Ch. 10 Pay for Performance Plans
Free riders
have a harder time loafing when there are clear performance standards
merit pay system
links increases in base pay to how highly employees are rated on a performance evaluation •Most use a merit increase grid to determine merit pay on the basis of performance and also position in the salary range, or grade •Captured by the compa-ratio - employee salary divided by range midpoint •Ratios are plugged into the grid to determine size of merit increase
Mixing Individual & Group Plans Goal:
motivate individual behavior and insure employees work together to promote team and corporate goals Plans start with the standard individual and group measures
Profit Sharing Plans Adv. and Disadv.
+: •Pays out when company has profit •Can include all employees •Promotes awareness •Opportunity to explain financials •Low administrative costs •Effective for small companies -: •Difficult to link to individuals •Results affected by outside factors •Accounting adjustments •Financial measures difficult for some •No performance differentialtion
Large Group Incentive Plans
1. Gain sharing plans use operating measures to gauge performance 2. Profit sharing plans use financial measures
PFP: Short-Term Incentive Plans
1. merit bonuses 2. spot awards 3. individual incentive plans
Salary increases due to promotion are much larger, ranging around _%
15% •Salary could double every 5 years
Typical Mix of individual and group plans
A typical plan might call for a 75-25 split •75% of the payout is based on individual performance and 25% on corporate performance
Group plans can suffer from
Free rider problem
Spot awards
are given for exceptional performance, often on special projects or for performance exceeding expectation
Long-term incentive plans
focus on performance beyond one year (usually 2-5)
Gain sharing
identifies areas where employees have some impact on savings - such as reduced scrap •Studies report positive results •Can lead to the sorting effect
Individual incentive plans
offer a promise of pay for some objective or pre-established level of performance
scanlon plan formula
payroll costs / net sales (+ or - inventories)
Broad-based option plans (BBOPs) are
stock grants with a firm giving employees shares of stock over a designated time period •The strength of BBOPs is versatility •Depending on their distribution, they reinforce performance or inspire greater commitment and retention •They are a growing trend
Profit sharing plans are..
typically designed as an organization-wide plan where all employee groups are eligible
Performance plans feature
corporate performance objectives for a time three years in the future •Driven by financial earnings or return measures and pay out for meeting or exceeding specific goals
The most common performance basis is a combination of
corporate, unit, and individual objectives
Profit Sharing Plans
Plans where employees receive a share of the profits of an organization
improshare formula
actual hours worked / total standard value hours
High risk businesses with uncertain outcomes:
better off NOT having incentive plans at all
Variable pay greater interest can be traced to two trends:
1. Increasing competition from foreign producers forces U.S. firms to cut costs and/or increase productivity 2. Today's fast-paced business environment means employees must be willing to adjust what they do and how they do it
Merit pay is widely used and the average merit pay increase is about _% per year
3 •An average employee would double their salary in about 23 years •Higher performers will get larger merit pay increases and their salary will increase faster, but it will still take a while
___% of organizations use some form of short-term incentive plan
99
Compa-Ratio
Salary compa-ratio= [(actual salary) / (salary midpoint)] *100
Three Gain-Sharing Formulas
Scanlon plan rucker plan improshare
Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs)
Some companies link employees to success or failure of a company through ESOPs •The effects are long-term •Management cannot predict what makes stocks rise, a central ingredient in the reward component of ESOPs
Merit plans are evaluated
at the end of a performance year - merit pay INCREASES, unlike variable pay, is added to base pay - What the employee does this year is rewarded every year the employee remains with the employer
Merit bonuses differ from merit pay in that
employees receive an end-of-year bonus that does not build into base pay •Over time, these can be considerably less expensive than merit pay
Pay for Performance Plans
is an incentive pay plan. It includes bonuses, profit sharing and commissions and is designed to retain good workers. Pay for performance is an attempt to overcome the principal agent problem.
Improshare (Improved Productivity through Sharing)
is easier to administer and to communicate. First, a standard is developed identifying the expected hours required to produce an acceptable level of output •The standard comes either a time-and-motion study or from a base-period measurement of the performance factor Any savings arising from production of the output in fewer than expected hours is shared by the firm and the workers •Gains are split 50-50 between employees and management
rucker plan formula
labor cost / value added
Long-term incentive plans are more likely to be used for
officers/executives and other higher job levels
Group incentive plans
when focusing on people working together - established standard measures team performance to determine the magnitude of incentive pay
Scanlon and Rucker Gain Sharing Plans: TWO MAJOR COMPONENTS
•A productivity norm requires effective measure of the base-year and employee acceptance
Rucker Plan
•A ratio is calculated expressing the value of production required for each dollar of the total wage bill •Production savings are split similarly to the Scanlon plan, including the emergency fund
Long term incentive plans types
•Equity based - track share price or total shareholder return -Stock purchase, stock options, stock grants, restricted stock •Cash based - target organizational performance measures
Scanlon Plan
•Incentives derived as a function of the ratio between labor costs and sales value of production (SVOP) •25% of wage savings goes back to the company and 75% of the remainder is distributed as employee bonuses •With the remaining 25% placed in an emergency fund
Profit Sharing Plans: objectives
•Increase employee identification with the organization's success •Create a common focus on important objectives of the organization
Incentive plans boost performance
•Individual incentives yield higher productivity gains, but group incentives often are right when team coordination is the issue
Long-term incentive plan objectives:
•Motivate long-term value creation & org performance •Assist in attracting & retaining top talent
Team performance standards are typically based on:
•Productivity improvements •Customer satisfaction measures •Financial performance •Quality of goods and services
Scanlon and Rucker Gain Sharing Plans: TWO DIFFERENCES
•Rucker plans tie incentives to a variety of savings, not just labor •Rucker plans are more linkable with individual incentive plans
Team incentive plans : not encouraging
•Teams come in many varieties •The "level problem" creates difficulty equalizing when assigning rewards •Some plans are simply too complex •Control and fairness are key issues •Team-based plans are simply not well communicated
Group incentive plans have common features:
•The size of the group that participates in the plan •The standard against which performance is compared •The payout schedule Example: Reduced scrap, safety incentive (zero accident)
ESOPs why:
•They foster employee willingness to participate in decision-making Impact is modest with little impact on productivity or profit •Critics argue the plans are not used effectively •If combined with high goal setting, improved communication, and greater participation, ESOPs may have a positive impact
self-funding plan
•Triggers specific payouts only after the company reaches a certain profit target
Scanlon and Rucker Gain Sharing Plans differ from individual incentive plans in FOCUS
•individual plans focus on wage incentives to motivate •The Scanlon/Rucker plans focus on organizational behavior variables •The key is participation developed through group unity