Many companies are currently under pressure. This makes it all the more important to pool forces internally, to clearly align common goals and to understand performance as an ongoing, learning-oriented process. However, performance culture is often misunderstood: Too often we think about pressure, rankings or fear – instead of clear goals, fairness and healthy work.
And so many organizations are very busy but not effective. They confuse busyness with performance: meetings without results, reports without consequence, Power Point battles. Lots of movement, but little progress.
Rethinking performance means prioritizing effectiveness over busyness, anchoring team performance systemically and carrying responsibility from top management to the teams. But how does this work?
Create clear direction
Impact occurs when performance is clearly aligned with the overarching economic goals. HR takes on a central translation role in coordination with the CEO, CFO and managers: What are the overarching goals? How are they measured? Who is responsible and how are employees involved?
Modern performance systems also combine performance and learning: goals provide direction, feedback strengthens competence and self-efficacy, development becomes part of everyday life and makes skills specifically visible. HR is the central partner here – as the architect of the framework.
Anchor performance in the system
Performance occurs where teams understand how their contribution has an impact and have the freedom to act together. Responsibility is shared by many, not just a few. Participation creates identification, self-efficacy and motivation.
HR creates the framework in which goals, roles and incentives are coherently linked, for example via OKRs, performance dialogues or transparent control formats. In Germany, co-determination and data protection must be taken into account.
Performance systems must therefore be legally clean and culturally compatible. Together with internal communication, HR develops formats for real exchange such as town halls, team dialogues, feedback rounds in order to anchor these guidelines in the company.
Ensuring decision-making ability
Managers need clear decision-making space and an environment that enables speed without losing foundation. HR designs governance, roles and decision-making logic for this purpose. Sustainable performance can only be achieved together. Impact develops where leadership and HR take joint responsibility for culture, processes and behavior.
Dashboards with 30 to 40 KPIs create disorientation and promote justification instead of responsibility. Proper control requires focus and the courage to leave out unimportant things. Fewer, relevant key figures significantly increase decision quality and implementation power.
Conclusion: focus on impact rather than busyness
Performance is not a sure-fire success. It arises where common direction, clarity, decision-making ability and implementation power come together. Companies serve an economic purpose. Those who prioritize impact over busyness, provide orientation, involve people and strengthen self-efficacy will regain performance and trust. Strong performance does not arise from systems, but rather where leadership, prioritization and shared responsibility work together.


