Pay for Individual Performance
Organizations may reward individual performance with incentives such as piecework rates, standard hour plans, merit pay, individual bonuses, and sales commissions. These alternatives are summarized in Figure
1. Piecework Rates
An obvious advantage of piece rates is the direct link between how much work the employee does and the amount the emoloyee earns. In spite of their advantages, piece rates are relatively rare for several reasons. Most jobs, including those of managers, have no physical output, so it is hard to develop an appropriate performance measure. This type of incentive is most suited for very routine, standardized jobs with output that is easy to measure. For complex jobs or jobs with hard-to-measure outputs, piecework plans do not apply very well. Also, unless a plan is well designed to include performance standards, it may not reward employees for focusing on quality or customer satisfaction if it interferes with the day's output.
2. Standard Hour Plans
Another
quantity-oriented incentive for production workers is the standard hour
plan, an incentive plan that pays workers extra for work done in less
than a preset "standard time." The organization determines a standard
time to complete a task, such as tuning up a car engine. If the mechanic
completes the work in less than the standard time, the mechanic
receives an amount of pay equal to the wage for the full standard time.
Suppose the standard time for tuning up an engine is two hours. If the
mechanic finishes a tuneup in 1 1/2 hours, the mechanic earns two hours'
worth of pay in 1 1/2 hours. Working that fast over the course of a
week could add significantly to the mechanic's pay.
Almost all organizations have established some program of merit pay—a system of linking pay increases to ratings on performance appraisals. (described the content and use of performance appraisals.) Merit pay is most common for management and professional employees.
Rewards employees with 200% variable payout
INDIA: After growing faster than Indian information technology (IT) industry, Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp has now rewarded its employees by giving out as much as 200% of the variable components of their 2011 salaries.
Typically, anywhere from 20 to 30% of an employee salary is labeled as variable pay, linked to a combination of overall company performance and individual performance.
"The company has done the repeat of 2010 in rewarding its top performers. The top performers got around 200% of their target bonus while the average bonus given was 150%. The bonuses were on expected lines as the company has been scoring good quarter on quarter," said a Cognizant employee in Chennai on condition of anonymity.
Organizations may reward individual performance with incentives such as piecework rates, standard hour plans, merit pay, individual bonuses, and sales commissions. These alternatives are summarized in Figure
INDIA:
Defence Minister A K Antony in a report to Parliament upper house
disclosed that 637 scientists have resigned from the Defence Research
and Development Organisation (DRDO) during the period of 2007-2011, most
of them were younger scientists who resigned. Better incentives,
better increments and promotions are few main reasons behind the
resignation of scientists from DRDO. defence Minister said "corrective
measures " had been put in place "to stem the flow of resignations". The
government has planned to grant performance related incentive scheme to DRDO scientists, on par with the similar organisations.
Source: TOI, 6-12-2012
1. Piecework Rates
As
an incentive to work efficiently, some organizations pay production
workers a piecework rate, a wage based on the amount they produce. This
rate is often paid in addition to employees' base pay. The amount paid
per unit is set at a level that re-wards employees for above-average
production volume. For example, suppose that on average, assemblers can
finish ten components in an hour. If the organization wants to pay its
average assemblers $12 per hour, it can pay a piecework rate of $12 per
hour divided by 10 components/hour, or $1.20 per component. An assembler
who produces the average of 10 components per hour earns an amount
equal to $12 per hour. An assembler who produces 12 components in an
hour would earn $1.20 x 12, or $14.40 each hour.
An obvious advantage of piece rates is the direct link between how much work the employee does and the amount the emoloyee earns. In spite of their advantages, piece rates are relatively rare for several reasons. Most jobs, including those of managers, have no physical output, so it is hard to develop an appropriate performance measure. This type of incentive is most suited for very routine, standardized jobs with output that is easy to measure. For complex jobs or jobs with hard-to-measure outputs, piecework plans do not apply very well. Also, unless a plan is well designed to include performance standards, it may not reward employees for focusing on quality or customer satisfaction if it interferes with the day's output.
2. Standard Hour Plans
Payment
according to standard our plan is mostly seen in areas where there is
daily labour intensive. Daily labour will be paid according to the hours
he has worked. Standard our plan for payment of wages is being used in
the field of construction, agriculture sector and in the areas where
more manual labour is required.
In terms of
their pros and cons, standard hour plans are much like piecework plans.
They encourage employees to work as fast as they can, but not
necessarily to care about quality or customer service. Also, they only
succeed if employees want the extra money more than they want to work at
a pace that feels comfortable.
3. Merit Pay
Merit pay refers to the process of determining employee compensation
(base salary or bonuses), in part, on the basis of how well each
employee performs at work. The principle is simple, at least in theory.
It makes sense to reward more productive employees for their increased
contributions to the organization, in the interests in fairness, but
also with an eye to trying to retain the best employees in a company.
Almost all organizations have established some program of merit pay—a system of linking pay increases to ratings on performance appraisals. (described the content and use of performance appraisals.) Merit pay is most common for management and professional employees.
A
drawback of merit pay, from the employer's standpoint, is that it can
quickly become expensive. Managers at a majority of organizations rate
most employees' performance in the top two categories (out of four or
five). Therefore, the majority of employees are eligible for the biggest
merit increases, and their pay rises rapidly. This cost is one reason
that some organizations have established guidelines about the percentage
of employees that may receive the top rating.
Another
drawback of merit pay is that it makes assumptions that may be
misleading. Rewarding employees for superior performance ratings assumes
that those ratings depend on employees' ability and motivation. But
performance may actually depend on forces outside the employee's
control, such as managers' rating biases, the level of cooperation from
coworkers, or the degree to which the organization gives employees the
authority, training, and resources they need. Under these conditions,
employees will likely conclude that the merit pay system is unfair. The
HR How-To box suggests ways to set up a merit pay system so that is
maximizes the advantages of this type of pay while minimizing the
drawbacks.
Advantages of Merit PayThese are reasons why you might want to consider merit pay.
- Allows the employer to differentiate pay given to high performers.
- Merit pay helps an employer differentiate between the performance of high and low performing employees and reward the performance of the higher performers.
- Merit pay, unlike profit sharing or similar bonus pay schemes, allows an employer to differentiate between the performance of the company as a whole and the performance of an individual. While many merit pay programs also provide an overall reward that is distributed to all employees, to promote such values as team work, a portion of the available compensation is reserved for strong performers.
- Merit pay also provides a vehicle for an employer to recognize individual performance on a one time basis. This is useful for rewarding employees who may have participated in a one-time project such as implementing a new HRIS or opening up a new sales territory.
4. Performance Bonuses
Like
merit pay, performance bonuses reward individual performance, but
bonuses are not rolled into base pay. The employee must re-earn them
during each performance period. In some cases, the bonus is a one-time
reward. Bonuses may also be linked to objective performance measures
rather than subjective ratings. Bonuses for individual performance can
be extremely effective and give the organization great flexibility in
deciding what kinds of behaviour to reward.
Rewards employees with 200% variable payout
INDIA: After growing faster than Indian information technology (IT) industry, Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp has now rewarded its employees by giving out as much as 200% of the variable components of their 2011 salaries.
Typically, anywhere from 20 to 30% of an employee salary is labeled as variable pay, linked to a combination of overall company performance and individual performance.
"The company has done the repeat of 2010 in rewarding its top performers. The top performers got around 200% of their target bonus while the average bonus given was 150%. The bonuses were on expected lines as the company has been scoring good quarter on quarter," said a Cognizant employee in Chennai on condition of anonymity.
5. Sales Commissions
A
variation on piece rates and bonuses is the payment of commissions, or
pay calculated as a percentage of sales. For instance, a Insurance
policy salesperson might earn commissions of 5 percent on the amount of
the insurance policy of an insured person by him. Selling a 100000 worth
Insurance policy will earn 5000/- commissions for the Salesperson. At
most organizations today, commissions range from 5 to 20 percent of
sales. 21 In a growth-oriented organization, sales commissions need not
be limited to salespeople. Many of the technical experts at Scientific
&. Engineering Solutions are eligible for commissions and bonuses
tied to the profitability of the sales they help to close. The HR How-To
box provides additional suggestions for incentive pay.
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