Prompted
by brutal competition and demanding customers, companies are
looking for new ways to engage employees. In doing so, they
often vacillate between two approaches. The change debate
often sounds like a not-so-funny take-off on the classic
Abbott and Costello skit, "Who's on first?" Do you first
change the culture, the "What it's like to work around here"
mindset? Or, do you first change the reward system and hope
everything else will work itself out?
The reason for the debate is the longstanding belief that a
company can change either its culture or its rewards-but not
both. Naysayers believe that an organization can't handle too
much change at once. Unfortunately, they're missing the point.
Just ask the employees in plants across the country who face
plant closures unless they can find ways to increase quality
and productivity while reducing costs. Or ask customers whose
new and more complex demands aren't being met. The message-and
it ought to be coming through loud and clear by now-is that
companies need to make big changes.
Culture and rewards go hand in hand.
A growing
number of organizations have stopped arguing and taken a
different approach. They're changing both their companies'
cultures and rewards at the same time. Culture, in this
instance, refers to the way in which people work and how
they're organized, how and by whom decisions are made, and how
constructive levels of trust and respect are developed.
Rewards go beyond the financial returns to include all of the
things about work and working that people find rewarding, such
as recognition, career development, feedback and meaningful
work.
By changing their cultures without also developing a reward
system, companies run the risk of sending employees terribly
mixed signals and are much less likely to sustain any gains.
Along the same lines, by simply changing the reward
system-often in the hope that the reward system can fix the
company's cultural problems-companies often end up throwing
money at their problems. Consider the experiences of two
companies that changed one key aspect of the organization
without changing the other.
A 'round-the-clock manufacturing plant with several
thousand employees changed its culture, but not its rewards. A
few years ago, the company moved toward greater accountability
to its business units within the plant and moved to a
team-based work model. Now, there are several hundred teams in
place. The company has enjoyed success with this new work
design, and employees now have the tools and knowledge to make
significant business decisions about such things as
scheduling, quality and training.
Since the plant increased its focus on business units and
teams, costs have been reduced, quality has improved and
accidents have decreased. However, because the company hasn't
fully aligned rewards with its new work system, there's a
sense among employees that they've hit the wall. They still
receive most of their pay for hours worked with an annual
profit-sharing award based on the profitability of the total
corporation-performance that's far beyond the walls of this
particular plant. But operators and managers are frustrated
because there's no link between the way people are being asked
to work-that is, in business units and teams-and their
pay.
"By changing their cultures without also
developing a reward system, companies run the risk of sending
their employees terribly mixed signals.
In another manufacturing plant, rewards have changed, but
there haven't been changes in the culture. This facility has a
gainsharing plan in which awards are driven almost totally by
production-that is, tons of product out the door. Recent
awards have added up to 40% to employees' base pay. Yet,
there's been no attention given to the culture side of the
equation. Employees are encouraged to work harder, but their
work processes aren't becoming more flexible nor are they
becoming involved in making important decisions about their
work. Moreover, they don't have contact with the customers.
They are driven toward production, period. And that's exactly
what the facility has gotten. Yet quality is very uneven.
Long-time customers are threatening to go to other suppliers
whose service and quality is better and more consistent. And
because employees are paid by how much tonnage is processed,
production grinds on. Employees also resist any effort to
change a pay plan that's been so lucrative for them. And no
one works on the underlying problems. Employees are involved
in achieving production, but there's more to the equation. Pay
alone won't get them out of their mental rut or energize the
work force to make significant changes in their work
processes.
Companies increase customer focus and work in new
ways.
Organizations of all descriptions are organizing
themselves in ways that are simple and efficient for their
customers. Some even invite customers in to help with product
design and key features. For example, at Seattle-based Boeing
Co., customer input resulted in important improvements in the
design of new jumbo passenger planes, including wider aisles
and larger storage bins.
Some companies have gone a step further by putting the
people who do the work in direct contact with the people who
buy the work. At a manufacturing plant operated by
Bridgewater, New Jersey-based Hoechst Celanese, line employees
visit customer locations to see how customers use the
company's products. These visits help give employees a better
understanding of customer requirements and problems. At a
maker of top-quality home cabinets, line workers are actually
considered the company's best salespeople. Customers who visit
a Jasper, Indiana-based Aristokraft facility meet with
production employees to hear first-hand about the company's
commitment to quality, craftsmanship and complete customer
satisfaction. It's important to recognize that the customer is
directly connected to employees-the people who make and supply
the product or service.
Smart companies also believe that employees with a broader
view can make better decisions. They know how to please the
customer and work more efficiently. Today's employees often
welcome opportunities to help their colleagues, their teams
and overall operations. That's why it makes so much sense for
employees to learn multiple parts of the operation. For
example, in one manufacturing plant, when the production
process develops a bottleneck in one area, multiskilled
employees from other areas help eliminate the backlog. Not
only are these employees more valuable to the company, but
they report higher job satisfaction and turn out better
products.
Yet, while the key to flexible organizations is often
increased teamwork, the team concept is neither a silver
bullet nor an easy fix. It isn't enough to gather a
group of people, sprinkle some magic dust on them, and say,
"Poof, you're a team." Developing effective teams takes much
more than magic dust. Some companies approach team- and
work-system design by broadly including management, company
and union staff, employees and customers. If stakeholders
recognize that change is in everyone's best interest, the
quality and acceptance of the plan is likely to be higher. In
one manufacturing company, stakeholder meetings defined the
organization's future vision and how that vision could be
accomplished through significant changes in the way work would
be done and the role employees would play as team members. If,
for example, a team structure is put in place, a company
should be prepared to back up the change effort with ongoing
training and communication, as well as team-based rewards.
These are important steps in maintaining a change effort's
credibility among employees. One manufacturing firm that
established teams concluded that it needed to devote extra
resources, such as more and better training programs, to make
their employees more capable team members. The company then
followed up by developing a group incentive plan to reward
those new behaviors and the results they produced.
Although companies still need solo contributors in some
situations, very little of any organization's work is done
alone these days. Now, more than ever, employees must be able
to work together to achieve the complex goals most
organizations require.rganizational charts today look less
vertical and more like circles, spheres or other exotic
shapes. Meanwhile, downsizing, information technology and
employee empowerment have removed whole layers from the
traditional structure. Customers don't want to wait
unnecessarily for service while a sales representative seeks
rubberstamp approval from a supervisor. They want an immediate
decision.
Hence, the traditional job is giving way to more fluid
roles in which everyone does whatever it takes to satisfy the
customer. Employees are accountable to one another and, with
fewer supervisors and managers, they often manage
themselves.
Little wonder, then, that employee involvement has become a
mainstream strategy in many organizations. The total quality
movement (TQM) sparked the awareness by teaching that quality
is everyone's responsibility. In his new book, Creating
Strategic Change, organizational change expert Bill
Pasmore, professor of organizational behavior at
Cleveland-based Case Western Reserve University, argues that
for employee involvement to make a real difference in an
organization's performance, the issues on the table must be
meaty and substantive. People must understand the business and
what they can do to make a difference; they need to have both
the technical and social skills necessary to participate in
real business decisions.
Workplace changes have implications for
rewards.
Focusing on the customer will require new ways
of measuring an organization's performance. Financial
performance is still important, but so are more operational
measures, which are often the ones that directly link employee
efforts to customer needs. So with new measures of overall
organizational performance in place, the next step is to
translate those measures into new reward programs for the
employees.
The Consortium for Alternative Rewards Strategies Research
(CARS), sponsored in part by Sibson & Company and the
American Compensation Association, studied 663 incentive plans
for broad-based employee groups and found that, although
profit is still the most common type of measurement, quality
and productivity are nearly as common. The research also
indicated that by using some of these operational measures and
supporting them with strong involvement and communication
efforts, companies reported better results. These plans simply
work better than those with a one-track financial approach and
limited employee involvement.
If a company wants to foster a greater customer focus, the
key is to ensure the success of a multitude of "moments of
truth," those critical opportunities when an employee's
actions can make a breakthrough. Those moments of truth
involve everyone, not just executives or managers. That's why
more companies are sharing both risks and rewards with the
people who do the work. Employees have always shared in the
risk, of course. They know all too well that business failures
mean jobs lost. The difference today is that, in many cases,
employees across the organization have an opportunity to share
in the upside as well. The old standbys of hourly pay,
seniority and individual merit pay have been supplemented with
other plans that encourage a collective attention to the needs
of the customer. At Zeeland, Michigan-based Herman Miller, for
example, a product development team designed and installed a
plan that rewards team members for achieving critical goals,
including those defined by the customer. Once the product is
launched, team members have a financial stake in its
first-year commercial success. They are encouraged to stay
close to the customers even after the product is
introduced.
Reward systems often send a clear message to employees
about "what's important around here"-that is, what the
organization values. So a move toward new ways of getting work
done-new skills, greater flexibility, teams-opens the door for
new ways to deliver rewards. Skill- or competency-based pay
design, for example, requires that the organization discover
which competencies are necessary for its success, then brings
that analysis down to the team or individual level and rewards
for the acquisition of those skills. In this case, the
organization shifts from paying for the job to paying the
person for what they bring to the job. When it's combined with
a way to recognize results, in either base pay or a variable
element, skill- or competency-based pay can provide an
important future-oriented balance.
Other companies encourage employees to broaden their
experience by offering career-development pay-that is, base
pay increases for moves, usually lateral, that meet the
company's needs and help employees broaden their skills, but
aren't promotions. This might be a change in function, such as
a move from sales to marketing; a change in role, such as from
manager to senior individual contributor; or a change of
business unit. The key is to identify the kind of breadth the
organization needs, and then be willing to reward employees
for helping to achieve that breadth.
When you reward for results, there's more at work than just
pay. Work content is important. For example, employees at
Hoechst Celanese say they like the responsibilities of their
new team-based work environment. With less supervision, these
employees have more elbow room and more space to make their
own decisions. The move to teams itself is energizing and
invigorating for a while. But sooner or later, employees will
begin to ask, "What's in it for me?" That's why a new way of
getting work done must be supported by a new approach to
rewards.
Reward accountability.
From the employee's
perspective, the biggest change occurring in many
organizations is an increased level of employee empowerment.
Employees now make decisions that were once made in a far-off
executive suite or in the plant manager's office. A classic
example is the Saturn plant in Spring Hill, Tennessee, where
any line employee can halt production to correct a
problem.
In this kind of environment, the importance of hierarchy
and even the hierarchy itself fades as organizations move to
flatter structures.
Such changes put jobs into broad bands to further encourage
exchange and mutual accountability. Organizations need to
devise new approaches to career management so that the focus
shifts from the position one holds to the results
produced.
"Organizations can take comfort in
understanding that it can take several years to put a
completely redesigned culture and reward system in
place."
One advantage of empowering employees is their inclusion in
designing and implementing reward systems. Once upon a time,
these systems were designed by experts. Later, they were
designed by a team of managers.
Then came representative teams of employees. Now, a few
companies have begun taking a broad approach by involving
large segments of the work force at critical points. This
broader involvement has resulted in higher quality plans, and
greater employee buy-in and acceptance of these plans than
ever before. After all, employees often resent change that's
thrust upon them. They're more likely to embrace change when
they're part of the process.
Ensuring the alignment between culture and rewards is,
undeniably, a big job. To many companies, the whole process is
simply overwhelming. But organizations can take comfort in
understanding it can take several years to put a completely
redesigned culture and reward system in place. They will
achieve their best results by creating new ways to work,
hiring more capable, flexible employees and flattening the
decision-making processes, all of which must be supported by
appropriate rewards.
That's what's happening at Hoechst Celanese, Herman Miller
and a host of other companies. They're addressing the whole
system. They've put aside the "Who's on first" question with
the realization that, "We have to do it all."
Personnel Journal
, April 1995, Vol. 74, No. 4, pp.
30-37.