The commenter who likes the bell curve has likely not functioned as a manager under the system.
As a performer, I was long frustrated with how poorly managers differentiated performance. So I could bust my backside and deliver great work and, while my reviews were strong, others who did a lot less often received overly generous reviews. Accordingly, the comp differential wasn’t what it should have been.
So I was for any system that compelled managers to better differentiate performance.
This system is not it.
It can be incredibly hard for managers. First of all, you are usually forced to limit Exceeds to 10-15% of your team, so on a team of 10, you’re lucky if you can award it to two people. Then almost all of the rest of your team (65-75% of the co) is dumped in a huge middle bucket and there is such a broad range of performance within that, including some who really deserved Exceeds and some who narrowly escaped Below. So it includes some of your best, some okay performers and some barely acceptable ones. It’s nuts. The best performers who get Achieved are leaps and bounds above others who receive that rating. Fair? Not even close.
And if you’re good at managing up your poor performers, or managing them out when all else fails (or the system forces you to), the next year you have to find someone else to to award the silver anvil of job death.
The system makes most managers despise the whole performance management process.
And again, I am someone who believes strongly in differentiating performance, because that produces the best results for the company and properly rewards strong performers.