Title: Incentives and PerformanceBased Rewards
1Chapter Twelve
- Incentives and Performance-Based Rewards
2Chapter Outline
- Purposes of Performance-Based Rewards
- Merit Compensation Systems
- Incentive Compensation Systems
- Teams and Group Incentive Reward Systems
- Executive Compensation
- New Approaches to Performance-Based Rewards
3Chapter Objectives
- Summarize the purposes of performance-based
rewards.
- Discuss merit compensation systems and their
limitations.
- Identify and discuss forms and limitations of
incentive compensation systems.
- Identify and describe forms and limitations of
team and group incentive reward systems.
4Chapter Objectives (contd)
- Discuss both standard and special forms of
executive compensation and summarize criticisms
of recent trends in executive compensation.
- Summarize new approaches to performance-based
rewards in organizations.
- Understand basic concepts underlying a
compensation strategy as applied to incentives
and performance-based pay.
5Purposes of Performance-Based Rewards
- The major purposes involve the relationship of
rewards to motivation and to performance.
- Specifically, organizations want employees to
perform at relatively high levels and need to
make it worth it for them to do so.
- When rewards are associated with higher levels of
performance, employees will be motivated to work
harder in the effort to achieve those awards.
6Rewards and Motivation
- It is important that organizations motivate
employees to exert effort aimed at accomplishing
organizational goals.
- Rewards play an important role in how motivation
occurs.
- Expectancy theory suggests that people are
motivated to engage in behaviors if they perceive
that those behaviors are likely to lead to
outcomes they value.
7Rewards and Motivation in Organizations
8Agency Theory
- Is concerned with the diverse interests and goals
held by the organizations stakeholders,
including its employees and managers, and the
methods through which the organizations reward
system can be used to align these diverse
interests and goals.
9Rewards, Motivation, and Performance in
Organizations
10Rewards and Other Employee Behaviors
- Rewards can be used to influence
- Turnover
- Absenteeism/attendance
11Merit Compensation Systems
- Merit pay
- Pay awarded to employees on the basis of the
relative value of their contributions to the
organization
- Merit-pay plans
- Compensation plans that formally base at least
some meaningful portion of compensation on merit
12Limitations of Merit Compensation Systems
- They focus almost exclusively on individual
performance.
- They are based primarily on performance appraisal
systems, which may be subject to error.
- They may be prone to focusing on too broad a
period of performance.
- They are subject to considerable disagreement
among employees.
- Increases given to individuals become a permanent
part of base pay.
13Skill- and Knowledge-BasedPay Systems and Merit
- Skill- and knowledge-based pay systems reward
employees for the acquisition of more skills or
knowledge.
14Incentive Compensation Systems
- Piece-rate incentive plan
- Paying an employee a certain amount of money for
every unit she or he produces
- Individual incentive plans
- Reward individual performance on a real-time
basis
- Sales commission
- An incentive paid to salespeople
- Other forms
- Time off, special perks
15Limitations of Incentive Compensation Systems
- They are practical only when performance can be
measured easily and objectively.
- They are often an administrative burden.
- They are likely to focus attention on only a
narrow range of behaviors, perhaps at the expense
of other behaviors.
16Team and Group Incentive Reward Systems
- Gainsharing
- A team- and group-based incentive system designed
to share the cost savings from productivity
improvements with employees
- Scanlon plan
- A type of gainsharing plan in which the
distribution of gains is tilted much more heavily
toward employees and across the entire
organization.
17Other Types of Team and Group Rewards
- Profit sharing
- An incentive system in which, at the end of the
year, some portion of the companys profits is
paid into a profit-sharing pool, which is then
distributed to all employees - Employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs)
- Group-level reward systems in which employees are
gradually given a major stake in the ownership of
a corporation
18Limitations of Team and Group Reward Systems
- Not every member of a group may contribute
equally to the groups performance.
- Employees may not see how their efforts lead to
increased profits.
- Employees may come to view the group-level
incentive as a normal part of their compensation.
19Standard Forms ofExecutive Compensation
- Base salary
- A guaranteed amount of money that the individual
will be paid
- Stock-option plan
- An incentive plan established to give senior
managers the option to buy the company stock in
the future at a predetermined fixed price
20Criticisms of Executive Compensation
- The levels of executive compensation attained by
some managers seem too high for the average
shareholder to understand.
- Executive compensation in the U.S. seems far out
of line with that paid to senior executives in
other countries.
- Little or no relationship seems to exist between
the performance of the organization and the
compensation paid to its senior executives.
- The gap between the earnings of the CEO and the
earnings of a typical employee is enormous.
21New Approaches to Performance-Based Rewards
- A company could grant a salary-increase budget to
work groups and then allow the members of those
groups themselves to determine how the rewards
will be allocated. - Some companies now offer stock options to all
their employees rather than just top executives.
22A Strategic Perspective on Incentives and
Performance-Based Rewards
- The organization must decide what it needs in
order to compete more effectively.
- Reward systems should provide incentives to
employees so that they work for the desired
outcomes.
- Organization must be careful that the incentive
plan does not encourage undesirable behaviors and
outcomes.