OPINION
In this age-discrimination case, David Browning, a 48-year-old male, claims that the Army’s use of a matrix of job-related criteria to determine which applicant was best qualified for an open position was a pretext designed to mask a discriminatory motive. Browning worked in the Ammuni-tions Operation Division (AOD) at the Blue Grass Army Depot (BGAD) in Richmond, Kentucky as a Material Handlеr and Forklift Operator/Supervisor. In 1996, the BGAD Civilian Personnel Office advertised that an Explosives and Handler Supervisor position was open in the AOD. Browning and five other individuals applied for this position. Smiley Courtney, the Chief of the AOD, prepared a matrix of job-related criteria to determine which applicant was best qualified. After reviewing the appliсations, Courtney ranked Browning third. Courtney subsequently awarded the position to Steven Rhodus, a 83-year-old First-Line Supervisor whom Courtney had ranked as the most-qualified applicant.
Claiming that he was discriminated against because of his age, Browning filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) in March of 1996. The EEOC found that the Army had a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for hiring Rhodus. Browning then filed suit in the district court, alleging age discrimination in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA). The district court granted summary judgment to the Army on all claims. On appeal, Browning argues that the district court erred in holding that he had failed to present sufficient evidence to raise a jury question as to whether the Army’s reason for not promoting him wаs a pretext designed to hide unlawful discrimination. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
William Ware, a “subject matter expert,” initially ranked the applicants for the Explosives and Handler Supervisor position pursuant to BGAD’s merit-promotion policy, and he ranked all of them as “highly qualified.” Courtney received the applicаtions following this initial ranking, but he did not review Ware’s evaluation or ascertain the ages of any of the applicants.
*694 Pursuant to a Commander’s directive on selection procedures, Courtney was responsible for developing a method to evaluate the applicants’ qualifications. The directive gave Courtney the authority to seleсt the job criteria relevant to the position. He proceeded to develop a “Rating Element Criteria” matrix based upon the description of the job and his personal knowledge of the job’s requirements. To create the matrix, Courtney reviewed the original job description and developed the following five criteria that he believed were necessary to perform the job, with the five criteria adding up to 25 points: (1) supervisory experience (worth 4 points, or 16%), (2) administrative/managerial experience (worth 5 points, or 20%), (3) ammunition experience (worth 8 points, or 32%), (4) general supply experience (worth 4 points, or 16%), and (5) education (worth 4 points, or 16%). Under Criterion #2 (administrative managerial/experience), Courtney created five subparts, each worth one point: (1) oral and written communication competency, (2) managerial experience, (3) policy implementation competency, (4) decisionmaking competency, and (5) analytical/interpretive competency. Courtney developеd the criteria and created the matrix before he received any of the applications.
Because Courtney had served as a supervisor to all six candidates, he did not conduct interviews for the position and did not review the information in the applicants’ personnel files. Courtney claims that he did not know the respective ages of the applicants or that Browning was eligible for early retirement. After reviewing the applications and assigning each applicant a point value based on the matrix that he had created, Courtney ranked the six applicants. Browning ranked third with 14 points, and Rhodus ranked first with 16 points. Although Courtney acknowledged that Browning possessed administrative/managеrial experience, he awarded Browning just one out of five possible points for that criterion, explaining that he awarded points to applicants only if they had “outstanding capacity” in a particular category. Courtney selected Rhodus for the position in August of 1996 based on Rhodus’s matrix score and his ability to work with upper management.
After learning that Rhodus had been selected for the position, Browning scheduled a meeting with Courtney because Browning believed that Courtney had discriminated against him on the basis of age. Courtney told Browning that Browning’s experience and expertise were better utilized in his current position and that Rho-dus was selected due to his strong administrative skills. Browning, however, thought that he was more qualified than Rhodus because he had completed coursework in Technical Ammunition and because he had 17 years of supervisory experience compared with Rhodus’s 4 years.
Although the position in question requires administrative experience, Browning claims that Courtney overvalued the administrative/managerial criterion because the job description stated that only 13% of the position was administrative while the matrix valued administrative experience at 20%. Following his meeting, Browning requested EEOC counseling and later filed a formal complaint with the EEOC. Joseph Simeone, an EEOC investigator, held a factfinding conference in February of 1997. He ultimately concluded that Browning’s claim of age discrimination had no basis in fact.
Browning then requested a hearing before an EEOC administrative law judge (ALJ), who found that the Army had a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for hiring Rhodus instead of Browning. The agency adopted the ALJ’s recommendation both initially and after completing its internal appeals procedure.
BROWNING
*695
v. SEC’Y OF THE ARMY,
EEOC Doc 01990290 (2002),
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of review
The district court’s grant of summary judgment is reviewed de novo.
Minadeo v. ICI Paints,
B. Burden of proof
The burden-shifting approach articulated in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
The parties do not dispute that Browning made out a primа facie case. Once Browning established his prima facie case, the burden shifted to the Army to offer a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for the adverse employment action.
Id.
Again, the parties agree that the Army met its burden. As a result, the presumption of discrimination no longer exists, and Browning must prove that the reasons offered by the Army were in fact pretextual in order to prevail.
Id.
The ultimate burden of persuasion remains with Browning at all times.
See Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods.,
C.Browning’s claim of pretext
Browning can demonstrate pretext by showing that the Army’s reasons for failing to promotе him (1) had no basis in fact, (2) did not actually motivate its conduct, or (3) were insufficient to warrant the challenged conduct.
See Manzer v. Diamond Shamrock Chems., Co.,
Although Browning claims that the Army’s stated reasons for failing to promote him were pretextual, he neither cites
Manzer
nor attempts tо categorize his arguments as fitting within any of
Manzer’s
alternative prongs. His failure to do so is not fatal, however, because Browning must satisfy only one alternative in order to avoid summary judgment.
Manzer,
Browning first argues that the matrix was used as a pretext designed to hide age discrimination. During the EEOC hearing, Browning initially claimed that Courtney’s development of the matrix was improper becаuse it valued administrative/managerial experience at 20% while the job description described the position as just 13% administrative. Later, however, Browning argued that Courtney’s flexibility in applying the matrix criteria, rather than the matrix itself, was improper. Browning therefore contradicted his own claim that Courtney developed the matrix as a pretext to hidе age discrimination.
In any event, Browning cites two cases for the proposition that reliance on criteria not listed in the job description supports an inference of discrimination.
See Courtney v. Biosound, Inc.,
Moreover, in contrast to
Courtney
and
Gallo,
this court has held that employers are
not
rigidly bound by the language in a job description.
Wrenn v. Gould,
reasonable employers do not ordinarily limit their evaluation оf applicants to a mechanistic checkoff of qualifications required by the written job descriptions. Obviously, they will take additional credentials into account, if those credentials would prove useful in performing the job.
Id. Courtney’s decision to weigh administrative/managerial experience more heavily than the job description suggested is simply not sufficient to demonstrate pretext. Browning has failed to show that Courtney’s motivation in doing so was to unlawfully discriminate on the basis of age.
Several courts, moreover, have held that employers may use matrices that reward applicants who meet subjective criteria. Although Browning argues that “there were no underlying or documentary bases to supрort the objectivity of the matrix [ ] ... other than the selecting official’s testimony,” this subjectivity, without more, does not establish pretext.
See Brown v. EG & G Mound Applied Technologies, Inc.,
Senner’s most persuasive argument is that the rating criteria were too subjective .... The rеsult ... is that the assessors could readily manipulate the results .... The problem is that these arguments, even when construed most favorably toward Senner, only show that NTC did not give his credentials the emphasis [that] they may have deserved .... Senner has shown, at best, that NTC’s evaluation criteria require a subjective judgment; they do not suggest that discriminatory intent affected that judgment.
Id. at 756-57.
As in
Senner,
Brоwning at most contends that the Army undervalued his skills and experience. Browning never asserts a link between the subjective matrix criteria and any discriminatory intent by the Army. He instead claims that “the use of this [mjatrix and the change in the requirements of the job description is enough evidence for a jury to find for [him].” Browning’s argument fails, however, because he has the ultimate burden of persuasion throughout the suit,
see Reeves,
Again challenging Courtney’s ability to make subjective determinations, Browning argues that Courtney should have awarded him more points under Criterion # 2, the administrative/managerial category (which contained the five subcategories set forth above). Browning received zeroes in every subcategory of Criterion #2 except analytical/interpretive competency, and he contends that he should have received more points given his 17 years of federal experience and his undergraduate degree. *698 Courtney explained, however, that “this [matrix] was meаnt to identify areas of significant strength as opposed to areas of just able to do it,” and that “analytical and interpretive competency was the only [subcategory] he felt [Browning] really shone in.” Rather than simply awarding points for applicants that possessed certain skills, Courtney wanted to compare the qualifications of the various applicants. Although Browning had 17 years of experience and an undergraduate degree, Courtney did not believe that these factors translated into Browning’s potential to excel in the position.
Whether Browning agrees with Courtney’s scoring method, or whether he believes that he was more qualified for the position that Rhodus ultimately filled, is irrelevant to the age-discriminatiоn inquiry — what matters is Courtney’s perception of Browning’s qualifications. Lomax
v. Sears, Roebuck, & Co.,
Browning also argues that Courtney should have awarded him a point for inventory experience, a category under Criterion # 3 (the ammunition-experience category). During the factfinding conference, Browning admitted that his inventory experience was “not actually spelled out in the application,” but he contends that Courtney should have awarded him a point because Courtney knew about his prior inventory experience. Courtney, however, explained that he did not award a point to Browning on this basis because Browning was not an “expert” in that field. As discussed above, Courtney awarded points only to those candidates who demonstrated “outstanding capacity” in a particular field, and such subjective evaluations, without more, do not support an inference of discrimination.
See Senner,
III. CONCLUSION
For all of the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
