MNGT 463 Chapter 4
Group versus individual incentives
-Group incentive programs are most suitable where the nature of the work is interdependent and the contributions of individual employees are difficult to measure -Individual plans reward employees for meeting or surpassing such predetermined individual goals as production or sales quotas
Three advantages of individual incentive pay plans
1. Can promote the relationship between pay and performance 2. Individual incentive plans promote an equitable distribution of compensation within companies (The better they perform, the more they earn) 3. Their compatibility with such individualistic cultures as the United States
Three conditions individual incentive plans are most appropriate under
1. Employees' performance can be measured objectively 2. Are appropriate when employees have sufficient control over work outcomes 3. Appropriate when they do not create a level of unhealthy competition among workers that ultimately leads to poor quality
Human resource experts allocate rewards in on of the three ways:
1. Equal incentive payments to all team members. 2. Differential incentive payments to team members based on their contribution to the team's performance 3. Differential payments determined by a ration of each team member's base pay to the total base pay of the group.
Effective pay systems are based on three assumptions:
1. Individual employees and work teams differ in how much they contribute to the company, both in what they do as well as in how well they do it. 2. The company's overall performance depends to a large degree on the performance of individuals and groups within the company 3. To attract, retain, and motivate high performers and to be fair to all employees, a company needs to reward employees on the basis of their relative performance
Disadvantages of Individual incentive pay programs
1. Individual incentive plans possess the potential to promote inflexibility 2. Supervisors must develop and maintain comprehensive performance measures to properly grant incentive awards. 3. They may encourage undesirable workplace behavior when these plans reward only one or a subset of dimensions that constitute employees' total job performance
Piecework plans
1. Rewards employees based on their individual hourly production against an objective output standard and are determined by the pace at which manufacturing equipment operates 2. Establishes individual performance standards that include both objective and subjective criteria
Gain sharing plans
A group of employees, generally a department or work unit, is rewarded for productivity gains.
Team-based or small-group incentive plans
A small group of employees shares a financial reward when a specific objective is met
Labor hour ratio formula
A standard is determined by analyzing historical accounting data to find the number of labor hours needed to complete a product.
Sorting effect
Addresses an employee's choice to stay versus leave his or her employer for another job, presumable one without an incentive pay contingency
Group incentive programs are most effective when:
All group members have some impact on achieving the goal, even though individual contributions might not be equal
Team-based incentives
Are similar to individual incentives with one exception - Each group member receives a financial reward for the attainment of a group goal
Management incentive plans
Award bonuses to managers when they meet or exceed objectives based on sales, profit, production, or other measures for their division, department, or unit - Require multiple complex objectives
Project teams
Consist of a group of people assigned to complete a one-time project
Gain sharing
Describes group incentive systems that provide participating employees with an incentive payment based on improved company performance for increased productivity, increased customer satisfaction, lower costs, or better safety records.
Scanlon plan
Emphasis on employee involvement. Believed that
Rucker Plan
Emphasizes employee involvement Uses a value-added formula (value added/total employment costs) Value of sales price Value of materials used Total labor costs Larger ratios show that value added is greater than total employment costs
Referral plans
Employees may receive monetary bonuses for referring new customers or recruiting successful job applicants
Traditional pay plans
Employees receive compensation based on a fixed hourly pay rate or annual salary
Behavioral encouragement plans
Employees receive payments for specific behavioral accomplishments (ex. goos attendance or safety records)
Free-Rider effect
Gaining the benefits of group membership by avoiding costly obligations of membership and by allowing other members to incur those costs.
Five important factors when designing effective incentive pay plans
Group versus individual incentives, level of risk, compensating or replacing base pay, performance criteria, and short or long term time horizon
Improshare
Improved Productivity through sharing measures productivity physically rather than in terms of dollar savings like those used in the Scanlon and Rucker plans.
Parallel teams
Include employees assigned to work on a specific task in addition to normal work duties
Three components of gain sharing programs
Leadership philosophy Employee involvement systems Bonus
Work (process) teams
Refer to organizational units that perform the work of the organization on an ongoing basis
Incentive effect
Refers to a worker's willingness to work diligently to produce more quality output then simply attending work without putting in the effort
Long-term goals
Require more than five years
Group incentive programs
Reward employees for their collective performance, rather than for each employee's individual performance
Company-wide incentives
Reward employees when the company exceeds minimum acceptable performance standards
Incentive pay
Rewards employees for partially or completely attaining a predetermined work objective
Spot bonuses
Small monetary gifts provided to employees fro outstanding work or effort during a reasonably short period of time
Scale value of production (SVOP)
The sum of sales revenue plus the value of goods in inventory
Group incentive plans
These plans promote supportive, collaborative behavior among employees - Work well in manufacturing and service delivery environments that rely on interdependent teams
Individual incentive plans
These plans reward employees whose work is performed independently - Piecework plans are an example in which compensation depends on the number of units she/he produces over a given period
Company-wide incentive plans
These plans tie employee compensation to a company's performance over a short time frame, usually from one-month period to a five-year period.
Short-term goals
can be achieved in five years or less
Advantages of companies using piecework plans
incentive and sorting effect