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Summary
Summary
The Comprehensive Resource for Designing and Implementing MSG Processes
As organizations strive to make the best possible decisions on critical issues such as compensation, succession planning, staffing, and outplacement, they have increasingly turned to multisource feedback (MSF) for answers. But while use of MSF (or 360-degree) systems has proliferated rapidly, understanding of its complexities has not3/4and many companies are moving forward with MSF amid a dangerous void of systematic research and discussion on this powerful process.
The Handbook of Multisource Feedback provides the most comprehensive compendium available of current knowledge and practice in MSF. The volume''s diverse group of contributors3/4which includes renowned academics, practitioners, and applied researchers3/4represents the acknowledged thought leaders in the current and future practice of MSF. Through their multiple perspectives, they identify best practices in the design and implementation of MSF processes and offer key guidelines for decision making when using MSF.
The book offers solid grounding in the nuts and bolts of MSF data collection and reporting, providing a process model that leads the reader step-by-step through each phase of an MSF system. It details the developmental and decision-making uses of multisource feedback, describing MSF applications for improving executive development, organization development and change, teams, performance management, personnel decision, and more. And it addresses the realities of system forces that influence MSF processes, including legal, ethical, and cross-cultural issues.
The Handbook of Multisource Feedback will provide an ideal one-stop reference for practitioners, researchers, consultants, and organizational clients who need to understand the challenges of using multisource feedback.
The Editors
David W. Bracken, is director of research consulting at Mercer Delta Consulting group, LLC. His twenty-two years of practice have included multisource feedback systems, individual and organizational assessments, performance management, and management development.
Carol W. Timmreck, is an organization development consultant at Shell Oil Company. She is a cofounder of the Multisource Feedback Forum, a consortium of organizations with active MSF processes.
Allen H. Church, is a principal consultant in management consulting services at PricewaterhouseCoopers, specializing in multisource feedback systems and organizational surveys. He is also an adjunct professor at Columbia University.
The complete guide to MSF systems
Handbook of Multisource Feedback offers a comprehensive, multiperspective look at the most current knowledge and practice in multisource feedback (MSF) systems. Drawing from extensive research and practice, a diverse group of distinguished contributors presents the "best practices" in the field and offers pragmatic guidelines for decision making at each step of design and implementation of an MSF process.
Contributors include:
David Antonioni
Leanne E. Atwater
H. John Bernardin
Scott A. Birkeland
Walter C. Borman
David W. Bracken
Stephane Brutus
W. Warner Burke
Allan H. Church
Jeanette N. Cleveland
Victoria B. Crawshaw
Anthony T. Dalessio
Maxine A. Dalton
Mark R. Edwards
Ann J. Ewen
James L. Farr
John W. Fleenor
Marshall Goldsmith
Glenn Hallam
Michael M. Harris
Sally F. Hartmann
Jerry W. Hedge
Laura Heft
Mary Dee Hicks
George P. Hollenbeck
Robert A. Jako
Richard Lepsinger
Jean Brittain Leslie
Manuel London
Anntoinette D. Lucia
Dana McDonald-Mann
Carolyn J. Mohler
Kevin R. Murphy
Daniel A. Newman
David B. Peterson
Steven G. Rogelberg
James W. Smither
Jeffrey D. Stoner
Lynn Summers
Carol W. Timmreck
Carol Paradise Tornow
Walter W. Tornow
Catherine L. Tyler
Brian O. Underhill
Ellen Van Velsor
Nicholas L. Vasilopoulos
Kiran Vendantam
Janine Waclawski
David A. Waldman
Alan G. Walker
Tom Wentworth
Alicia J. Winckler
David J. Woehr
Francis J. Yammarino
Author Notes
DAVID W. BRACKEN is director of research consulting at Mercer Delta Consulting group, LLC. His twenty-two years of practice have included multisource feedback systems, individual and organizational assessments, performance management, and management development. CAROL W. TIMMRECK is an organization development consultant at Shell Oil Company. She is a cofounder of the Multisource Feedback Forum, a consortium of organizations with active MSF processes. ALLAN H. CHURCH is a principal consultant in management consulting services at PricewaterhouseCoopers, specializing in multisource feedback systems and organizational surveys. He is also an adjunct professor at Columbia University.
Table of Contents
Foreword | p. xiii |
Preface | p. xxi |
The Contributors | p. xxxv |
Part 1 The Methodology of Multisource Feedback | |
1 Introduction: A Multisource Feedback Process Model | p. 3 |
2 History and Development of Multisource Feedback as a Methodology | p. 15 |
3 Readiness for Multisource Feedback | p. 33 |
4 Linking Multisource Feedback Content with Organizational Needs | p. 48 |
5 Selecting a Multisource Feedback Instrument | p. 63 |
6 Instrumentation Design | p. 79 |
7 Rater Selection: Sources of Feedback | p. 96 |
8 Improving the Quality of Multisource Rater Performance | p. 114 |
9 Reliability, Validity, and Meaningfulness of Multisource Ratings | p. 130 |
10 Working with a Vendor for a Successful Project | p. 149 |
11 Web Technologies for Administering Multisource Feedback Programs | p. 165 |
12 Multisource Feedback Reports: Content, Formats, and Levels of Analysis | p. 181 |
13 Understanding Agreement in Multisource Feedback | p. 204 |
14 Tools and Resources for Helping People Move Forward Following Multisource Feedback | p. 221 |
15 How Do Users React to Multisource Feedback? | p. 239 |
16 Measuring the Impact of Multisource Feedback | p. 256 |
Part 2 Applications of Multisource Feedback | |
17 Multisource Feedback for Executive Development | p. 275 |
18 Multisource Feedback for Teams | p. 289 |
19 Multisource Feedback for Organization Development and Change | p. 301 |
20 Performance Management and Decision Making | p. 318 |
21 Multisource Feedback for Personnel Decisions | p. 335 |
22 A Model for Behavior Change | p. 352 |
23 The Great Debate: Should Multisource Feedback Be Used for Administration or Development Only? | p. 368 |
Part 3 Systems Forces in Multisource Feedback | |
24 Introducing and Sustaining Multisource Feedback at Sears | p. 389 |
25 Evolution of Multisource Feedback in a Dynamic Environment | p. 403 |
26 Organizational Integration | p. 418 |
27 Cross-Cultural Issues in Multisource Feedback | p. 433 |
28 Legal and Ethical Issues in Multisource Feedback | p. 447 |
29 Confronting Barriers to Successful Implementation of Multisource Feedback | p. 463 |
30 Success and Sustainability: A Systems View of Multisource Feedback | p. 478 |
Appendix Guidelines for Multisource Feedback When Used for Decision Making | p. 495 |
Name Index | p. 511 |
Subject Index | p. 519 |