's Experiential Learning cycle describes development as a continuous process — experience leads to reflection, reflection to understanding, and understanding back into practice (Kolb, 1984). The implication is that learning is not a one-off event but a habit that organisations either support or neglect. What differs across cultures is how that support is best provided — and what employees actually respond to. Asia Sri Lanka: Structure as a Foundation for Growth In Sri Lankan organisations, employee development tends to work best when it ...

Performance Appraisal Methods Across Cultures

Image
Sit in on a performance review in New York, then observe one in Colombo, Nairobi, or Milan — and you will quickly notice that the conversation looks quite different in each city, even when the organisation running it is the same company with the same global HR policy. The tools themselves — 360-degree feedback, Management by Objectives, rating scales — are reasonably well understood (Verma and Mishra, 2024). The gap is not in the methodology. It is in the assumption that the same method will be received the same way by people with very different expectations about authority, hierarchy, and what a fair evaluation actually looks like. That assumption, repeated across too many global appraisal rollouts, is where things tend to break down. Americas United States: More Voices, Better Picture 360-degree feedback has become a fixture in American performance management for a straightforwar...

Annual Reviews to Real-Time Feedback

Image
The annual performance review is not dead, but it is on borrowed time in many organisations. A single conversation once a year — often months after the events it is meant to address — has limited ability to improve performance, and most employees know it. What has taken its place, in organisations paying attention, is something more continuous: regular check-ins, ongoing dialogue, and feedback that arrives close enough to the work to actually be useful (Giamosa, Stone and Mularski, 2023). The evidence for continuous feedback is reasonably strong. Employees who receive timely, relevant input tend to stay more engaged, course-correct more quickly, and feel a clearer sense of what is expected of them. But the shift from annual reviews to ongoing feedback is not simply a process change — it is a cultural one. And culture, as ever, shapes how that change plays out on the ground. Americas United States: Fast, Frequent, and...

Setting Goals Globally - Why One Size Doesn’t Fit All

Image
Setting goals sounds simple — decide what you want, write it down, and get to work. But managing performance across borders is far more complicated than that. Goal-setting theory posits that performance improves when employees commit to clear, challenging targets (Locke and Latham, 1990), and there is strong evidence supporting this. The problem is that theory rarely accounts for culture. What motivates a team in New York may frustrate one in Colombo. What feels empowering in Milan may feel inappropriate in Nairobi. Culture shapes how people relate to authority, how they define success, and how they respond to being measured—and any serious approach to performance management must take that into account. Americas The United States: Individual Targets and Measurable Outcomes In the United States, performance management is built around individual accountability. KPIs are standard, and systems like OKRs—Objectives a...

Introduction

Image
Ask ten HR directors from ten different countries what good performance management looks like, and you will get ten meaningfully different answers. Not because some of them are wrong — but because the question itself does not have a single correct answer. Culture shapes what employees expect from their managers, how they respond to feedback, what motivates them, and what a fair evaluation even means. These are not surface-level preferences. They run deep. This series explores that reality directly. I looked at performance management across four distinct cultural regions — the United States, Italy, sub-Saharan Africa (Kenya and South Africa), and Sri Lanka — and examined how core HR practices play out differently in each one. The goal is not to rank these approaches or declare a winner. It is to understand them well enough to work across all of them. What This Series Covers Performance management is broader than most people re...