5. How do managers and organizations use incentives and rewards
effectively to secure the best possible performance from
employees?
We now turn to an examination of various employee incentive
programs used by organizations. First, we consider the relative
merits of individuals versus group incentive programs. Next, we
focus on several relatively new approaches to motivation and
compensation. Finally, we suggest several guidelines for effective
incentive systems.
Individual versus Group Incentives
Companies usually have choices among various compensation plans
and must make decisions about which is most effective for its
situation. Incentive systems in organizations are usually divided
into two categories on the basis of whether the unit of
analysis—and the recipient of the reward—is the individual or a
group. Among individual incentive plans, several approaches can be
identified, including merit-based compensation (commonly known as
merit compensation), piece-rate incentive programs (where people
are paid according to the quantity of output), bonus systems of
various sorts, and commissions. In each case, rewards are tied
fairly directly to the performance level of the individual.
Although individual incentive systems often lead to improved
performance, some reservations have been noted. In particular,
these programs may at times lead to employees competing with one
another, with undesirable results. For instance, department store
salespeople on commission may fight over customers, thereby chasing
the customers away. After all, customers don’t care who they deal
with, only that the service is good. Second, these plans typically
are resisted by unions, which prefer compensation to be based on
seniority or job classification. Third, where quality control
systems are lax, individual incentives such as piece rates may lead
employees to maximize units of output while sacrificing quality.
And, finally, in order for these programs to be successful, an
atmosphere of trust and cooperation is necessary.
In order to overcome some of these shortcomings, many companies
have turned to group or organizational incentive plans. Group
incentive programs base at least some of an employee’s rewards on
group or organization performance. Hence, employees are encouraged
to cooperate with one another and with the corporation so that all
employees can benefit. Programs such as profit-sharing or
gain-sharing plans (discussed below) are designed to tie the
employees’ future rewards and prosperity to that of the company and
reduce the age-old antagonism between the two. The results are
often dramatic.
Creative Pay Practices
Recently, we have seen several innovations in the way
corporations approach reward systems. These efforts are
designed to facilitate the integration of employee and company
interests in a way that maximizes both productivity and quality of
working life. Five such creative pay practices should be noted: (1)
gain-sharing plans, (2) skills-based incentives, (3) lump-sum pay
increases, (4) participative pay decisions, and (5) flexible
benefits programs. These approaches, along with their major
advantages and drawbacks, are summarized in Table
8.7.
Table 8.7 (Attribution: Copyright Rice
University, OpenStax, under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license)
Gain-Sharing Plans. Giving executives and
senior managers bonuses to reflect their contributions to
organizational effectiveness is commonplace. In fact, in some
companies executive bonuses are often larger than salaries.
Recently, companies have increasingly applied this same principle
to all employees in the form of gain-sharing
(profit-sharing) plans. Here, employees are given a chance to share
in corporate productivity gains through increased earnings. The
greater the productivity gains, the greater the earnings. Several
variations on this theme can be found, including the Scanlon Plan,
IMPROSHARE, the Ruker Plan, and the Lincoln Electric Plan.
Regardless of the title, the basic plan is similar.
For example, under the Scanlon Plan (probably the oldest such
program), three operating guidelines are used: (1) each department
or division is treated as a business unit for purposes of
performance measurement, (2) specific cost measures associated with
the production process are identified and agreed to by all parties,
and (3) bonuses are paid to all employees according to a
predetermined formula tying the amount of the bonus to the actual
cost savings realized during the time period. Under such a plan, it
is clearly in the employees’ best interest to contribute to cost
savings, thereby increasing their own incomes.
expanding around the GLobe
Providing Feedback in Different
Countries
Global workplaces are increasing within the world businesses,
and it has become a trend to have managers from one country, most
likely the country in which the headquarters arise, manage
employees abroad. An important consideration when managing globally
is how cultural differences can have a profound effect on
performance evaluations, negotiations, and criticisms.
For example, oftentimes in the United States, a method of
critical feedback in the “hamburger method” (Step 1: Identify
tasks. As a group, identify technical steps that would be involved
in implementing. Step 2: Identify options for tasks. Split the team
into several small groups. Step 3: Combine results.) is acceptable,
while other countries give their feedback with just the meal alone.
This strategy in the Netherlands and Germany can be off-putting to
other cultures, and when you read into another culture’s technique
with your own lens of reference, it can feel wrong.
Managing globally means that you need to do your research on
which approach for feedback is best received for the employee’s
cultural differences. For example, being direct is key when
communicating with a Dutch person. In contrast, in England or the
United States, criticism is not delivered directly, but with
positive pieces wrapped around the negative. In Asian countries,
feedback is often avoided or the message is blurred in order to
“save face.” With all of these complications and considerations, it
is ever more important to acutely understand the culture, the
cultural understandings of employees who are direct reports, and
also the lens through which feedback is being viewed as well.
Questions:
How can a new manager that is working with international
employees ensure she is providing reviews in an appropriate
manner?
What methods can a manager employ in her preparation for the
review to be successful when providing feedback to employees of
different cultures?
Sources: C. Solbach. “Feedback through cultural looking glass.”
Krauthammer, September 16, 2015,
www.krauthammer.com/en/publi...2/07/feedback-
through-cultural-looking-glass; M. Abadi. “The exact same sentence
from your boss can mean 'yes,' 'no,' or 'maybe' depending on the
country where you work.” Business Insider, December 7,
2017,
https://www.businessinsider.com/dire...ulture-2017-12; J.
Windust. “An International Approach to 360-Degree Feedback.”
Cognology, July 26, 2016,
https://www.cognology.com.au/interna...gree-feedback/; “Giving
Employee Feedback To A Culturally Diverse Workforce.” Impraise
Blog, accessed January 26, 2019,
blog.impraise.com/360-feedba...ences-between-
branchescountries-in-feedback-behavior-performance-review.
Skills-Based Incentives. Typical compensation
programs are tied to job evaluations. In these, jobs are analyzed
to assess their characteristics, and then salary levels are
assigned to each job on the basis of factors such as job difficulty
and labor market scarcity. In other words, pay levels are set on
the basis of the job, not the individual. This approach fails to
encourage employees to improve their skills on the job, because
there is no reward for the improvement. This thinking also keeps
all employees in their places and minimizes the possibility of
inter-job transfers.
Under the skills-based incentive
program, employees are paid according to their skills
level (that is, the number of jobs they can perform),
regardless of the actual tasks they are allowed to perform. This
approach has proved successful in organizations such as Procter
& Gamble and General Foods. Employees are encouraged to learn
additional skills and are appropriately rewarded. The organization
is provided with a more highly trained and more flexible workforce.
However, training and compensation costs are necessarily increased,
so the program is appropriate only in some situations. The
technique is most often seen as part of a larger
quality-of-working-life program, where it is associated with job
redesign efforts.
Lump-Sum Pay Increases. Another technique that
has received some attention is to allow employees to decide how
(that is, in what amounts) they wish to receive their pay raises
for the coming year. Under the traditional program, pay raises are
paid in equal amounts in each paycheck over the year. Under the
alternate plan, employees can elect to receive equal amounts during
the year, or they can choose to take the entire raise in one
lump-sum pay increase. This plan allows employees
greater discretion over their own financial matters. If an employee
wants to use the entire pay raise for a vacation, it can be paid in
a lump sum in June. Then, if the employee quits before the end of
the year, the unearned part of the pay raise is subtracted from the
final paycheck. This plan increases the visibility of the reward to
the employee. The employee receives, for example, a $600 pay raise
(a rather sizable amount) instead of twelve $50 monthly pay raises.
As with the flexible rewards system discussed below, however, the
administration costs of the lump-sum plan are greater than those of
the traditional method.
Participative Pay Decisions. In addition, of
concern to many managers is the extent to which employees should be
involved in decisions over pay raises. This is the issue of
participative pay decisions. Recently, several
organizations have been experimenting with involving employees in
pay raise decisions, and the results seem to be quite positive. By
allowing employees to participate either in the design of the
reward system or in actual pay raise decisions (perhaps through a
committee), it is argued that decisions of higher quality are made
on the basis of greater information. Also, employees then have
greater reason to place confidence in the fairness of the
decisions. On the negative side, this approach requires
considerably more time for both the manager and the participating
subordinates. Costs must be weighed against benefits to determine
which approach is most suitable for the particular organization and
its goals.
Flexible Benefits Systems. A typical fringe
benefit package provides the same benefits—and the same number of
benefits—to all employees. As a result, individual differences or
preferences are largely ignored. Studies by Lawler indicate
variations in benefit preferences.18
For instance, young unmarried men prefer more vacation time,
whereas young married men prefer to give up vacation time for
higher pay. Older employees want more retirement benefits, whereas
younger employees prefer greater income. Through a flexible
benefits program (also called a “cafeteria benefits
program”), employees are allowed some discretion in the
determination of their own packages and can make trade-offs, within
certain limits. Organizations such as PepsiCo, TRW, and the
Educational Testing Service already use such programs. Although
certain problems of administration exist with the programs, efforts
in this direction can lead to increased need satisfaction among
employees.
We have seen a number of different creative solutions to the
compensation dilemma. Which approaches are most effective in
motivating employees? This is obviously a difficult question to
answer. However, one way to get relevant information on this
question is to see what corporations actually use. One such study
asked major employers which of a variety of approaches had been
used with a high success level. The results are shown in
Table 8.8. As can be seen, skills-based
compensation, earned time off, and gain sharing
all received high marks from personnel executives, although other
programs are also widely supported. It would appear from these
results that many approaches can be useful; the choice of which one
to use would depend upon the circumstances and goals of a
particular organization.
Guidelines for Effective Incentive Programs
Whatever incentive plan is selected, care must be taken to
ensure that the plan is appropriate for the particular organization
and workforce. In fact, a simple test of the effectiveness of an
incentive plan would be as follows:19
Does the plan capture attention? Do employees discuss
the plan and take pride in their early successes?
Do employees understand the plan? Can employees explain
how the plan works, and do they understand what they must do to
earn the incentive?
Does the plan improve communication? As a result of the
plan, do employees understand more about corporate mission, goals,
and objectives?
Does the plan pay out when it should? Are incentives
being paid for desired results, and are they withheld for
undesirable results?
Is the company performing better as a result of the
plan? Are profits or market share up or down? Have any gains
resulted in part from the incentive plan?
Table 8.8 (Attribution: Copyright Rice
University, OpenStax, under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license)
If a new (or existing) pay plan can meet these tests, it is
probably fairly effective in motivating employee performance and
should be retained by the organization. If not, perhaps some other
approach should be tried. On the basis of such a test, several
specific guidelines can be identified to increase the effectiveness
of the programs. These include the following:20
Any reward system or incentive plan should be as closely
tied to actual job performance as possible. This point was
discussed earlier in this chapter.
If possible, incentive programs should allow for individual
differences. They should recognize that different people want
different outcomes from a job. Flexible benefits programs such as
the ones discussed here make an effort to accomplish this.
Incentive programs should reflect the type of work that is
done and the structure of the organization. This simply means
that the program should be tailored to the particular needs, goals,
and structures of a given organization. Individual incentive
programs, for example, would probably be less successful among
unionized personnel than would group programs such as the Scanlon
plan. This point has been clearly demonstrated in research by
Lawler, which points out that organizations with traditional
management and those with more participative management might
approach reward systems quite differently in order to be
effective.21 As shown in Table 8.9, both
types of company can be effective as long as their
reward systems are congruent with their overall approach to
management.
The incentive program should be consistent with the
culture and constraints of the organization. Where trust
levels are low, for example, it may take considerable effort to get
any program to work. In an industry already characterized by high
levels of efficiency, basing an incentive system on increasing
efficiency even further may have little effect, because employees
may see the task as nearly impossible.
Finally, incentive programs should be carefully monitored
over time to ensure that they are being fairly administered
and that they accurately reflect current technological and
organizational conditions. For instance, it may be appropriate to
offer sales clerks in a department store an incentive to sell
outdated merchandise because current fashion items sell themselves.
Responsibility falls on managers not to select the incentive
program that is in vogue or used “next door,” but rather to
consider the unique situations and needs of their own
organizations. Then, with this understanding, a program can be
developed and implemented that will facilitate goal-oriented
performance.
Table 8.9 (Attribution: Copyright Rice
University, OpenStax, under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license)
Table 8.9 (Attribution: Copyright Rice
University, OpenStax, under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license)
concept check
What are the differences between individual and group
incentives?
What is the variety of reward incentives available to
organizations?