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Leadership
& Team Management MGMT
623
VU
Lecture
35
REWARDING
& RECOGNIZING TEAMWORK
Turning
Individuals into Team
Players
We
have already discussed the importance of
right type of team members
and their training
and
learning
organization concepts. To day we
will focus on third important
components of turning
individuals
into team players the
"Reward". Rewarding or compensation of employees/team
members
plays
important roles in managing a team and
performance.
Compensating
Teams:
An
employee's total compensation has three components.
The first and the largest element is
base
compensation
(i.e., salary). The second
component of total compensation is pay
incentives (i.e.,
bonuses
and profit-sharing). The third component
is benefits or indirect compensation
(i.e., insurance,
vacation,
unemployment, and perks.
Reward
and Recognition
Systems
o
Team-based
reward and recognition systems
can promote teamwork
o
Focus
should be rewarding teams
for achieving specific
goals
Why
People Leave Their
Jobs?
o
They
feel they do not make a
difference.
o
They
do not get proper
recognition.
o
They
are not learning anything
new or growing as a
person.
o
They
do not like their
coworkers.
o
They
want to earn more
money.
People
leave organization due to many
reasons but one of them might be the
improper compensation
system.
Compensating
Teams:
Reasons
for tailoring compensation to
individuals:
o
Motivation
comes from within the
individual as opposed to the
group.
o
The
development of skills and behaviors is an
individual undertaking.
o
Fairness
in dealing with teams does
not mean equal pay
for all.
o
Team
compensation is not a payoff but a
means of nurturing behavior
that benefits the
team.
Rewards
and other Employee
Behaviors
Starting
from attracting the good
team members/employees to retain
every thing is revolving on
the
reward
system of organization. Three
important HR related behaviors
like turnover, absenteeism
and
attendance
is directly linked with the
reward system of
organizations.
With
better reward system we can
minimize the turnover, absenteeism and
attendance and vice
versa.
Reward
is also used to reinforce
positive behavior and
reduces the undesirable
behaviors.
Total
compensation comprises of direct like
wages, salary, commission, gain sharing
etc while indirect
benefits,
vacation, insurance, etc. Even
positive behavior of manager/leader also
play important role
in
modifying
the behaviors of the team member/employees. We
can see a wide range of
benefits
organization
use to attract, and retain the
employees.
Objectives
of Reward Systems
o
Attraction
and retention (employees compare to other
firms in the market)
o
Motivating
performance (contingent on expectancy &
equity)
o
Getting
employees to gain skills and
knowledge
o
Reinforce
the organization's culture
150
Leadership
& Team Management MGMT
623
VU
o
Not
cost the firm too
much!!
Designing
Rewards
o
Always
remember your basic
motivational theories
o
Options
for reward systems
o
Objectives
of reward systems
o
How
rewards impact organizational
effectiveness
o
Implementing
a reward system
o
Appropriate
rewards practices sometimes
vary between countries
Individual
or Team Rewards?
Individual
rewards
o
fosters
independent behavior
o
may
lead to creative thinking and
novel solutions
o
encourages
competitive striving within a
work team
Team
rewards
o
emphasize
cooperation & joint
efforts
o
emphasize
information sharing
Both
have same purpose.
Types
of Team Pay
o
Incentive
pay
o
Recognition
o
Profit
sharing
o
Gain
sharing
Variable
Pay (Incentive Pay):
There
are several plans that can be
used: Merit
pay, bonus
programs, and
awards.
Advantages of
individual-based
pay-for-performance plans include rewarded performance
is likely to be repeated,
financial
incentives can shape an
individual's goals, they help the
firm achieve individual equity,
and
they
fit in with an individualistic
culture. Disadvantages include they
may promote single
mindedness;
employees
do not believe pay and performance
are linked, they may
work against achieving
quality
goals,
and they may promote
inflexibility.
Variable
pay fluctuates according to
some pre-established criterion. For
select employee groups,
such
as
sales, variable pay can be
as high as 100 percent. The
higher the form of variable
pay, the more risk
sharing
there is between the employee and the firm.
Executives and sales personnel are
usually treated
very
differently than other types of
workers in pay-for-performance plans. A number of
plans are used
to
link executives' pay to a firm's
performance, but there is little
agreement on which is best.
Sales
professionals
may be paid in the form of
straight salary, straight commission, or
a combination plan.
The
relative proportion of salary versus
incentives varies widely across
firms.
Guidelines
for Variable Team-Based
Pay:
o
Tie
rewards to performance
Make
sure employee has
control
o
Balance
team & individual
pay.
o
Make
sure team compensation system
consistent with rest of
organization
o
Make
it clear who is eligible
o
How to
divide it up?
o
Decide
on compensation criteria (pay for
bottom line results?
Contribution? Behavior?
Attitude?)
o
Are
you rewarding for past or
projected performance?
o
Develop
a budget
o
Decide
on measurement periods & timing of
payout
Shorter
periods & faster payout motivate more
but also increase
administrative costs!
o
Share
financial information with
team members.
151
Leadership
& Team Management MGMT
623
VU
Recognition
Recognition
of employee's efforts is also
very important motivational
factor and part of reward
system.
General
Rules:
o
Not
everyone should get it
o
Give
in timely manner
o
Publicize
it
o
Tie it
to team performance
o
Personalize
awards
o
Nomination
should be simple
o
Recognize
performance linked to org. goals
Gain
sharing Plan: A percentage
of the value of increased productivity is
given to employees
(prearranged
formula).
These
plans reward all workers in a
plant or business unit based
on the performance of the entire
plant
or
unit. Plant wide plans are
generally referred to as gain
sharing programs
because they return a
portion
of the company's cost savings to the
workers, usually in the form of a
lump-sum bonus.
Advantages
include eliciting active
employee input, increasing the level of
cooperation, fewer
measurement
difficulties, and improving quality.
Disadvantages include protection of low
performers,
problems
with the criteria used to
trigger rewards, and management-labor
conflict.
Profit
sharing: Corporate
profits are distributed to
all employees.
This
is the most macro type of
incentive program and is
based on the entire corporation's
performance.
The
most widely used program of
this kind is profit
sharing which
differs from gain sharing in
several
important
ways: no attempt is made to reward
workers for productivity
improvements, they are
very
mechanistic,
and typically they are used
to fund retirement programs. Advantages
of this plan are
financial
flexibility for the firm,
increased employee commitment, and
tax advantages. Disadvantages
include
risk for employees, limited
effect on productivity, and long-run
financial difficulties.
Team-based
plans attempt to support other efforts to
increase the flexibility of the workforce
within a
firm.
These plans normally reward
all team members equally
based on group outcomes.
The
advantages
of team-based pay-for-performance plans
include they foster group
cohesiveness and they
facilitate
performance measurement. Disadvantages include
possible lack of fit with
individualistic
cultural
values, the free-riding effect, social
pressures to limit performance,
difficulties in identifying
meaningful
groups, and inter-group competition
leading to a decline in overall
performance.
Team
Performance Appraisal
Performance
appraisal involves the identification,
measurement, and management of
human
performance
in organizations. Organizations usually
conduct appraisals for administrative (a
decision
about
an employee's working conditions,
including promotions and rewards) and/or
developmental (a
decision
concerning strengthening the employee's
job skills, including
counseling and training)
purposes.
Dissatisfaction with appraisals is
rampant. HR professionals, line managers, and
employees
voice
dissatisfaction. Many workers have
difficulty with appraisal, which
may account for the short
life
span
of the average appraisal system.
360-Degree
Feedback
360
degree feedback is a tool that
gives individuals a clear view of
their performance at work.
Opinions
are
gathered from the person being
assessed; people that work
for them, their peers and
their manager.
All
views are grouped together
to form the full picture. In
most cases opinions are
expressed by the
completion
of a questionnaire covering different
aspects of expected performance factors.
Effective
Benefit Administration
There
are two critical issues in
the administration of employee benefits:
the use of flexible benefits
and
the
importance of communicating benefits to
employees. A flexible benefits
program allows
employees
to choose from a selection of such
employer-provided benefits as vision
care, dental care,
health
insurance coverage for dependents,
additional life insurance coverage,
long-term disability
insurance,
child care, elder care, more
paid vacation days, legal
services, and retirement plan.
Benefits
communication
is essential. Many employees with
excellent benefits packages have
never been
informed
of the value of these benefits and
are likely to underestimate their
worth.
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