Most organizations today struggle to implement multiple operational initiatives.
Many of these organizations have discovered that one main reason why their
initiatives have achieved insufficient results is because their current
compensation systems don't reward employees for modeling appropriate behaviors
or achieving desired results.
Productivity gainsharing plans have existed for nearly 50 years. They're
all based on a mathematical formula that compares a baseline of performance
with actual productivity during a given period. When the actual productivity
is greater than the baseline, a percentage of savings is shared with employees.
As its name suggests, productivity gainsharing plans reward improvements
in productivity. Although productivity can be measured in different ways,
it's usually calculated as a ratio of outputs to inputs. Common output measures
include: pieces/units/pounds; net sales; sales; inventory changes; value
added; total standard costs; orders; total direct labor dollars earned;
and total standard hours earned. Inputs commonly used include: materials;
energy; inventory; labor; purchased goods/services; and total costs.
One key to success is selecting the most strategic inputs/outputs to track.
A measurable increase in productivity is usually due to one of the following
scenarios:
Greater production output with
equal or less input.
Equal production output with less
input.
Types of productivity gainsharing systems
There are four types of gainsharing programs: the Scanlon Plan, the Rucker
Plan, Improshare and custom plans. The plans are similar except for the
way the bonus is calculated and the level of employee involvement required
to support the plan.
The Scanlon Plan is the oldest and most widely used type of gainsharing
plan. It's based on the historical ratio of labor cost to sales value of
production. And, because it rewards labor savings, it is most appropriate
for companies that have a "high touch labor" content.
The Rucker Plan is based on the premise that the ratio of labor costs to
production value (actual net sales plus or minus inventory changes, minus
outside purchased materials and services) is historically stable in the
manufacturing industry. This principle became the underlying precept of
the Rucker Plan, which tracks the value added to a product as a measure
of productivity. Because this plan utilizes a multicost formula, it's most
appropriate for organizations that want to improve other variables, such
as scrap reduction or energy consumption, in addition to labor.
Improshare measures changes in the relationship between outputs and the
time (input) required to produce them. This plan is minimally affected by
changes in sales volume, technology and capital equipment, product mix,
or price and wage increases. It's the easiest of the gainsharing plans to
understand and install.
Custom plans are used to customize components of a gainsharing plan to support
a unique aspect of an organization's environment. Typically, these plans
modify either the "textbook descriptions" of the bonus formula
or the employee- involvement system. Since the Scanlon and Rucker plans
were developed about 60 years ago, the employee-involvement vehicles associated
with the textbook implementations of these plans are extremely dated. Instead,
many organizations utilize self-directed work teams or cross-functional
teams in lieu of the structured, multitiered employee-involvement approaches
that plans were designed to use.
Our experience in designing and studying many gainsharing plans suggest
six factors must be addressed in creating an effective gainsharing program.
Utilization of an easy-to-understand
formula that tracks those variables which directly affect an organization's
strategic performance. Employees must have an impact on formula's elements.
Regular program evaluation (at
least annually). This can include developing metrics to assess program performance,
creating procedures for revising the bonus formula and using a process for
communicating the program's changes.
Employee involvement during design,
implementation and periodic evaluation. Organizations that solicit employee
input regarding program design tend to have programs that outperform systems
designed without such contributions.
A base reward system that pays
at the current market level. Gainsharing is not a substitute for paying
salaries below the market level. It is designed for and works best when
augmenting a base salary system that reflects market conditions.
A subject-matter expert to guide
the design process. Gainsharing systems are not do-it-yourself programs.
Success requires an expert who has successfully designed these types of
reward systems. Organizations that think the process is as simple as reading
a book usually encounter significant problems.
Stable product/service lines. Organizations
that have relatively stable product/service lines or an ability to develop
a stable formula tend to have the highest success rate. Rapidly changing
product/service lines and unstable baselines will result in wide payout
variations, which tends to undermine employee confidence in the program.
Features of each gainsharing plan include:
Strategic objectives-Most
successful gainsharing programs utilize clearly communicated objectives.
Common objectives include: improving safety, reducing operating costs, enhancing
productivity and quality, and reducing materials and/or energy usage.
Employee involvement-Involving
employees should be an important consideration in gainsharing plans. The
Scanlon and Rucker plans utilize a multitiered employee-involvement program
that consists of a suggestion system and one or more committees to identify
and solve operational problems. Although Improshare doesn't require an involvement
program, plans having an involvement vehicle tend to be more successful
than those that do not.
Employees covered by gainsharing
plans-There is wide variability in the employee groups covered by gainsharing
plans. Some organizations have established plans that cover all employees,
while other plans have focused on production and indirect labor. One of
the most difficult decisions to make is designating which employee groups
should be included in gainsharing. In the decision process, organizations
must consider the tradeoffs between including those groups of employees
who can impact the measurement formula the most, and including all employees
to develop esprit de corps.
Types of measurement formulas
There are two distinct types of gainsharing measurement formulas: physical
and financial. Physical formulas reward employees for improving the relationship
between physical units of output and input (e.g., Improshare). This type
of formula affords many advantages because it's based on easily understood
variables within the employee's direct control. The downside of using this
type of formula is that it can pay bonuses during periods of shrinking or
nonexistent profit.
The Improshare formula can best be understood by examining the Dowe Cheatum
& Howe company-the world's premiere kite manufacturer. The company was
founded by Ben Franklin's brother more than 200 years ago. It employs 100
people-80 employees comprise the direct-labor work force, and 20 comprise
management and technical support. DC&H makes two different kites-a starter
kite that retails for $500 and the U.S.S. Enterprise kite that sells for
$2,500.
DC&H bases their formula on engineering work standards, which are calculated
by dividing the total production work hours by the number of units produced.
For the starter kite, the work standard is 40 direct labor employees x 40
hours/50 kites, or 32 hours per kite.
The total standard value hours in the base period is 4,800. Improshare plans
use a based productivity factor to factor in all production and nonproduction
hours within the base period. Once these hours are added together, they
are divided by the total standard hours (4,800), or 0.833. The bonus calculation
for the month is shown in Figure 1.
Financial formulas are based on
an organization's overall profitability. Employees become eligible to receive
a bonus only when the organization makes a profit. The Rucker and Scanlon
plans use this type of formula. Since financial formulas are affected by
factors beyond an employee's direct control (e.g., inflation, government
regulations, taxation, pricing decisions), they are distorted by the relationship
between effort and reward. This can have a deleterious effect on employees'
motivation (see figures 2 and 3).
In some organizations, the three textbook formulas don't track and reward
the variables required for competitive advantage. In these instances, it
may be appropriate to develop a customized formula that meets an organization's
special needs. When developing a formula, you should consider the following
guidelines:
Create a formula that can be administered
easily.
Develop a formula that adapts to
changing environmental conditions.
Before installing a formula, do
simulations or modeling to identify how the bonus is affected by changes
in volume, selling price, market share, etc.
The baseline
Baselines are used as a starting point for calculating improvements. Organizations
use either permanent, dynamic, rolling or targeted baselines. Permanent
baselines remain constant during the plan's lifetime. This provides employees
with an added advantage because their bonuses reflect improvements made
during previous periods. Dynamic baselines are revised on an intermittent
basis (usually early) according to the performance level achieved in the
previous measurement period. Plans that utilize dynamic baselines have problems
maintaining bonus levels because employees must generate new improvements
constantly.
Rolling baselines calculate the average performance for a specific number
of periods. The length of time typically varies from four to six weeks.
For example, if a company utilizes a four-week rolling average as it begins
the first week of month two, the first week of month one is dropped. Targeted
baselines are used when no appropriate baselines are available. This can
occur when a new product or technology is introduced or when work processes
are significantly changed, making the existing baseline invalid.
The employee bonus
The percentage of savings shared with employees varies depending on the
gainsharing plan utilized. Generally, plants that only measure labor productivity
share the greatest percentage of savings with employees. Traditionally,
the Scanlon plan (labor-only formula) returns 75 percent of the gain to
employees. Improshare usually returns 50 percent of the gain to employees,
while the Rucker Plan varies greatly.
When determining the bonus share, management should consider the capital
intensity of the business, frequency of baseline changes and expected motivational
impact. Capital-intensive industries usually pay out smaller shares to employees.
Plans that frequently change the baseline require larger productivity improvements
for employees to receive a bonus. Typically, these types of plans provide
employees with a larger share.
In most plans, organizations pay out bonuses either weekly, monthly, quarterly
or annually. Most organizations reward employees monthly. When deciding
on payout frequency, consider the availability of data, motivational intent
desired, administrative costs and environmental uncertainty (uncertainty
in the environment can cause considerable payout variations).
Organizations can divide employees' share of gains as follows:
Percent of income-The bonus
pool translates into a percentage of salaries, with each employee receiving
an equal percentage of compensation. This method is used in about 75 percent
of the plans.
Equal shares-Every employee
receives the same dollar amount.
Hours worked-The bonus is
paid in terms of dollars per hour worked and applied to employees accordingly.
Deficit reserve
Deficit-reserve accounts are frequently used in Scanlon and Rucker gainsharing
plans. They protect a company from profitability and inventory fluctuations.
Employees covered by the plan usually fund the account by contributing between
15 percent and 40 percent of their bonus share. This, in effect, defrays
risk. When employees perform in excess of the baseline, both stakeholders
share the gain. Conversely, when employees perform below the baseline, both
the organization and employees share in the loss.
Any money left in the account by year's end is paid out to employees. Organizations
that don't utilize deficit-reserve accounts base their bonus shares on the
average of several performance periods.
Advantages of productivity gainsharing
Organizations that have successfully implemented productivity-gainsharing
plans report a number of benefits. Many of these organizations believe it
has significantly improved organizational communications, especially between
labor and management, and between different interdependent functional units.
Since gainsharing supports a true pay-for-performance culture, employees
tend to see their prosperity linked directly to the organizations. This
tends to increase their commitment to the organization.
Since gainsharing plans measure changes in critical relationships between
inputs and outputs, employees must understand the variables-that they can
control-which affect organizational performance. Many gainsharing plans
create an esprit de corps between interdependent work groups, and between
labor and management, which usually reduces conflict, improves cooperation
between related work units and benefits labor-management relations.
It's not uncommon for these quality-of-worklife benefits to have a positive
effect on absenteeism, turnover and tardiness. Also, most companies report
considerable reductions in their cost drivers (e.g., labor costs, product/service
quality, purchased goods or services). Lastly, gainsharing plans motivate
employees to improve the performance of key success factors within an organization.
Is gainsharing right for you?
Listed below are seven variables that should be considered when assessing
the feasibility of gainsharing.
Fit with strategy and ongoing
operational initiatives-An organization's strategy is the vehicle of
change. Gainsharing is viable only when it supports the business strategy
and is integrated with ongoing operational initiatives.
Alignment with existing culture-Gainsharing
is not an overlay. It must be consistent with the organization's existing
beliefs and values.
Commonality with the prevalent
leadership style of management-Gainsharing requires a participatory
leadership style. Supervisors and managers must not be threatened by increased
employee empowerment. Management must be receptive to suggestions for improvement
and be willing to act on those suggestions.
Capabilities of the information-reporting
system-Gainsharing plans can tax an organization's information system.
Successful plans require accurate, timely and appropriate information to
calculate the bonus and track the plan's performance.
Type of product/service mix-Plan
complexity increases exponentially as the product/service mix becomes greater.
It is, therefore, more difficult to implement gainsharing principles in
an organization with a wide range of product/service lines.
Interdependence of the work
force-Gainsharing works best in organizations that have highly interdependent
processes.
Potential to absorb additional
output-The basic premise behind gainsharing is to improve the ratio
of inputs to outputs. Typically, organizations focus on increasing outputs.
If your organization competes in a market that cannot utilize additional
output of products/services, productivity gains can become personnel displacements.
Implementation issues
Since no two organizations are alike, there is no map that can be used to
design and implement gainsharing in all environments. Listed below are several
broad steps that should be considered when designing and implementing a
gainsharing program.
Conduct a readiness assessment-A
readiness assessment answers two important questions: Is gainsharing a fit
within my organization, and what are the requirements for a successful transition
to gainsharing?
In most instances, the readiness assessment should start with a review of
your operations.
This can include an analysis of the current physical layout and process
flows, existing productivity measures, historical information on resources
used, key cost drivers, input/output variables that measure productivity,
capital investment plans and assessment of the degree employees can impact
profitability.
It is not advisable to install gainshar-ing in an environment where large
capital investments are planned, which can affect the capital-labor ratio
and makes the baseline unreliable.
In addition to the operations review, you should conduct an assessment that
identifies how a gainsharing program will affect your organization's architecture.
We believe architecture is composed of three elements: technology (i.e.,
the equipment, data and applications used); organization (i.e., administrative
control systems, structure, human resource systems, culture and employee
competencies); and process (i.e., work processes and physical layout).
Design gainsharing program-Typically,
this begins with the formation of a design team. Our experience suggests
a cross-functional design team-represented by human resources, training,
finance, operations and the union, if applicable-with significant employee
representation a must for success.
Unless the design team has considerable gainsharing experience, we recommend
you conduct education on gainsharing principles, including: the history
of gainsharing; successful case studies/plant visits; benefits/risks; features
of each gainsharing plan; and a blueprint for design/implementation.
After completing the training, the design team should get down to the nuts
and bolts, and develop the objectives of the gainsharing program, identify
which groups will be covered by the plan and design the plan's key features
(e.g., employee-involvement vehicles, productivity baseline, bonus formula,
bonus payout). Before selecting which plan to implement, we recommend highly
that the design team simulate the Scanlon, Rucker and Improshare plan formulas
based on historical data while using a variety of input/output measures.
One of the most critical components that organizations frequently ignore
is the evaluation strategy of the gainsharing plan. This should include
metrics to measure the plan's effectiveness, timetables for ongoing measurement
and the establishment of a committee or team that has the authority to review
and modify the plan.
After the plan has been designed fully, decide the scope of initial introduction.
Specifically, will the plan be introduced on a pilot basis, or will full
implementation take place? The optimal time to implement gainsharing is
when demand for the organization's products or services exceeds current
production levels. Avoid new product introductions or implementing technology
with long learning curves. Also, avoid introduction during peak times or
labor negotiations.
Maintenance-Gainsharing
plans must be flexible enough to respond to changing market conditions.
The last key task that the design team should tackle is clarifying maintenance
roles and responsibilities.
This is a ticklish issue. For a plan to succeed, employees must understand
and have confidence in the plan. Whenever a plan is modified, employees
tend to be skeptical. They assume that management has a hidden agenda. Plan
modifications usually occur because of changes in the product/service mix
or capital investments (i.e., new technologies).
One way to mitigate the perception of tampering is to include a section
in the gainsharing policy on plan evaluation and modification. The policy
should describe who will review the plan, circumstances under which the
plan can be modified and a process for modifying the plan.
Always include employees in the review process. The utilization of a gainsharing
policy should reduce employee mistrust. And some organizations document
how and why decisions to modify the plan were made, what assumptions were
made and what conditions existed that necessitated the change, reporting
the results to em-ployees.
About the authors
Ronald J. Recardo is managing partner of The Catalyst Consulting
Group, which specializes in operations improvement and change management.
Recardo works with Fortune 500 organizations to assist them in strategic
business transformation. He is a certified Baldrige Examiner, certified
in just-in-time and a certified management consultant. His research and
consulting have enabled him to work with organizations in North America,
Asia and Europe. Recardo has written two books and several articles on change
management, reengineering, quality management and organizational effectiveness.
Diane Pricone is a consultant with The Catalyst Consulting Group. She has
more than 10 years of experience working in the insurance and health-care
industries. She has co-written articles on teams, reward systems and change
management.