A friend of mine sent me an article recently that had me pulling out my hair óand I don’t have that much hair left to pull out! It seems a 3,400-person bank in Ohio had a big problem with turnover among its check-proofers (a low-paying job that combines the benefits of tedium with the rewards of low pay and mission-critical accuracy). According to bank managers, proofers were “vital to ensure the correct amount of money is moved from one account to another… The bank’s reputation and the customer’s satisfaction depend on it.” Someone’s innovative “solution” was to institute a pay-for-performance plan. In fact, the spokesperson said the pay plan worked so well that they intended to implement it throughout other departments. As the Church Lady on Saturday Night Live used to say, “Well, isn’t that special?” Be Careful What You Reward, You Just Might Get It I totally agree that good performers should receive good pay, but most research shows that pay only has a temporary effect on performance. However, tinkering with pay programs is similar to wandering into a blue-haired feeding frenzy… getting between people with bionic hips and boiled shrimp can be downright hazardous to your health. Most jobs follow the laws of supply and demand. More demand for a specific job combined with fewer qualified people yields higher pay scales. But ó and I mean BUT ó economic balance also assumes every employee has equal skills and is equally productive. Of course, anyone who has ever worked in an organization knows “equal skills” are pure fantasy. Employees naturally tend to separate into top-scale people, middle-of-the-roaders, and bottom feeders. In most cases, this follows roughly a 20/60/20 ratio. But did you ever wonder WHY? Or more importantly, how to change it? Traditional practices:
Best practices:
Did you notice that “pay for performance” was not included as part of a good selection process? When Pay for Performance Goes Bad
There are several psychological principles that drive this kind of behavior:
Bottom line: Pay is a very complicated process that often leads to unexpected consequences. Recommendations The recommendations are so simple they seem complicated: 1) use best practices to hire right-skilled employees and managers, and 2) get out of the way and let them do their job. Best practices ensure that marginally qualified people are screened out pre-hire, instead of later. They also maximize diversity by basing decisions more on skill measurement than impression management. Getting “out of the way” means training, managing, and evaluating people on the job they were hired for and then rewarding people fairly. It also means actively searching for and removing silly blocks and obstacles that inhibit work. A bank-wide pay-for-performance system? It won’t be a pretty sight. Chickens produce better eggs when they are healthy and fed a balanced diet. More feed only leads to fat fowl, not more eggs.