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Do bonuses increase performance?

Economists have traditionally advocated the view that bonuses raise employee performance. The key idea is simple: if people are paid according to their performance, they should be motivated to work harder.

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Economists have for a long time argued that performance-based bonuses raise performance. Indeed, many firms use bonuses tied to individual performance to motivate their employees. However, there has been heated debate among human resources professionals recently, and some firms have moved away from individual performance bonuses toward fixed wages only or collective performance incentive schemes such as profit-sharing or team incentives. The appropriate approach depends on each company's unique situation, and managers need to realize that individual bonus plans are not a panacea to motivate employees. Recent empirical evidence on the effects of bonus schemes shows that details of their implementation matter. Bonus schemes may work well for easily measurable tasks when employees have low intrinsic task motivation and performance is hard to monitor. In other contexts, however, there are several factors that limit their benefits. Bonus schemes must thus be carefully evaluated in the specific context of the organization in which they are to be implemented. Firms and academics should pursue evidence-based bonus design by implementing scheme changes for subgroups of employees that allow for robust evaluation of the observed consequences. For a surprisingly long time, there was very little clean causal evidence from actual firms on the performance effects of bonuses. A key reason is that if a firm introduces a bonus scheme for all its employees at the same time (as is common in practice) it is virtually impossible to estimate its effects on performance. This is because many other impactful things tend to happen at the same time (business cycle effects, market developments, and so on); any changes in performance can then not be cleanly attributed to changes in the bonus scheme. In a field experiment (randomized controlled trial, RTC), however, a new scheme is only implemented for a subgroup of employees, which allows researchers to cleanly estimate its causal effects. Evidence from a growing number of field experiments and quasi-experiments on the performance effects of bonus schemes in firms is now available and may help shed further light on the subject. Economists have traditionally advocated the view that bonuses raise employee performance. The key idea is simple: if people are paid according to their performance, they should be motivated to work harder. Practitioners and academics have sometimes challenged this view. And while for many years the use of performance pay in firms had increased, recent descriptive evidence indicates a potential reversal of this trend (see the Illustration ). A benchmark case One of the earliest large-scale quasi-experimental studies investigates the effects of introducing performance pay for technicians repairing windshields at Safelite, the largest US provider of vehicle glass repair services [1]. Safelite technicians had previously worked under fixed hourly wages. Starting in 1993, the firm introduced a performance pay plan which paid technicians according to the number of windshields installed per unit of time. The setting does not correspond to an actual RCT as the new scheme was not randomly assigned to subsidiaries. But it was not implemented at the same time for all and within the rollout period there were subsidiaries working under the old and the new compensation schemes. This created an approximate experimental setting. The performance pay plan had a very large effect on performance: the number of windshields installed per technician increased by more than 40%. Roughly half of this effect was due to higher performance among legacy Safelite technicians (the “incentive effect”). The other half was a result of Safelite attracting more productive (able) workers under the new performance pay plan (the “selection effect”). This study constitutes an important benchmark for the literature on performance pay, but it is crucial to think about its specific context. Safelite technicians primarily drove to the customer's location to conduct windshield repairs. Hence, monitoring employees’ behavior was hard and may have led to a substantial “moral hazard” problem. Moreover, repairing windshields was technicians’ main and essentially only important task. The key metric used to measure performance (the number of windshields repaired) thus measured all key aspects of their importance for the firm. All in all, the Safelite setting was very conducive for performance pay to succeed. Context factors and design challenges As shown above, bonus plans may work well in settings where monitoring workers is difficult and where key performance indicators track workers’ essential tasks. However, many jobs systematically differ from such settings, which can substantially affect whether and to what extent bonus schemes increase performance. Examples of such alternate settings include: In most jobs people work on several tasks and objective performance measures are often not available for all tasks. This may create multitasking problems. Employees can be motivated by social preferences or have personality traits that generate intrinsic preferences to do their work well, which may reduce the need to align interests through bonuses. Objective performance measures are often only available at the level of a group of employees, potentially giving rise to free-riding behavior.

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Other management practices such as performance feedback or target setting have also been shown to raise performance; bonus schemes may interact in complex ways with these practices. Firms often rely on subjective assessments (for instance by supervisors) to award bonuses which are prone to biases in subjective performance evaluations. Each of these design challenges is discussed below with reference to relevant empirical evidence from field studies and (quasi-)field experiments in firms. Multitasking A classical result in the theory of incentives shows that if only subsets of tasks can be measured objectively, and performance pay is based on these tasks, people focus too much on the measurable tasks. A typical example is the question of whether firms should use bonuses to reward produced “quantity” when the “quality” of the output cannot be easily measured. A recent field experiment in several Chinese electronics manufacturing firms finds some evidence in line with this conjecture [2]. In the experiment, workers performing supporting work (such as packaging) in five firms received a sizeable bonus for quantity increases for a few days. Work quality (defect rates) was secretly inspected and showed that the intervention increased quantity but also led to a higher defect rate. Another example where multitasking distortions can play a substantial role is the question of whether bonus payments that reward short-term performance inhibit exploration and creativity. A consequence of such multitasking distortions is that if specific key tasks cannot be easily measured and these tasks are very important to an organization's overall objectives, it may be better not to use performance pay schemes. Social preferences Incentive theory in economics has traditionally relied on the homo economicus model: the idea that people are guided by their self-interest and hardly care for the well-being of others. However, a large body of evidence in behavioral and experimental economics (and of course also in psychology) has shown that many people care for the well-being of others and thus have—in the language of economics—social preferences. In the context of bonus plans this has, for instance, been shown in a study with agricultural workers that people tend to take the effect of their actions on their coworkers into account [3]. The study explores a change from a bonus scheme where workers were paid based on their relative performance (they earned more when performing better than their colleagues) to a bonus scheme in which rewards only depended on a worker's own performance. Whereas, in the former, higher efforts by one worker had a negative effect on a coworker's well-being, this was not the case in the latter scheme. The authors find that performance increased substantially after the relative performance component was abandoned. This effect was stronger when coworkers were close friends, which supports the view that social preferences matter. However, the authors provide further evidence that workers “internalize” (i.e. take into account) the effect of their behavior on coworkers only when efforts are mutually observed—which indicates that it is not pure altruism that triggers these effects, but that this social behavior also has a strategic component. Personality traits The idea that employees’ preferences and traits affect how they respond to monetary incentives has another important implication: individuals who intrinsically feel the obligation to work or those who enjoy the task may respond to a lesser extent to performance pay, as they “try to give their best” even at flat wages. A recent field experiment among maternity care providers in India supports this view [4]: the authors assessed the personality of the providers measuring the so-called “big five personality traits” (the most widely accepted psychological characterization of personality: openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism). One key personality trait is conscientiousness: people who score high with respect to conscientiousness are those that feel intrinsically driven to do their work or duty well and thoroughly. The study finds that the introduction of performance pay raised workers’ performance, but that the positive effect was driven by the less conscientious workers. The highly conscientious workers hardly reacted to the incentive. Team incentives and free-riding Objective performance measures are often available only for larger groups of employees. For instance, financial performance is typically assessed only at the level of the whole firm or specific profit center within that firm. Beyond jobs in sales, the profit contribution of individual employees can only rarely be assessed objectively. Performance pay in such settings may thus be based on group outcomes. This can give rise to the so-called free-rider problem, according to which individual employees do not work as hard because they personally receive only a small part of the performance gains from increased effort. Economists have traditionally been very skeptical toward the usefulness of team incentive schemes. However, a growing number of empirical studies support the view that free-riding may be less severe than previously thought. One key reason is again the prevalence of social preferences, which lead employees to internalize the (positive) effect of their own efforts on colleagues’ well-being when team bonuses are in place. Another core mechanism is peer pressure: under team compensation, team members have an incentive to motivate or punish free-riding colleagues. One study explores the performance effects of a very simple bonus scheme Continental Airlines introduced to improve on-time departure rates [5]. The scheme paid a specific amount to all Continental employees if the airline ranked high in on-time performance among US airlines. Theoretically, this scheme should have led to a huge free-rider problem, as the impact of an individual employee at a specific airport on the entire airline's on-time ranking would be very small. However, the authors provide compelling evidence that the scheme worked by comparing performance changes around the introduction of the scheme between airports in which Continental's operations were performed by its own employees to those where operations were outsourced to separate companies, showing that the performance gains were driven by the former. Researchers studying the introduction of teamwork in a US garment factory (which coincided with a shift from individual to team incentives) find that teamwork was associated with an increase in productivity [6]. Workers in this setting could initially volunteer to join teams. Interestingly, in particular, high-ability workers decided to join teams early on—even though this often led to wage losses (as these workers had high earnings under individual performance pay). This evidence again supports the view that free-riding may be less prevalent—as low-ability workers had the strongest material incentive to join a team and free-ride. Moreover, it is in line with the view that teamwork can bring about non-monetary benefits, for instance when social preferences outweigh free-rider effects. A recent field experiment in a large German bakery chain randomly assigned a team bonus to stores and found that the team bonus increased profits significantly [7]. The study also analyzed detailed personnel data to investigate the underlying cause; the evidence shows that the team bonus increased customer serving speed, thereby raising the number of customers served. Feedback or rewards? When a firm introduces bonus payments, it not only affects employees through monetary incentives, but it also draws attention to the key metrics used to assess performance. By the same token, the introduction of a bonus may also yield performance feedback that in itself can affect motivation. Evidence in line with this idea comes from a study conducted in a Dutch retailer (selling clothing, shoes, and sports apparel) [8]. The study introduced a team bonus via a six week tournament between different stores. Stores were allocated into groups of five and competed for a fixed bonus paid to all employees in the best performing store in each group. The study finds that this tournament increased sales performance. But strikingly, the effect was strongest and statistically most robust in a “feedback” treatment where the reward (the tournament prize) was not associated with a monetary bonus but merely symbolic. A recent field experiment in a supermarket chain shows that this interaction between bonuses and feedback may be even more intricate [9]. The study randomly allocated 224 supermarkets to three different treatment groups and a control group. One treatment group received a monetary bonus to increase store profits. In another group, no bonus was paid but store managers had biweekly performance review conversations about what they did to increase profits. Finally, the third treatment group received both a bonus and had the review conversations. The review conversations raised profits by about 8%. The bonus, however, had no discernible effect on performance. Moreover, the bonus even undermined the value of the review conversations, as performance in the combined treatment also did not exceed performance in the control group. Evidence from analysis of protocols of the review meetings shows that the bonus payment changed the nature of the review conversations. For instance, store managers spoke significantly less often of encountered problems when the bonus was in place and perceived feedback quality was higher when no bonus was in place. The authors argue that performance review conversations trigger reputational incentives as store managers want to signal their motivation to supervisors and these reputational incentives are undermined when the bonus is in place. An implication for the design of bonus plans is thus to carefully evaluate their interplay with other management practices.

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