Abstract
Despite the widespread implementation of performance management in public organizations, we know little about how contextual factors influence frontline employees’ perceptions of performance information. This study contributes to the literature by developing and empirically testing hypotheses stating that the source of the performance information matters to frontline employees’ perceptions and willingness to use performance information for learning purposes. We test the hypotheses in a survey experiment including 1926 public high school teachers in Denmark. The findings show that frontline employees exposed to performance information from vertical sources (the management) rather than from horizontal sources (colleagues in learning forums or the employees themselves) are less likely to perceive performance information as relevant and useful, and less willing to use the information for learning activities. The findings have important policy implications for the design of performance management in public organizations.
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank all the teachers who participated in the survey. Also, I am thankful for the excellent and helpful comments and suggestions provided by Mads Leth Jakobsen, Søren Serritzlew, Jens Blom-Hansen and the participants at DPSA 2017 and MPSA 2018.
Notes
1 The two questions are part of an index used by Jacobsen et al. (Citation2014) to measure teachers’ perceptions of command systems as controlling or supportive.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Niels Bjørn Grund Petersen
Niels Bjørn Grund Petersen has a PhD from the Department of Political Science at Aarhus University. He is currently a researcher at The Danish Center for Social Science Research. His research interests include street-level bureaucracy, performance management and political psychology and he has published in international journals such as JPART and BJPS.