Page 78/79/80 of the Financial Report makes interesting reading about how they remunerate staff and keep them motivated
Of interest 128 employees get over $100k
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Page 78/79/80 of the Financial Report makes interesting reading about how they remunerate staff and keep them motivated
Of interest 128 employees get over $100k
I have no issue with bonus pools increasing in good times, but a flat bonus to all employees is not best practice. it doesn't incentivise good work, just freeloading retention. The good staff are worth more than $1,500 so could still decide to leave, yet the bad staff will stay because they hope to get a 'free' bonus next year too.
IMO highly skilled and committed staff can make a material difference to the profitability of a business regardless of their status as a monopoly. Hopefully those that are ideologically opposed to the incentive paid to employees sell, thereby providing a bargain buying opportunity for committed investors.
Perhaps if AIA's HR policies and procedures are finely tuned, then non-performing staff should either be removed or never hired in the first place.
As a coincidence, I've been reading through some HR studies that dismiss the practice of incentivising employees via bonuses or commissions. Perhaps the tide is turning.
Pizza is cheaper: http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/8369...nd-compliments
Craigs have a sell on the stock
I have no problem with incentive plans so I wont be selling. Such plans can be good - give your staff something additional to aim for and reward them on achievement. Its the willy nilly handing out of the owners cash to individuals with no evidence of their actual individual contribution (over and above their job) to the enhanced profit that i ma opposed to. Talk about privatizing the loss and socializing the profit! (thats something you wont see in the text books)