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Suggest You - How to Structure a Good Bonus Plan
Embracing the Feminine in the Workplace sbursementsBang! Bang! My shiny metal cap gun sounded as I fired at the imaginary tribe of Indians invading my suburban Atlanta backyard. Two houses down the street, my childhood friend Shelly cuddled her brand new "Chatty Cathy" baby doll.Growing up in the 50s, our roles were clear: women gather and nest, and men hunt and fight. I was sure that one day I would go into business, and Shelly would be a stay-at-home mom. Twenty years later, Shelly and I were both in business; I was working in a public relations agency, and Shelly had landed a Devise a rating system that accumulates the value of the criteria mentioned above (responsibility, loyalty, performance). Aggregate the values for all employees. Determine the amount of money to be distributed as a percentage of “excess profits” and divide that amount by the aggregate points for all employees to determine the dollar value per point. Individual bonuses can then be determined by multiplying the individual’s score by the average value per point. A spreadsheet can be easily set up to automate this task with only a little maintenance required to update employees and employee performance ratings. Distribute Bonus Payments Frequently Pay bonuses The Power of a Pregnant Pause Bonuses Plans Should Be UniversalThe busiest maternity hospital in the world is my client. They were once listed in the Guinness Book of Records for ‘most babies delivered in one year’!Pregnant women appreciate the slow pace of elevator doors at the hospital, but visitors and guests complain, ‘The elevators close too slowly!’The slow doors are intentionally programmed to give pregnant women and wheelchair-bound patients more time to enter and exit. If the hospital were to speed up the program, you can imagine the complaints: ‘The elevator doors close too To get your entire staff pulling in the same direction devise your bonus plan to include all employees at some level and after a pre-employment evaluation period (often 90 days) with the company. Many plans include part timers as well as full timers but at a somewhat lesser share of the proceeds. Bonuses Must Be Significant and of Perceived Value to the Recipient To create an incentive, the recipient must perceive the bonus potential as a significant addition to income. Otherwise, the bonus is looked upon as supplemental income or even a “benefit”. There should be public (company) recognition of the employees’ performance that resulted in the bonus to add to the perceived value. Bonuses Should Relate to Individual Performance One factor in the determination of how much an individual employee receives should be their rating as determined by their last formal job performance appraisal. All other things being equal, a superior job performance should command a higher share of the bonus proceeds. Bonuses Should Include a Factor for Employee’s Job Responsibility It is reasonable to relate an employee’s rating for bonus purposes to their overall responsibility in the company as determined by the number of employees supervised and/or budget for which they have direct control. General categories can have different ratings in the bonus distribution process (hourly/clerical, supervisor, department head or officer). Bonuses Should Include a Factor for Employee Loyalty It is reasonable to associate time with the company as “loyalty”. An employee that has been with the company for 25 years should have a somewhat higher rating for bonus proposes than someone having only 1 year. A factor can and should be included in the bonus program for employee tenure. Bonus Plans should be Based On and Pay a Predictable Share of “Excess Profits” Set a trigger level that must be achieved before bonuses are paid and communicate this clearly to all staff. The trigger level should provide a base for company growth and replacement of capital. Many small businesses find that this occurs at the 8-10% net profit level but each company. It is to be understood that a portion of the profits above the trigger level will be shared. The % shared may be determined by company owners but should not be so low as to yield little employee incentive or so large as to give away the bank. Typically, this share is 25-50%. Disclosing the trigger level and distribution share percentage is at the discretion of the owner but the more open the system is the more trust, rapport and enthusiasm will be developed with the staff. Devise a Distribution Method and System to Manage Bonus Disbursements Devise a rating system that accumulates the value of the criteria mentioned above (responsibility, loyalty, performance). Aggregate the values for all employees. Determine the amount of money to be distributed as a percentage of “excess profits” and divide that amount by the aggregate points for all employees to determine the dollar value per point. Individual bonuses can then be determined by multiplying the individual’s score by the average value per point. A spreadsheet can be easily set up to automate this task with only a little maintenance required to update employees and employee performance ratings. Distribute Bonus Payments Frequently Pay bonuses a The Free-Rider Problem d in the bonus to add to the perceived value.The Free-Rider Problem: The Inefficiencies of Production and Distribution in Private Markets Caused By The Free-Rider ProblemThe study of microeconomics provides us with a clear explanation of how the free-rider problem creates a dilemma for producers in the private market. It impedes the consumers' valuation of a good, lowering profit, and ultimately raising production costs. As a producer in the private market one should understand from where this problem arises and thus learn to avoid it.The free-rider Bonuses Should Relate to Individual Performance One factor in the determination of how much an individual employee receives should be their rating as determined by their last formal job performance appraisal. All other things being equal, a superior job performance should command a higher share of the bonus proceeds. Bonuses Should Include a Factor for Employee’s Job Responsibility It is reasonable to relate an employee’s rating for bonus purposes to their overall responsibility in the company as determined by the number of employees supervised and/or budget for which they have direct control. General categories can have different ratings in the bonus distribution process (hourly/clerical, supervisor, department head or officer). Bonuses Should Include a Factor for Employee Loyalty It is reasonable to associate time with the company as “loyalty”. An employee that has been with the company for 25 years should have a somewhat higher rating for bonus proposes than someone having only 1 year. A factor can and should be included in the bonus program for employee tenure. Bonus Plans should be Based On and Pay a Predictable Share of “Excess Profits” Set a trigger level that must be achieved before bonuses are paid and communicate this clearly to all staff. The trigger level should provide a base for company growth and replacement of capital. Many small businesses find that this occurs at the 8-10% net profit level but each company. It is to be understood that a portion of the profits above the trigger level will be shared. The % shared may be determined by company owners but should not be so low as to yield little employee incentive or so large as to give away the bank. Typically, this share is 25-50%. Disclosing the trigger level and distribution share percentage is at the discretion of the owner but the more open the system is the more trust, rapport and enthusiasm will be developed with the staff. Devise a Distribution Method and System to Manage Bonus Disbursements Devise a rating system that accumulates the value of the criteria mentioned above (responsibility, loyalty, performance). Aggregate the values for all employees. Determine the amount of money to be distributed as a percentage of “excess profits” and divide that amount by the aggregate points for all employees to determine the dollar value per point. Individual bonuses can then be determined by multiplying the individual’s score by the average value per point. A spreadsheet can be easily set up to automate this task with only a little maintenance required to update employees and employee performance ratings. Distribute Bonus Payments Frequently Pay bonuses The Key To Business Success ave different ratings in the bonus distribution process (hourly/clerical, supervisor, department head or officer).The key to business success is really quite simple. It is your ability to offer a product or service that people will pay for at a price sufficiently above your costs to produce. Ideally you need to price your product or service at three to five times your cost, thereby giving you a profit that enables you to buy and offer more products and services.Before you can sell a product or service for a profit you must find one. You must find a product or service that fills a need or solves a problem for people. It must be product or se Bonuses Should Include a Factor for Employee Loyalty It is reasonable to associate time with the company as “loyalty”. An employee that has been with the company for 25 years should have a somewhat higher rating for bonus proposes than someone having only 1 year. A factor can and should be included in the bonus program for employee tenure. Bonus Plans should be Based On and Pay a Predictable Share of “Excess Profits” Set a trigger level that must be achieved before bonuses are paid and communicate this clearly to all staff. The trigger level should provide a base for company growth and replacement of capital. Many small businesses find that this occurs at the 8-10% net profit level but each company. It is to be understood that a portion of the profits above the trigger level will be shared. The % shared may be determined by company owners but should not be so low as to yield little employee incentive or so large as to give away the bank. Typically, this share is 25-50%. Disclosing the trigger level and distribution share percentage is at the discretion of the owner but the more open the system is the more trust, rapport and enthusiasm will be developed with the staff. Devise a Distribution Method and System to Manage Bonus Disbursements Devise a rating system that accumulates the value of the criteria mentioned above (responsibility, loyalty, performance). Aggregate the values for all employees. Determine the amount of money to be distributed as a percentage of “excess profits” and divide that amount by the aggregate points for all employees to determine the dollar value per point. Individual bonuses can then be determined by multiplying the individual’s score by the average value per point. A spreadsheet can be easily set up to automate this task with only a little maintenance required to update employees and employee performance ratings. Distribute Bonus Payments Frequently Pay bonuses Ten Employability Skills For 2010 rovide a base for company growth and replacement of capital. Many small businesses find that this occurs at the 8-10% net profit level but each company. It is to be understood that a portion of the profits above the trigger level will be shared. The % shared may be determined by company owners but should not be so low as to yield little employee incentive or so large as to give away the bank. Typically, this share is 25-50%. Disclosing the trigger level and distribution share percentage is at the discretion of the owner but the more open the system is the more trust, rapport and enthusiasm will be developed with the staff.In 2010, the work world will be even more global. If your job is not one that requires you to physically be in one place, you will be competing with bright and hungry workers in India, China, Korea and other developing nations around the globe. Competing in the new environment will require higher levels of competence and necessitate looking straight ahead, not constantly glancing rearview mirror for warm fuzzy feelings about what you have achieved in the past. Here are 10 skills to acquire and refine that will increase Devise a Distribution Method and System to Manage Bonus Disbursements Devise a rating system that accumulates the value of the criteria mentioned above (responsibility, loyalty, performance). Aggregate the values for all employees. Determine the amount of money to be distributed as a percentage of “excess profits” and divide that amount by the aggregate points for all employees to determine the dollar value per point. Individual bonuses can then be determined by multiplying the individual’s score by the average value per point. A spreadsheet can be easily set up to automate this task with only a little maintenance required to update employees and employee performance ratings. Distribute Bonus Payments Frequently Pay bonuses Use The Right Benefit Statements on Your Website (and in All Your Marketing) sbursementsThe experts say you need benefit statements in all your marketing – on your website, on your brochures and flyers, in your 30-second introduction and in all types of advertising. This is true.There could be so many benefit statements for your business, how do you choose?Marketing is the process of communicating to people about your product or service so they can make a purchase if they perceive they want or need it. If they are not aware of it, don't know how to purchase it or don't perceive it fulfills a want or need, Devise a rating system that accumulates the value of the criteria mentioned above (responsibility, loyalty, performance). Aggregate the values for all employees. Determine the amount of money to be distributed as a percentage of “excess profits” and divide that amount by the aggregate points for all employees to determine the dollar value per point. Individual bonuses can then be determined by multiplying the individual’s score by the average value per point. A spreadsheet can be easily set up to automate this task with only a little maintenance required to update employees and employee performance ratings. Distribute Bonus Payments Frequently Pay bonuses as frequently as practical but no less than once quarterly, otherwise the incentive is not kept in front of the employee. Annual bonus plans are not looked upon as “incentives”; they often are viewed as supplemental income (and an entitlement) or a “Christmas Bonus”. Bonus payments should be viewed much like salespeople’s commissions, if not, the incentive wanes in the average employee. When Bonus Plans Are Not Bonus Plans Avoid devising a system that pays on a percentage of salary as it is difficult to relate to the three criteria stated above (responsibility, loyalty and performance). Even though companies contribute mightily to savings and investment plans such as 401k’s, do not look upon these programs as bonuses. They are simply supplemental income, and although they may affect loyalty, they do little to meet the other two criteria.
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