Chapter
28
Managing Reward for Special Groups
397
Method
Features
Advantages
Disadvantages
When appropriate
Salary plus
bonus
Basic salary plus
cash bonus
based on
achieving and
exceeding sales
targets or
quotas and
meeting other
selling
objectives
Provide financial
motivation but
targets or
objectives can be
flexed to ensure
that particular sales
goals are achieved,
eg high margin
sales, customer
service
Do not have a clear
line of sight between
effort and reward;
may be complex to
administer; sales
representative may
find them hard to
understand and
resent the use of
subjective
judgements on
performance other
than sales
When: flexibility in
providing rewards is
important; it is felt
that sales staff need
to be motivated to
focus on aspects of
their work other than
simply maximizing
sales volume
Commission
only
Only
commission
based on a
percentage of
sales volume or
value is paid,
there is no basic
salary
Provide a direct
financial incentive;
attract high-
performing sales
staff; ensure that
selling costs vary
directly with sales;
little direct
supervision
required
Lead to high-pressure
selling; may attract
the wrong sort of
people who are
interested only in
sales and not
customer service;
focus attention on
high volume rather
than profitability
When: sales
performance depends
mainly on selling
ability and can be
measured by
immediate sales
results; staff are not
involved in non-selling
activities; continuing
relationships with
customers are
relatively unimportant
Additional
non-cash
rewards
Incentives,
prizes, cars,
recognition,
opportunities
to grow
Utilize powerful
non-financial
motivators
May be difficult to
administer; do not
provide a direct
incentive
When it is believed
that other methods of
payment need to be
enhanced by providing
additional motivators
Rewarding customer service staff
Customer service staff work mainly in retail establish-
ments and in call or customer contact centres. Their
rewards need to reflect the nature of their duties,
ie enhancing levels of customer service as well as
selling.
Research conducted by West
et al (2005) estab-
lished that most employees in the researched organ-
izations had the opportunity to progress their base
pay on the basis of their performance or competence,
either through a range or up a pay spine, or between
grades/levels of job. Such arrangements have generally
supplanted spot rates for service roles in call centres
tabLe
28.1
Continued
Part
6
Performance and Reward
398
and retail shops. Low base pay/high commission
arrangements were rare.
At Boots the chemists, shop staff can progress up
through a number of pay points according to their
level of performance and skill – from entry level,
to experienced, to advanced, to expert/specialist.
At B&Q, customer advisers are paid on one of six
different spot rates. Pay progression is based on the
acquisition – and application on the shop floor –
of skills and knowledge. There are four additional
spot rates beyond the established rate, designed to
reward high performance. Each additional level
represents an hourly increase up to a maximum
rate. At House of Fraser, employees are allocated to
one of four competency bands – training, bronze,
silver and gold – with staff assessed for a ‘promotion’
every six months. At Lands’ End, there is a six-grade
pay structure for hourly paid staff, with spot rates
for starters.
Paying manual workers
The pay of manual workers takes the form of time
rates, also known as day rates, day work, flat rates
or hourly rates. Incentive payments by means of
payment-by-results schemes may be made on top of
a base rate.
Time rates
These provide workers with a predetermined rate for
the actual hours they work. Time rates on their own
are most commonly used when it is thought that it
is impossible or undesirable to use a payment-by-
results system, for example in maintenance work.
From the viewpoint of employees the advantage of
time rates is that their earnings are predictable and
steady and they do not have to engage in endless
arguments with rate fixers and supervisors about
piece rate or time allowances. The argument against
them is that they do not provide a direct incentive
relating the reward to the effort or the results. Two
ways of modifying the basic time rate approach
are to adopt high day rates, as described below, or
measured day work.
Time rates may take the form of what are often
called high day rates. These are higher than the
minimum time rate and may contain a consolidated
bonus rate element. The underlying assumption is
that higher base rates will encourage greater effort
without the problems created when operating an
incentive scheme. High day rates are usually above
the local market rates in order to attract and retain
workers.
Pay structures
Pay systems for manual workers are seldom graded
in the ways described in Chapter 27 unless their
conditions have been harmonized. Time rates are
usually paid in the form of spot rates: that is, a
fixed rate for a job or an individual. However, spot
rates may be designated for different levels of skill.
A person-based pay system may be adopted with
three basic rates of pay attached to people – unskilled,
semi-skilled and skilled – above which there might
be special rates for highly skilled occupations
such as toolmakers. Earnings from payment-by-
result schemes were added to these rates. Other
arrangements include the use of a more discerning
hierarchy of rates linked to skill levels (a type of
skills-based pay), a job-based pay system with
different rates for different jobs, or individual job
grades that are, in effect, spot rates to which there
is a defined pay to provide scope for pay progression
based on performance.
Payment-by-result schemes
Payment-by–result (PBR) schemes provide incentives
to workers by relating their pay or, more usually,
part of their pay to the number of items they pro-
duce or the time taken to do a certain amount of
work. The main types of PBR or incentive schemes
for individuals are piece work, work-measured
schemes, measured day work and performance-
related pay. Team bonus schemes are an alternative
to individual PBR, and plant-wide schemes can
produce bonuses that are paid instead of individual
or team bonuses, or in addition to them. Each of these
methods is described in Table 28.2 together with an
assessment of their advantages and disadvantages
for employers and employees and when they are
appropriate.
Chapter
28
Managing Reward for Special Groups
401
Questions
Segmentation
Many organizations have one reward system applied
to all categories of staff below the level of chief
executive. However, others find it necessary to cater
for the needs of special groups of staff by adopting
different reward practices. This is called reward
segmentation.
Executive pay levels
Executive pay is out of control. The reasons are:
●
Tournament theory: the increasing demands
made on chief executives.
●
Star culture: the creation of the celebrity CEO.
●
The talent shortage.
●
Pay disclosure in annual reports lead to demands
from CEOs to achieve parity.
Elements of directors’ and senior
executives’ pay
Basic, pay, bonus schemes, share options, executive
restricted share schemes.
Key learning points: Managing reward for special groups
Rewarding knowledge workers
The nature of knowledge work, especially in smaller
high-tech organizations such as software houses,
means that a more flexible approach to pay is
required that gives close attention to levels of
competence and skill.
Payment and incentive schemes
for sales staff
Summarized in Table 28.1.
Pay for customer service staff
Customer service staff usually have the opportunity
to progress their base pay on the basis of their
performance or competence, either through a range
or up a pay spine, or between grades/levels of job.
Pay for manual workers
The pay of manual workers takes the form of time
rates, also known as day rates, day work, flat rates
or hourly rates. Incentive payments by means of
payment-by-results scheme, as summarized in
Table 28.2, may be made on top of a base rate.
1
What is the function of a remuneration
committee?
2
What is a knowledge worker?
3
How should knowledge workers
be rewarded?
4
What are the main methods of rewarding
sales staff?
5
What are the advantages and disadvantages for
employers and employees of work-measured
payment-by-result schemes?