Financial incentives for middle management in British Columbia.

The objective of this study was to determine the use of financial incentives in the manufacturing industry of British Columbia as applied specifically to middle-management personnel. Many unproven statements have been made in the past regarding the use of financial incentives. It has been assumed t...

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Main Author: Robinson, Bruce Arnold
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/38074
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-380742018-01-05T17:49:04Z Financial incentives for middle management in British Columbia. Robinson, Bruce Arnold Incentives in industry The objective of this study was to determine the use of financial incentives in the manufacturing industry of British Columbia as applied specifically to middle-management personnel. Many unproven statements have been made in the past regarding the use of financial incentives. It has been assumed that incentives were often offered for the purpose of pleasing the employee rather than encouraging improved performance. It has also been assumed that the application of financial incentives in British Columbia industry was less extensive than in United States industry. In addition few of the aspects of other successful incentive plans appeared to be evident among the plans in operation in British Columbia. This study was undertaken to dispel misconceptions and to confirm conditions thought to exist in British Columbia industry respecting the use of financial incentives for middle-management employees. A systematic random sample was drawn from a large group of manufacturers composed of small and large companies engaged in a variety of manufacturing operations located throughout British Columbia. The companies sampled were requested to provide information on their actual use of, experience with, and opinions about various types of financial incentives. The results of the survey indicated that in British Columbia manufacturing industry, as much interest was shown in providing financial incentives for middle management as in offering incentives to top management and to first-line supervisors. In some companies the use of financial incentives for middle management seemed to be encouraged if the company had had previous experience with incentive pay methods among office and production worker groups. Medium-sized companies exhibited more interest in providing financial incentives for middle management than did small- or large-sized concerns. In medium-sized companies it appeared that financial incentives were being used for middle management in an attempt to offset small proportionate increases in basic salaries for this management group compared to recent pay increases for other groups of employees. No company indicated an interest in making large-sized incentive awards which might provide effective motivation of employees. Results from the survey suggested that many firms relied unduly on the granting of salary increases to have a continuing incentive value in encouraging improved employee performance over an extended period. The use of financial incentives for management groups in British Columbia industry seemed to be nominal; they were offered more for the purpose of pleasing the employee with a distribution of a portion of the firm’s profits or with a Christmas bonus than for encouraging specific effort and improved performance valuable to the company. The application of financial incentives in British Columbia industry for all employee groups in management appeared to be less intensive and specifically less satisfactory than some long-established incentive plans in American industry. Few, if any, of the tenets of effective financial incentives exhibited by many of these successful plans were evident among the plans operated in British Columbia. Business, Sauder School of Graduate 2011-10-19T19:52:06Z 2011-10-19T19:52:06Z 1963 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/38074 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Incentives in industry
spellingShingle Incentives in industry
Robinson, Bruce Arnold
Financial incentives for middle management in British Columbia.
description The objective of this study was to determine the use of financial incentives in the manufacturing industry of British Columbia as applied specifically to middle-management personnel. Many unproven statements have been made in the past regarding the use of financial incentives. It has been assumed that incentives were often offered for the purpose of pleasing the employee rather than encouraging improved performance. It has also been assumed that the application of financial incentives in British Columbia industry was less extensive than in United States industry. In addition few of the aspects of other successful incentive plans appeared to be evident among the plans in operation in British Columbia. This study was undertaken to dispel misconceptions and to confirm conditions thought to exist in British Columbia industry respecting the use of financial incentives for middle-management employees. A systematic random sample was drawn from a large group of manufacturers composed of small and large companies engaged in a variety of manufacturing operations located throughout British Columbia. The companies sampled were requested to provide information on their actual use of, experience with, and opinions about various types of financial incentives. The results of the survey indicated that in British Columbia manufacturing industry, as much interest was shown in providing financial incentives for middle management as in offering incentives to top management and to first-line supervisors. In some companies the use of financial incentives for middle management seemed to be encouraged if the company had had previous experience with incentive pay methods among office and production worker groups. Medium-sized companies exhibited more interest in providing financial incentives for middle management than did small- or large-sized concerns. In medium-sized companies it appeared that financial incentives were being used for middle management in an attempt to offset small proportionate increases in basic salaries for this management group compared to recent pay increases for other groups of employees. No company indicated an interest in making large-sized incentive awards which might provide effective motivation of employees. Results from the survey suggested that many firms relied unduly on the granting of salary increases to have a continuing incentive value in encouraging improved employee performance over an extended period. The use of financial incentives for management groups in British Columbia industry seemed to be nominal; they were offered more for the purpose of pleasing the employee with a distribution of a portion of the firm’s profits or with a Christmas bonus than for encouraging specific effort and improved performance valuable to the company. The application of financial incentives in British Columbia industry for all employee groups in management appeared to be less intensive and specifically less satisfactory than some long-established incentive plans in American industry. Few, if any, of the tenets of effective financial incentives exhibited by many of these successful plans were evident among the plans operated in British Columbia. === Business, Sauder School of === Graduate
author Robinson, Bruce Arnold
author_facet Robinson, Bruce Arnold
author_sort Robinson, Bruce Arnold
title Financial incentives for middle management in British Columbia.
title_short Financial incentives for middle management in British Columbia.
title_full Financial incentives for middle management in British Columbia.
title_fullStr Financial incentives for middle management in British Columbia.
title_full_unstemmed Financial incentives for middle management in British Columbia.
title_sort financial incentives for middle management in british columbia.
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/38074
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