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Insights
on Excellence | "Insights
on Excellence" Archive
Judging the value of pork in business
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR |
Stephen
Hawley Martin is
a former principal of The Martin Agency
in Richmond and the author of more than
half a dozen books including his newest,
Lean Enterprise Leader: How to Get Things
Done Without Doing It All Yourself.
He is editor and
publisher of The
Oaklea Press, a book publishing business
dedicated primarily to helping business
executives increase productivity.
He can be reached at shmartin@oakleapress.com
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by Stephen
Hawley Martin
for Virginia Business
January 10, 2007
No matter which side of the political spectrum they
lean toward, most business people would agree that Congress
hands out bushels of money -- sometimes for good reasons,
and other times not -- and it certainly seems the public
hardly ever gets an accounting of the effectiveness of
that spending. Unfortunately, Congress doesn't have to
make a profit to stay in business.
Imagine if a business
was run like Congress. We could all step back and watch
it get sucked down a gigantic black hole.
But there is one area where executives often behave
like congressmen. Compensation and benefit programs are
rarely evaluated for effectiveness. I recently talked
with an HR director whose company had a sign-on bonus
program. The company is in a tight labor market, and
it offered a great incentive package for new employees.
The intent of the program was to attract and retain the
best workers. New hires received the bonus immediately
in exchange for a promise that they would for a certain
length of time -- six months to two years is typical
of these programs.
I asked the HR director two questions: Is it working?
And how do you recoup the money when employees leave
before their time is up?
Guess what his answers were.
"I don't know," and "We
don't track whether they work as long as required,
so we don't have a collection [pay back] process."
Apparently, one department processes
the payments, and no department was responsible for
collection. There was no tracking of employees in the
program -- no evaluation of whether the program attracted "good" employees
or how long they stayed.
Ask yourself this. Could the marketing department get
away with such a thing? If a car dealer offered $1000
cash back and didn't sell any more cars than usual, would
management continue that campaign? If a retailer offered
a rebate for purchases of $100 or more but the cashier
paid it out to everyone who came in the store, would
that person have a job tomorrow?
We'll assume the company -- which was very large, keeping
the human resources and payroll departments very busy
-- simply could not manage the new hire sign-on bonus
any better than it did because it had to work with a
manual payroll system, which can be very labor intensive.
Maybe the cost of manually handling the extra workload
compared with the bonus payments that might have been
returned did not justify the extra man hours that would
have been required. But with an automated time and attendance
system, this program could easily have been monitored
both for effectiveness and compliance. Participants receiving
the bonus payment could be flagged in the system. Their
employment could be tracked so that if they were to leave
the company before fulfilling their time in service commitment,
the supervisor and payroll department could be notified
to collect the amount of the bonus from the final paycheck.
If an individual had insufficient payroll dollars coming
to him or her to reimburse the employer, then further
action could be taken to recover the money.
Not only is the recovery of these funds important, the
employer ought to be concerned about the message conveyed
when such a program is not policed. Employees talk to
each other. Workers study compensation programs and become
students of them -- not just what is written, but what
is enforced. They are smart, and when it comes to money,
they don't miss much. And besides, you wouldn't want
to run your business they way Congress runs its -- would
you?
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Stephen Hawley Martin is a former principal of The Martin Agency in Richmond
and the author of more than half a dozen books including his newest, Lean Enterprise
Leader: How to Get Things Done Without Doing It All Yourself. He is editor and
publisher of The Oaklea Press, a book publishing business dedicated primarily
to helping business executives increase productivity.
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