Smart Business Chicago
Employee motivation
Accountability, incentives and productivity measurements By Mike Rudd
The focus of a productivity-based excess profit incentive system is to reward the employee
based on the work performed over and above the minimum profit standards established by management,
as opposed to a bonus given based on entitlement.
Every company has several obligations — to generate enough cash flow to meet the company’s daily cash
requirements, produce a profit commiserate with the risk involved in the business practice, allow the
owner(s) to maintain a good quality of life and assure the employees a fair wage and safe work environment.
The concept of excess-based profit incentives was developed as a mythology to assure the business
maintains the profit margins required to thrive and provide employee motivation based on specific
performance criteria.
There are a few key principles that need to be addressed to establish and maintain a good incentive program.
1. Define the minimum gross profit your organization must produce to maintain its return on risk.
The amount of incentive is calculated on the gross profit generated in excess of this amount. This
allows the company to increase profits as the excess profit is shared with the company and employees.
2. Incentives must be tied to cost areas that employees have control over.
This could be labor hours, material costs, overtime, reworks and waste and scrap, small tools, and
consumable supplies. This is in direct contrast to an incentive plan that does not take into account
the individual contribution of the employees.
3. The financial reporting system must reflect the distinct/discreet operations of the company so it
will be possible to measure the performance of the employees.
If a company lumps all of the direct job/production costs into one ledger account, it will be impossible
to measure where either improvement or poor performance is coming from.
4. The way to hold employees accountable is to have a program that rewards good performance and
negatively impacts the incentive amount if the performance is subpar. For example, if the employees
maintain a waste and scrap budget below what is established by management, the incentive paid to
employees increases. If the waste and scrap budget is exceeded, the incentive is decreased.
5. The incentive plan should reward all the employees of the company based on their specific contributions
to the overall success of the company; the greater the responsibilities, the greater the reward.
This includes senior management, administrative personnel, supervisors and line employees, down to
the least senior positions.
6. Rewards on a consistent basis monthly or quarterly maintain motivation but reduce the administrative
burden on management.
Do not fall into the year-end bonus syndrome. The bonus is generally arbitrary, is not based on
performance, leads to entitlement and is often paid because the employees expect it regardless of
the financial ability of the company to absorb the expense management pays because it does not want
to disappoint the employees.
7. Excess profit incentive plans force employees to pay attention to the work at hand. They have the
greatest impact on profitability and whether the management pays because they do not want to disappoint
the employees.
MIKE RUDD (mike.rudd@ipa-iba.com) is director of client services
for IPA. IPA’s 1,700 employees offer consulting services to businesses
throughout the United States, including Alaska and Hawaii, as well as Canada. Reach Rudd at (847) 808-5590 or at
www.ipa-iba.com.