DBT Bureau
Bengaluru, 16 April 2026
Doshaheen Solutions, which optimizes software development and testing for over a hundred enterprises, has long operated on a truly distinctive approach to employee appraisal, one that draws its foundation not from conventional Western performance management models, but from the timeless Eastern philosophy of Kaizen: the art of continuous, incremental self-improvement.
For decades, organisations worldwide have relied on the bell curve, a forced distribution model that requires managers to rank employees against one another, sorting them into fixed categories of high, average, and low performers. While statistically tidy, this approach carries a significant human cost: it pits colleagues against each other, cultivates internal politics, and ultimately measures people not against their own potential, but against the fortunes of those around them.
The Doshaheen appraisal system replaces forced ranking with a deeply personal performance journey. Every employee is measured against their own defined objectives and their progress toward becoming a better version of themselves — day by day, quarter by quarter.
Inspired by the Japanese concept of Kaizen, widely adopted in manufacturing, sport, and education across East Asia — this framework recognises that sustainable excellence is not achieved by competing with peers, but by committing each day to small, meaningful improvements in one’s own craft, discipline, and contribution.
At its core, the Doshaheen appraisal model is built on three pillars: clearly defined individual objectives, a commitment to daily and periodic self-reflection, and structured conversations that focus on growth rather than grading. Employees are not slotted into a distribution curve — they are empowered to chart their own progress, celebrate incremental wins, and receive meaningful feedback that supports forward momentum.



















