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==Introduction==
=Introduction=
This article introduces different models of organizational performance that have been researched over the past decades and the trend observed toward a better understanding of how individuals function and perform in groups. When appropriately measured and condensed into results that can be used on a broad range of subjects related to a company’s strategy and day-to-day operations, the measures provide the new foundation for raising organizational performance to new levels.
This article explores various models of organizational performance studied over recent decades and the increasing understanding of how individuals function and perform in organizations.


=Management Control=
When assessed precisely, measures of individual performance are relevant across a variety of topics related to a company’s strategy and daily operations, including attracting, recruiting, and empowering the talent it needs. They provide a new basis for understanding and improving organizational performance.
The traditional, historical, and often implicit understanding of an organization’s performance is that the organization functions like a machine, with its performance measured by efficiency, predictability, and control. With this vision, the goal of the organization is to optimize individual parts and processes to produce a specific, measurable output. Management control, sometimes called "management audit," "management accounting," "managerial control," or simply “management,” depending on the context, has focused on
<ref>Simon, H. A. (1954). A formal theory of the employment relationship. Econometrica, 22(3), 293–305.<br/>Simons, R. (2000). Performance measurement and control systems for implementing strategy. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, Prentice Hall.</ref>:
<ul>
<li>Decision-making for improving the decision-making process through planning and coordination. Planning is about setting strategic and performance goals, monitoring the quality and variety of resources. Coordination is about integrating disparate elements to achieve goals.</li>
<li>Control for providing feedback and ensuring that the input-output system is properly aligned, and to motivate or evaluate employees.</li>
<li>Reporting information to managers throughout the organization that relates to their values, preferences, and what employees need to focus their attention and energy on.</li>
<li>Learning and training for understanding changes in the internal and external environment, as well as the connections between their various components.</li>
<li>External communication to disseminate information to constituents outside the organization: shareholders, analysts, suppliers, partners, customers, etc.</li>
</ul>
It’s only progressively that concerns for reporting, learning, and training have gradually emerged. Companies began to differentiate diagnostic from interactive control<ref>Simons, R. (1990). The role of management control systems in creating competitive advantage: new perspectives. Accounting, Organizations and Society, 15 (1/2), pp. 127-143.</ref>. While the diagnostic refers to the piloting of routines and the implementation of strategy, interactive control relates to piloting by managers, the focusing of the attention of employees, learning, and the formulation of strategy.


=Gradual Evolution=
=Performance Models=
Anthony's seminal work played a major role in the development of management control systems<ref>Anthony, R. N. (1965). Planning and control systems: A framework for analysis. Division of Research, Graduate School of Business Administration, Harvard University.</ref>. However, the definition he gave of control systems led to considering these systems as means of control by accounting measures of planning, steering, and integrating mechanisms<ref>Langfield-Smith, K. (1997). Management control systems and strategy: A critical review. Accounting, Organizations and Society, 22, 2, pp. 207-232.</ref>. The focus was on accounting measures, but the non-financial measures were neglected<ref>Otley, D. (1999). Performance management: a framework for management control systems research. Management Accounting Research, 10, pp. 363-382.</ref>. The initial objective of accounting management systems, to provide information to facilitate cost control and measure the performance of the organization, was transformed into that of compiling costs with a view to producing periodic financial statements<ref>Johnson, H. T., Kaplan, R. (1987). Relevance lost: The rise and fall of management accounting. Boston, Harvard Business School Press.</ref>.
Organizational performance can be approached through various models, which address aspects of its measurement and control on the one hand, and its conceptualization on the other.  
 
The role of short-term financial performance measures progressively became inappropriate for the new reality of organizations. The non-financial indicators based on the strategy of the organization were of crucial importance<ref>Kaplan, R. S. (1983). Measuring manufacturing performance: a new challenge for managerial accounting research. The Accounting Review LVIII(4), pp. 686-705.<br/>Eccles, R. G. (1991). The performance measurement manifesto. Harvard Business Review January-February, p. 131-137.</ref>. Gradually, the performance measurement framework began to reconcile the use of financial and non-financial measures. They evolved from a cybernetic vision where the measures are about costs, financial control, planning, and management control, towards a new era reflecting a holistic vision where the performance measures are focused on process efficiency and added value in management through non-financial measures<ref>Ittner, C. D., Larcker, D. F. (2001). Assessing empirical research in managerial accounting: a value-based management perspective. Journal of Accounting and Economics, 32, pp. 349-410.</ref>.


=Performance Models=
Organizational performance can be approached through various models, which address aspects of its measurement and control on the one hand, and its conceptualization on the other.  
An organizational performance can be approached through various models, which address aspects of its measurement and control on one hand, and its conceptualization on the other hand. With both perspectives, the terms efficiency or performance can ultimately be considered synonyms<ref> March, J. G., Sutton, R. I. (1997). Organizational Performance as a Dependent Variable. Organization Science. Vol. 8, No. 6, pp. 698-706.</ref>. Management control research has traditionally focused on performance measures with the cybernetic model. Considering the human aspects amid non-financial measures has allowed the holistic model to gradually overcome some limitations of the cybernetic model<ref>Henri, J. F. (2004). Performance measurement and Organizational Effectiveness: Bridging the gap. Managerial Finance. Vol. 30, No. 6, pp 93-123.</ref>.


Other performance models contribute to defining and implementing procedures and performance measures, depending on the context (research, societal, leadership, organizational development, etc.). Several approaches have been proposed for categorizing the performance models. For example, they can be grouped into three categories based on their origins in economic, organizational, and social research<ref>Vibert C. (2004). Theories of macro organizational behavior: a handbook of ideas and explanations.</ref>. Others have suggested three clear categories: objectives, system, and stakeholders<ref>Campbell, J. P. (1977). On the nature of Organizational effectiveness. In P. S. Godman & J. M. Pennings (Eds.), New perspectives on organizational effectiveness. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Pp. 13-55.<br/>Zammuto, R. F. (1982). Assessing organizational effectiveness: Systems change, adaptation, and strategy. Albany, N.Y.:Suny-Albany Press.<br/>Quinn, R. E., Rohrbaugh, J. (1983). A Spatial Model of Effectiveness Criteria: Towards a Competing Values Approach to Organizational Analysis. Management Science. Vol. 29, No. 3, pp. 363-377.<br/>Cameron, K. S., Whetten, D. A. (1983). Organizational Effectiveness: One model or Several? Preface. Orlando: Academic Press.</ref>.
Until the 1980s, management control research had focused on performance measures within the cybernetic model, an extension of the more popular command-and-control model that had dominated until the 1950s. Considering new individual and cultural factors alongside non-financial measures has enabled the holistic model to gradually overcome some limitations of the cybernetic model<ref>Henri, J. F. (2004). Performance measurement and Organizational Effectiveness: Bridging the gap. Managerial Finance. Vol. 30, No. 6, pp 93-123.</ref>. Since the 2000s, thanks to capabilities from software platforms, the Internet, and later AI, Management Control System (MCS) packages have integrated and powered management control systems as integral parts of organizational management, most often aligned with holistic models. The three grand models are summarized in this table and detailed in separate articles.
The different performance perspectives have been regrouped below into seven categories that follow the three grand categories. This grouping enables highlighting different analytical anchor points and limitations. The seven approaches are summarized in the following table:


{| class="wikitable" style="margin: auto;"
{| class="wikitable" style="margin: auto;"
|+ Models of performance
|+ Performance Management
! Models !! Focus  
! Models !! Focus  
|-
|-
| Cybernetic ||Accounts for the financial and production metrics.  
| [[Command_and_Control_Perspective | Command and Control]] || Traditional hierarchical top-down approach, with original management control systems for planning and controlling.
|-
| [[Cybernetic_Perspective | Cybernetic]] || Accounts for the first-order loop feedback, learning, and communication in addition to financial and production metrics.
|-
|-
| Holisitc || Extends from the cybernetic model with individual and social aspects.
| [[Holistic_Perspective | Holisitc]] || Holistic_Perspective | Extends the cybernetic model with a second-order feedback loop and emphasizes the relationships and interactions among the organization’s different parts, including its culture, vision, mission, and reward systems.
|-
|}
| [[Performance_by_Objectives|Objectives]] || [[Performance_by_Objectives|Objectives are set and managed at different levels of the organization.]]
 
Regarding its conceptualization, several approaches have been proposed to categorize performance by context: research, society, leadership, organizational development, and more. For example, the models can be grouped into three categories according to their origins in economics, organizational studies, and social research<ref>Vibert C. (2004). Theories of macro organizational behavior: a handbook of ideas and explanations.</ref>. Others have suggested categorizing them into three categories: objectives, systems, and stakeholders<ref>Campbell, J. P. (1977). On the nature of Organizational effectiveness. In P. S. Godman & J. M. Pennings (Eds.), New perspectives on organizational effectiveness. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Pp. 13-55.<br/>Zammuto, R. F. (1982). Assessing organizational effectiveness: Systems change, adaptation, and strategy. Albany, N.Y.:Suny-Albany Press.<br/>Quinn, R. E., Rohrbaugh, J. (1983). A Spatial Model of Effectiveness Criteria: Towards a Competing Values Approach to Organizational Analysis. Management Science. Vol. 29, No. 3, pp. 363-377.<br/>Cameron, K. S., Whetten, D. A. (1983). Organizational Effectiveness: One Model or Several? Preface. Orlando: Academic Press.</ref> which is the one we adopted here. The value model was analyzed separately from the stakeholders model because it provides a distinct, overall understanding of how individuals and organizations behave. The non-performance model was added because it stands apart and continues to be a powerful model for understanding and managing performance. This grouping allows highlighting different analytical focus points, limitations, and relationships with management control systems.
 
{| class="wikitable" style="margin: auto;"
|+ Performance Conceptualization
! Models !! Focus
|-  
| [[Performance_by_Objectives|Objectives]] || Objectives are set and managed at different levels of the organization. Techniques such as cost-benefit analysis, management by objectives, individual criteria, or behavioral goals are used.
|-
|-
| [[Systems%27_Performance|Systems]] ||[[Systems%27_Performance|As a system, an organization’s parts and intangible resources need to be managed.]]
| [[Systems%27_Performance|Systems]] || Systemic models emphasize the importance of an organization's means, such as inputs, outputs, resource acquisition, and processes. They include the operations research model, the structural contingency model, and the culturalist and social regulation models.
|-
|-
| [[Stakeholders%27_Performance|Stakeholders]] || [[Stakeholders%27_Performance|Stakeholders' characteristics need to be leveraged.]]
| [[Stakeholders%27_Performance|Stakeholders]] || Stakeholders' performance models emphasize the expectations of individuals and interest groups that are either within or surrounding the organization. It includes the organizational development model, satisfaction, and expectancy models.
|-
|-
| [[Performance_by_Values|Behavioral Values]] || [[Performance_by_Values|Extends from the stakeholder model to understand organizations based on individual behavioral values and preferences.]]
| [[Performance_by_Values|Values]] || Value models extend the stakeholder model to understand organizations in terms of individual values and preferences. The concept of values encompasses broad aspects of social behavior that, unlike others, can be described, measured, and shared.
|-
|-
| [[Non_Performance|Non-performance]] || [[Non_Performance|Minimize non-performance and ineffectiveness.]]
| [[Non_Performance|Non-performance]] || It is easier, more precise, consensual, and beneficial to address performance issues by problems and faults rather than by skills and performance criteria.
|}
|}


Besides performance models, which only depend on financial, production, and other tangible data, holistic and stakeholder models have increasingly used new research methods and included more sophisticated data and theories about people and their organizations. The nature of this data has evolved over time, from the early days of scientific psychology in the 1900s, which was firmly rooted in behavioral research, to today, where emotions and neuroscience play a significant role.  
Organizational performance models have evolved over time, not to replace earlier ones but to improve them, expand their scope, and develop new models that meet current needs. Since the 2000s, with the rise of the Internet and more recently, AI, our ability to collect and analyze people's data has greatly increased. Similarly, management control systems have advanced, enhancing our capacity to better understand and manage people. How organizations can improve their performance over time is closely connected to how individuals and teams can enhance their performance.
 
=Individual Performance=
[[File:Performance_Individual.png|right|300px]]


Personality has been a key concept in many models early on and continues to be widely used in research and practice. In research, it is present in sociology, anthropology, and psychology with its different schools. Personality carries many connotations, though. Despite its extensive use in recruitment, management science, and coaching in day-to-day business, the idea of personality remains coupled to the early days of psychometry, when it was used with deviant behaviors in psychiatry and clinical psychology. Using the personality concept while avoiding its negative connotation remains a constant challenge in practice.
As the conceptualization of organizational performance and management control systems has dramatically progressed over the past decades, so has the understanding of people and their management. Although it takes more time than in technology, research in the social sciences has had the opportunity to build, break, challenge, and test the limits of many models and techniques. Adaptive profiles emerged from research in the 1950s in the USA and gradually began to penetrate organizations of all sizes worldwide.


=Centrality of Social Behaviors=
<blockquote>'''Adaptive profiles measure how people perform in context, their social behavior, adaptation efforts, and engagement.'''<ref>See more information [[Operationalizing_Performance|here on how adaptive profiles are used to operationalize performance at an individual level.]]</ref></blockquote>
Performance models based on actions and values include a behavioral component that makes them especially useful for research and practical applications. Behaviors are observable. We can discuss and analyze them more effectively than abstract concepts, increasing the chances of reaching consensus about what they are and what can be done with them. Behaviors are also a fundamental component of the personality concept. Behavioral traits and typologies have been extensively studied and used, both in recruitment and coaching. The behaviors that people value, are interested in, and will most likely express, also inform us about how they function and can perform.  


Being capable of analyzing behaviors using different models at the individual, team, company, and societal levels uncovers a limited set of behavioral factors. When combined, these factors can help explain behaviors; at GRI, we estimate that up to 90% of observable behaviors in organizations can be explained by four factors. As science progressed, so has our sophistication in analyzing and assessing people and in modeling and representing their behaviors.
Just like in the entertainment industry, actors perform in various ways, taking on different roles in different movies, influenced not only by their individual characteristics but also by how they are asked to act on stage. How does personal performance on the field actually happen, and what results does it produce? The adaptive profiles offer some answers.


=Beyond Intuition=
The same concept applies in sports, where team members are expected to collaborate and adapt their behavior when playing together, rather than strictly sticking to their personalities and positions on the field. In companies, different roles also require acting and adapting in various ways.
As discussed in articles about holistic and stakeholder models, the concepts used for understanding people are numerous: intelligence, mindset, competencies, skills, preferences, styles, beliefs, motivation, drives, emotions, grit, creativity, interests, etc. The list is long. Some concepts are broad and universal, while others are more specific and can only be used for narrow and limited applications. Some are easy to adapt, others are much less so. Some characteristics can be gathered in a few clicks from data collected on the Internet through sophisticated techniques and AI rather than direct observation and intuition.


Discussion on assessment techniques, what they assess, and how they work goes beyond what this article can address. In a few words, though, the survey technique stands apart by its capacity to apply statistics and gather information to produce results that we human beings can’t. We, however, apply our own and limited subjective statistics with our own values and reference points, something we’ve referred to in our research at GRI as our private techniques. Private techniques are valuable individually, but not effective when used with others and for analyzing individual and group performance.
[[File:Profile Detailed.png|right|300px]]
Adaptive profiles, like the one on the right, are constructed using a two-question, open-scenario, adjective format. The process helps remove biases and improve objectivity. The results are profiles that subtly show how people behave, feel, and think. They provide insights to maximize individual performance in flow, ways to support adaptation and engagement, and the conditions to prevent underperformance. The profiles are also used to enhance organizational performance<ref>The adaptive profiles are discussed [[Adaptive Profile|with greater detail in other articles on this wiki]].</ref>.
 
Today, markets are familiar with tools that measure traits and types. These tools are widely used in recruitment and coaching. Adaptive profiles differ because they are based on factors. They add details that help improve individual assessments by eliminating major limits in how measures are represented, learned, and applied, and providing greater precision across many applications in recruitment, management, leadership, and organizational development.<ref>See more [[Assessments_Potential_Uses | here in this wiki about the various potential uses of assessment techniques.]]</ref>.


=Organizational Performance=
=Organizational Performance=
[[File:Profile example_symbol.png|right|300px]]
[[File:Performance_Group.png|right|300px]]
Adaptive profiles, as we measure them at GRI and show in this example here on the right, accurately account for how people perform in context. The metrics represent, in a condensed way, how someone thinks, feels, and behaves. The three relate to each other. In other words it’s how someone functions based on what they think and feel about how they act. The metrics are people’s mindset about their preferences, interests, values, how they socialize, and communicate.


With adequate content and statistics, the metrics also apply to positions, teams, companies, and even at a societal level. When provided in a condensed way, the results can be learned, memorized, and used— or in short, make sense— in multiple situations, where they can bring their value.  
Adaptive profiles are also used at the position, team, company, and even industry and societal levels, to represent the performance expected for jobs and for small- to large-group activities.
Working with social behavior at the organizational level is especially useful and practical because behaviors are observable. We can describe, analyse, and discuss them more effectively than when working with abstract concepts that can only be inferred rather than observed. As evidenced by performance models based on values<ref>See for more information [[Performance by Values | here  in this wiki about increasing value-based performance.]]</ref>, working on social behavior applies universally to a variety of situations, stakeholders, industries, and cultures.


The adaptive profile is produced by answering two questions and applying statistics. If you see this profile for the first time, it will not tell you much. It is shown here only to illustrate what it looks like<ref>[[Performance_at_Heart|See here some brief information about the adaptive profile]]</ref>.  
==Social Performance==
<blockquote>'''By aggregating adaptive profiles, we can analyse a group's social performance.'''</blockquote>
An organization and team’s success relies not only on each individual's participation but also on their ability to focus their collective efforts. Leaders and managers, as in sports with coaches and captains, play a vital role in building group cohesion, increasing team member involvement, and maintaining high levels of engagement. But how do these performances on the field actually occur, and what results do they generate? The adaptive profiles can explain that<ref> See in this article [[Organizational_Performance_Measurement#Social_Performance_Indicators| here on how social performance indicators are calculated based on the adaptive profiles]].</ref>.


At an organizational level, the information from the adaptive profiles is regrouped and compared with that of position and group profiles for measuring and analyzing performance.<ref>[[Operationalizing_Performance|See here how the information is operationalized at a group level.]]<br/>[[Organizational_Performance_Measurement|See here how the information is used to calculate strategic and social indicators.]]</ref>
In sports, the trust and cohesion built during training are crucial to success. The disengagement of one teammate can impact the rest of the team. During competition, coaches and captains give real-time calls and directions. Some team members may also assume leadership roles. The team’s success relies on social performance and support from leadership, the organization, and the broader community, including educators, families, sponsors, and advocates. In sports, this also includes supporters.
 
==Strategic Performance==
<blockquote>'''Strategic performance, from a social behavior standpoint, can be established to determine how success will be achieved.'''</blockquote>
 
 
As with other characteristics of experience and skills, some social behaviors are expected in positions. The adaptive profiles enable the modeling of expected behaviors in jobs. They enable comparisons of how those behaviors occur over time for individuals in those jobs.
Does performance occur at the group level as intended, with appropriate fit among people and with enough diversity? The answer comes by comparing the adaptive profiles of individuals, positions, teams, and organizations. Once a company's management has defined the behaviors expected in positions and teams, aggregating profiles and calculating strategic indicators based on them formalizes the intent and helps manage performance gaps over time<ref> See in this article, [[Organizational_Performance_Measurement#Strategic_Performance_Indicators| here on how strategic performance indicators are calculated based on the adaptive profiles]].</ref>.
 
Discussing these behaviors at the team and organizational levels increases the likelihood of reaching consensus. If social behaviors must be expressed differently across jobs and teams at varying levels of intensity and frequency, recruitment and management must ensure this.
 
In our sports example, different social behaviors are expected of team members during competition. When training and socializing, athletes are expected to exhibit other social behaviors. How does their profile match what’s expected of them during training and while competing? Once aggregated, the adaptive profiles provide the answer.
 
[[File:Performance_Models_Full.png|right|400px]]
 
==Social Behavior Across Other Forms of Performance==
As illustrated on the right, a more nuanced understanding of social behavior provides insights into other performance models, including how they are discussed, implemented, and complement one another. Whether a company deploys command-and-control, cybernetic, or holistic management control systems, its approach to performance analysis and management is informed by the adaptive profiles. This is summarized in the table below.
 
By comparing management intent with individuals’ adaptive profiles (measuring which social behaviors are present vs. absent), organizations can move beyond intuition and ensure their strategic focus—whether systemic, cybernetic, holistic, or values-based—is informed by a rigorous understanding of their most central asset: their people.
 
{| class="wikitable" style="margin: auto;"
|+ Performance from a Social Behavior Standpoint
! Models !!  Insights from Adaptive Profiles
|-
| Objectives || Where objectives are managed through techniques such as Management by Objectives (MBO) and behavioral goals, the adaptive profile provides the individual criteria for assessing how the person will set, communicate, and meet those goals.
|-
| Systems || These models emphasize organizational means (inputs, processes, outputs). The adaptive profile provides a critical input metric—the human factor—that affects processes (e.g., collaboration) and outputs (e.g., results).
|-
| Stakeholders || These models focus on the expectations of internal and external interest groups. The adaptive profile provides an understanding of the individual and group values and behaviors that drive these stakeholders' satisfaction and expectations.
|-
| Values || This is the model that the adaptive profile most directly informs, as it extends the stakeholder model by understanding organizations in terms of individual values and preferences, which are expressed through social behavior. The adaptive profile provides a framework for describing, measuring, and sharing these values across the organization.
|-
| Non-performance || This model suggests it is often easier to address performance by focusing on problems and faults rather than skills and criteria. The adaptive profile aids this by clearly identifying conditions that can prevent underperformance (e.g., high adaptation effort and disengagement) and by providing precise language (observable behavior) for problem resolution.
|}


=Notes=
=Notes=

Latest revision as of 05:03, 25 March 2026

Performance Models.png

Introduction

This article explores various models of organizational performance studied over recent decades and the increasing understanding of how individuals function and perform in organizations.

When assessed precisely, measures of individual performance are relevant across a variety of topics related to a company’s strategy and daily operations, including attracting, recruiting, and empowering the talent it needs. They provide a new basis for understanding and improving organizational performance.

Performance Models

Organizational performance can be approached through various models, which address aspects of its measurement and control on the one hand, and its conceptualization on the other.

Organizational performance can be approached through various models, which address aspects of its measurement and control on the one hand, and its conceptualization on the other.

Until the 1980s, management control research had focused on performance measures within the cybernetic model, an extension of the more popular command-and-control model that had dominated until the 1950s. Considering new individual and cultural factors alongside non-financial measures has enabled the holistic model to gradually overcome some limitations of the cybernetic model[1]. Since the 2000s, thanks to capabilities from software platforms, the Internet, and later AI, Management Control System (MCS) packages have integrated and powered management control systems as integral parts of organizational management, most often aligned with holistic models. The three grand models are summarized in this table and detailed in separate articles.

Performance Management
Models Focus
Command and Control Traditional hierarchical top-down approach, with original management control systems for planning and controlling.
Cybernetic Accounts for the first-order loop feedback, learning, and communication in addition to financial and production metrics.
Holisitc Extends the cybernetic model with a second-order feedback loop and emphasizes the relationships and interactions among the organization’s different parts, including its culture, vision, mission, and reward systems.

Regarding its conceptualization, several approaches have been proposed to categorize performance by context: research, society, leadership, organizational development, and more. For example, the models can be grouped into three categories according to their origins in economics, organizational studies, and social research[2]. Others have suggested categorizing them into three categories: objectives, systems, and stakeholders[3] which is the one we adopted here. The value model was analyzed separately from the stakeholders model because it provides a distinct, overall understanding of how individuals and organizations behave. The non-performance model was added because it stands apart and continues to be a powerful model for understanding and managing performance. This grouping allows highlighting different analytical focus points, limitations, and relationships with management control systems.

Performance Conceptualization
Models Focus
Objectives Objectives are set and managed at different levels of the organization. Techniques such as cost-benefit analysis, management by objectives, individual criteria, or behavioral goals are used.
Systems Systemic models emphasize the importance of an organization's means, such as inputs, outputs, resource acquisition, and processes. They include the operations research model, the structural contingency model, and the culturalist and social regulation models.
Stakeholders Stakeholders' performance models emphasize the expectations of individuals and interest groups that are either within or surrounding the organization. It includes the organizational development model, satisfaction, and expectancy models.
Values Value models extend the stakeholder model to understand organizations in terms of individual values and preferences. The concept of values encompasses broad aspects of social behavior that, unlike others, can be described, measured, and shared.
Non-performance It is easier, more precise, consensual, and beneficial to address performance issues by problems and faults rather than by skills and performance criteria.

Organizational performance models have evolved over time, not to replace earlier ones but to improve them, expand their scope, and develop new models that meet current needs. Since the 2000s, with the rise of the Internet and more recently, AI, our ability to collect and analyze people's data has greatly increased. Similarly, management control systems have advanced, enhancing our capacity to better understand and manage people. How organizations can improve their performance over time is closely connected to how individuals and teams can enhance their performance.

Individual Performance

Performance Individual.png

As the conceptualization of organizational performance and management control systems has dramatically progressed over the past decades, so has the understanding of people and their management. Although it takes more time than in technology, research in the social sciences has had the opportunity to build, break, challenge, and test the limits of many models and techniques. Adaptive profiles emerged from research in the 1950s in the USA and gradually began to penetrate organizations of all sizes worldwide.

Adaptive profiles measure how people perform in context, their social behavior, adaptation efforts, and engagement.[4]

Just like in the entertainment industry, actors perform in various ways, taking on different roles in different movies, influenced not only by their individual characteristics but also by how they are asked to act on stage. How does personal performance on the field actually happen, and what results does it produce? The adaptive profiles offer some answers.

The same concept applies in sports, where team members are expected to collaborate and adapt their behavior when playing together, rather than strictly sticking to their personalities and positions on the field. In companies, different roles also require acting and adapting in various ways.

Profile Detailed.png

Adaptive profiles, like the one on the right, are constructed using a two-question, open-scenario, adjective format. The process helps remove biases and improve objectivity. The results are profiles that subtly show how people behave, feel, and think. They provide insights to maximize individual performance in flow, ways to support adaptation and engagement, and the conditions to prevent underperformance. The profiles are also used to enhance organizational performance[5].

Today, markets are familiar with tools that measure traits and types. These tools are widely used in recruitment and coaching. Adaptive profiles differ because they are based on factors. They add details that help improve individual assessments by eliminating major limits in how measures are represented, learned, and applied, and providing greater precision across many applications in recruitment, management, leadership, and organizational development.[6].

Organizational Performance

Performance Group.png

Adaptive profiles are also used at the position, team, company, and even industry and societal levels, to represent the performance expected for jobs and for small- to large-group activities. Working with social behavior at the organizational level is especially useful and practical because behaviors are observable. We can describe, analyse, and discuss them more effectively than when working with abstract concepts that can only be inferred rather than observed. As evidenced by performance models based on values[7], working on social behavior applies universally to a variety of situations, stakeholders, industries, and cultures.

Social Performance

By aggregating adaptive profiles, we can analyse a group's social performance.

An organization and team’s success relies not only on each individual's participation but also on their ability to focus their collective efforts. Leaders and managers, as in sports with coaches and captains, play a vital role in building group cohesion, increasing team member involvement, and maintaining high levels of engagement. But how do these performances on the field actually occur, and what results do they generate? The adaptive profiles can explain that[8].

In sports, the trust and cohesion built during training are crucial to success. The disengagement of one teammate can impact the rest of the team. During competition, coaches and captains give real-time calls and directions. Some team members may also assume leadership roles. The team’s success relies on social performance and support from leadership, the organization, and the broader community, including educators, families, sponsors, and advocates. In sports, this also includes supporters.

Strategic Performance

Strategic performance, from a social behavior standpoint, can be established to determine how success will be achieved.


As with other characteristics of experience and skills, some social behaviors are expected in positions. The adaptive profiles enable the modeling of expected behaviors in jobs. They enable comparisons of how those behaviors occur over time for individuals in those jobs. Does performance occur at the group level as intended, with appropriate fit among people and with enough diversity? The answer comes by comparing the adaptive profiles of individuals, positions, teams, and organizations. Once a company's management has defined the behaviors expected in positions and teams, aggregating profiles and calculating strategic indicators based on them formalizes the intent and helps manage performance gaps over time[9].

Discussing these behaviors at the team and organizational levels increases the likelihood of reaching consensus. If social behaviors must be expressed differently across jobs and teams at varying levels of intensity and frequency, recruitment and management must ensure this.

In our sports example, different social behaviors are expected of team members during competition. When training and socializing, athletes are expected to exhibit other social behaviors. How does their profile match what’s expected of them during training and while competing? Once aggregated, the adaptive profiles provide the answer.

Performance Models Full.png

Social Behavior Across Other Forms of Performance

As illustrated on the right, a more nuanced understanding of social behavior provides insights into other performance models, including how they are discussed, implemented, and complement one another. Whether a company deploys command-and-control, cybernetic, or holistic management control systems, its approach to performance analysis and management is informed by the adaptive profiles. This is summarized in the table below.

By comparing management intent with individuals’ adaptive profiles (measuring which social behaviors are present vs. absent), organizations can move beyond intuition and ensure their strategic focus—whether systemic, cybernetic, holistic, or values-based—is informed by a rigorous understanding of their most central asset: their people.

Performance from a Social Behavior Standpoint
Models Insights from Adaptive Profiles
Objectives Where objectives are managed through techniques such as Management by Objectives (MBO) and behavioral goals, the adaptive profile provides the individual criteria for assessing how the person will set, communicate, and meet those goals.
Systems These models emphasize organizational means (inputs, processes, outputs). The adaptive profile provides a critical input metric—the human factor—that affects processes (e.g., collaboration) and outputs (e.g., results).
Stakeholders These models focus on the expectations of internal and external interest groups. The adaptive profile provides an understanding of the individual and group values and behaviors that drive these stakeholders' satisfaction and expectations.
Values This is the model that the adaptive profile most directly informs, as it extends the stakeholder model by understanding organizations in terms of individual values and preferences, which are expressed through social behavior. The adaptive profile provides a framework for describing, measuring, and sharing these values across the organization.
Non-performance This model suggests it is often easier to address performance by focusing on problems and faults rather than skills and criteria. The adaptive profile aids this by clearly identifying conditions that can prevent underperformance (e.g., high adaptation effort and disengagement) and by providing precise language (observable behavior) for problem resolution.

Notes

  1. Henri, J. F. (2004). Performance measurement and Organizational Effectiveness: Bridging the gap. Managerial Finance. Vol. 30, No. 6, pp 93-123.
  2. Vibert C. (2004). Theories of macro organizational behavior: a handbook of ideas and explanations.
  3. Campbell, J. P. (1977). On the nature of Organizational effectiveness. In P. S. Godman & J. M. Pennings (Eds.), New perspectives on organizational effectiveness. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Pp. 13-55.
    Zammuto, R. F. (1982). Assessing organizational effectiveness: Systems change, adaptation, and strategy. Albany, N.Y.:Suny-Albany Press.
    Quinn, R. E., Rohrbaugh, J. (1983). A Spatial Model of Effectiveness Criteria: Towards a Competing Values Approach to Organizational Analysis. Management Science. Vol. 29, No. 3, pp. 363-377.
    Cameron, K. S., Whetten, D. A. (1983). Organizational Effectiveness: One Model or Several? Preface. Orlando: Academic Press.
  4. See more information here on how adaptive profiles are used to operationalize performance at an individual level.
  5. The adaptive profiles are discussed with greater detail in other articles on this wiki.
  6. See more here in this wiki about the various potential uses of assessment techniques.
  7. See for more information here in this wiki about increasing value-based performance.
  8. See in this article here on how social performance indicators are calculated based on the adaptive profiles.
  9. See in this article, here on how strategic performance indicators are calculated based on the adaptive profiles.