Incentive
compensation. Powerful stuff when used well and unfortunately potentially
even more powerful when misused and misdirected. Chip and
Dan Heath said it well...
Incentives are
dangerous, and not just because people game them. They often yield collateral
damage. Remember the tale of the Darwin Award winner who strapped a jet engine
to his car, dreaming of a joyride for the ages, and then met his sorry end as a
human flapjack on the side of a mountain? Incentives are like that jet engine.
There’s no question the engine will take you somewhere, fast, but it’s not
always clear where. Or what you’re going to mow down on the way. Yet incentives
are still the first resort of most managers, perhaps because they all think
they’re smart enough to create the perfect carrot.
How do you know when an
incentive plan is a good idea and when it is not?
For starters, it is
important to have a sense of the circumstances you are fixing to drop them into
and the objectives you (or the prospective plan "sponsor") hope
to achieve by putting them in place. If you don't, start there.
Next, you'll need to
face up to the reality that there are problems which incentives cannot fix (and
may even make worse). What follows is my own list of what incentives can
and cannot do. Many of you will have your own lists;
Things Incentives Can Do
1. Incentives can
focus out top priorities for employee attention. This is one of the most potent
capabilities of incentives
2. It can
communicate to employees that where their efforts can create the most value.
3. It shares the
rewards of success.
4. It could encourage
teamwork and collaboration across business or functional lines.
5. Incentives can
help drive and reward the development of critical skills and capabilities.
Things Incentives Cannot
Do
1. Incentives
can't fix broken organizational structures and processes. If the structure
and processes are so bad that have to dangle money to "motivate"
people to work around them.
2. It can't fix
bad job design and staffing decisions. Incentives are not an alternative
to designing and staffing work roles in ways that make good performance
possible and even likely.
3. It can't serve
as a substitute for enforcing policies and job requirements. Following
policy and meeting job requirements should be considered a condition
of employment, not something you "purchase" with extra compensation
in order to avoid confronting those morale-depleting slackers.
4. Incentives
cannot manage your employees for you (honestly, this doesn't even work with
most sales jobs) and they are not an alternative to setting and communicating clear
performance expectations.
Melcrum (2007) also
cites the importance of compensation, benefits and formal recognition in
instilling employee engagement. In 2008, a survey by CHA asked one thousand
employees what single action their employer could take immediately to help
improve engagement during the economic downturn (CHA, 2008 cited in Peacock,
2008). First and foremost, a pay rise including bonus or incentives was
requested, followed by company organized other incentives and reassurance about
job security.
References
Melcurm (2007), The
Practitioner’s Guide to: essential techniques for employee engagement, Melcrum
Publishing Limited.
Better to add more references and citations. All cited references should be listed in the reference
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