Showing posts with label evaluation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label evaluation. Show all posts

Friday, January 2, 2009

The Human Audit

The title may appear intimidating, especially in the background of the crumbling markets and the malpractices which cripple many a commercial firm. As we stand at the last lap of the year, what does this human audit means. First of all, the very term needs explication and explanation, for this is not a common term that is often used to expound the evaluation at the end of the year. By the phrase human audit I mean a need to evaluate one’s performance, not on the basis of a set of criteria, but on the basis of one’s achievement as seen by oneself, without any intrusion by a second or third party. This includes basically two areas: the success and the failures, but these two are seen not as water-tight compartments, but as one flowing into the other. At the end of the year, we may find that we have so many incomplete tasks to be completed, and may realize that all our efforts to fix deadlines have failed miserably. But it is important that we become aware of our strengths and drawbacks, so that we are able to take ourselves seriously in the new year.

Very seldom do we make a self-evaluation at the end of the year; all the business firms and commercial houses undertake routine exercise to evaluate their performance. The two primary concepts around which evaluations are conducted in business sectors are : performance and achievement. But when we come to human resources, of persons we cannot force these two concepts to take top position. If we attempt that way, then we will realize that we too soon equate human persons to machines, and that may be the death-knell of the human-oriented business center. Perhaps the most effective evaluation that we can think of for human persons is the one where in they are the subject and the object. They evaluate themselves using their own norms and criteria. But an opportunity should be given to them to see for themselves how they have fared in the year that has passed away.

I would like to make five or ten criteria to evaluate my success, and another ten criteria to evaluate my failures. It is not important for me to identify the areas where I have failed, but more than merely identifying, I need to find the reasons which were responsible for such failure. It may be related to either myself or others, or even the infrastructure facilities provided by the firm. What is important is that I am able to see these for myself, and don’t require someone to tell me what had gone wrong in my sector. If I find out the lacunae in my work, that would save my face and help me to redress the lacunae without even letting others know that something had gone wrong in my area of work.

Needless to say, I need to take an audit for all the different areas where I am involved, interpersonal, academic, social, economic, religious and even familial. I cannot afford to drop any particular area, without assessing how I had fared. If I do this exercise consciously and seriously, then I am sure to make progress in the days to come; if I don’t feel the need to assess my different areas of involvement, then I am sure to stagnate, if not go backwards in progress. One may not do this officially, but it is important that one spends some time quietly reflecting about these two areas, and similarly finding reasons what had gone wrong in the process. It is important that I take forward the areas where I had succeeded and to re-plan the areas where I need extra effort to make it tick. Human mind is capable of fusing ideas from nowhere in order to provide solution to most difficult of problems. All that we need is effort to find adequate solutions.

In order to engage in this sort of human audit, I need to take time off from the hustle-bustle of everyday life and commitments, so that I can seriously enter into my inner self, pick up areas which I rarely pay attention to. It would benefit if I can go to a place where I can be all by myself without anyone to disturb me. There are two ways how I can conduct audit : I may go chronologically from the first of January last year, and go month by month, recollecting the different events and incidents which had either helped you or prevented you from carry out the task you have been given. The second way is to go in terms of area of work or involvement. In either case, one can see for oneself that there are areas which require fine-tuning, and there are areas which require rescheduling of action plans. If I am honest to myself and genuinely wish to take my life forward, then I can be sure to find areas where I need to improve. The next year provides an opportunity for me to take life forward.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Jamming Judgements

I have been told umpteen times that I am a man of strong characters, strong temperament, likes and dislikes. It would be quite hard for me to accept or reject this major complaint about me. I would not make an attempt to address this issue of strong sentiments. Honestly speaking over the years I had been spending considerable amount of time delving deep into the inner recesses of my heart; the greatest discovery that I can possibly achieve during this life on earth is unravelling some of the baffling secrets, which are even now shrouded in mystery. No Sherlock Homes will ever be able to do it; nor can any Feluda of Satyajit Ray can ever enter into the guarded Red Forts!

A man of strong characters! Is it a virtue or a vice? You might smile and say, it all depends on whom I ask. But is there an objective truth in our judgements? How much of our judgements and evaluation of persons in our society are based on objective facts? In fact, even the very term objective facts may be understood by one hundred persons in one hundred and one ways. Each of us look at an external reality on the basis of our own perceptions, or to borrow an image from psychology, on the basis of the color glasses we wear. Perhaps there is not a single day in our lives when we had even unwittingly failed to judge a person or an event. It has become our second nature. Often I feel judging is itself a necessary evil that we have come to accept and acknowledge - judge others, often erroneously and allowing ourselves to be judged.

One of the greatest tragedies that often shake the world is caused by people who take the judgement of others too seriously. For many, what others say is the gospel truth; even if they know the information to be completely false, yet they will give undue weightage to it, and undergo untold suffering and pain deep within. It doesn't cost us any money to judge a person - either positively or negatively. For quite many of us in socieyt it is one of the most favorite passtimes. We know the very moment we take the words of these people seriously, our world may begin to crumble slowly. All our dreams will be fragmented into a million pieces all within a minute! But the moot question is : Am I free to take this judgement or not! Do I have the power to reject it? Of course I have the power deep within me!

This brings us to yet another crisis moment in life: can I ever live a peaceful life without paying heed to what others say about me? Is it not too rude and impolite to reject the opinions of others? It is not! In fact it is only when I begin to ask myself if I should take or reject the judgements of others, do I truly begin to show that I am a mature person, and am serious about my relationship with others, and that I control the direction of my destiny. Often we wish others to control our lives and find it frightening to reject what a good majority in society may say, or wish us to accept as blatant truth.

At this juncture, what am I to do? the one and perhaps the only question that I may have to ask myself is this : how far is this evaluation of myself by others or the judgements going to shape my future. If we give power to these judgements, however sound they may seem, then I am sure to ruin my life; but unfortunately more than 60 per cent of the people in society may take the criticism of others literally. Today I pause for a while and think of the one or two persons who had judged me positively or negatively, or reacted to me on the basis of his/her prejudgement or prejudice. Can I overcome the consequences of these judgements? Let me over come the excessive pain or pleasure that they may cause. Let me learn to take them for what they are truly worth! That may also be the beginning of accepting myself as I truly am, and there is the way to true enlightenment!