Saturday, October 12, 2019
Motivation: Reward System and the Role of Compensation :: Papers Management Business Essays
Motivation: Reward System and the Role of Compensation           The design and management of reward systems present the general     manager with one of the most difficult HRM tasks. This HRM policy area     contains the greatest contradictions between the promise of theory and     the reality of implementation. Consequently, organizations sometimes     go through cycles of innovation and hope as reward systems are     developed, followed by disillusionment as these reward systems fail to     deliver.       Rewards and employee satisfaction       Gaining an employee's satisfaction with the rewards given is not a     simple matter. Rather, it is a function of several factors that     organizations must learn to manage:       1. The individual's satisfaction with rewards is, in part, related to     what is expected and how much is received. Feelings of satisfaction or     dissatisfaction arise when individuals compare their input - job     skills, education, effort, and performance - to output - the mix of     extrinsic and intrinsic rewards they receive.       2. Employee satisfaction is also affected by comparisons with other     people in similar jobs and organizations. In effect, employees compare     their own input/output ratio with that of others. People vary     considerably in how they weigh various inputs in that comparison. They     tend to weigh their strong points more heavily, such as certain skills     or a recent incident of effective performance. Individuals also tend     to overrate their own performance compared with the rating they     receive from their supervisors. The problem of unrealistic self-rating     exists partly because supervisors in most organizations do not     communicate a candid evaluation of their subordinates' performance to     them. Such candid communication to subordinates, unless done     skillfully, seriously risks damaging their self-esteem. The bigger     dilemma, however, is that failure by managers to communicate a candid     appraisal of performance makes it difficult for employees to develop a     realistic view of their own performance, thus increasing the     possibility of dissatisfaction with the pay they are receiving.       3. Employees often misperceive the rewards of others; their     misperception can cause the employees to become dissatisfied. Evidence     shows that individuals tend to overestimate the pay of fellow workers    					    
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