This is a subscriber-only article. Join Entrepreneur+ today for access

Learn More

Already have an account?

Sign in
Entrepreneur Plus - Short White
For Subscribers

Pay for Performance Variable pay plans can save you money--and your employees may prefer them.

By Mark Henricks

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

When David Hayes offered employees the chance to take lower salaries in exchange for potentially higher bonuses based on performance, he wasn't sure how they'd take it. But when 75 percent of the eligible workers at Skyline Construction in San Francisco opted for the lowest salary combined with the highest bonus, Hayes had his answer. "It was incredibly well-received," says the 44-year-old founder and CEO. It helped Skyline, too: After two years, sales had climbed from $36 million to $71 million, while costs as a percentage of sales shrank. This year, the company projects sales of more than $100 million.

Pay for performance is a growing phenomenon, according to a Hewitt Associates study that found employee pay raises inching up an average of 3.8 percent in 2008, maintaining the tepid growth of the last few years. Bonuses based on performance, meanwhile, were set to hit a record high this year of 12 percent, as a percentage of payroll, up from 8.8 percent in 2003. Ninety percent of companies offer at least one broad-based variable pay plan, Hewitt found, up from 80 percent in 2006 and 51 percent in 1991.

Cash-strapped companies unable to afford big raises can use pay for performance to single out their most valuable workers so they can be recognized, rewarded, motivated and retained, explains Manny Avramidis, senior vice president of global human resources at the American Management Association. "It is truly a differentiator in tight times to recognize individuals and pay them a little more than the average. The attention goes a long way, and it's really a cheap way to show that you care."

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Side Hustle

This Millennial Dad Just Wanted to Help His Daughter Care for Her Bearded Dragon. Then His Cricket-Breeding Side Hustle Exploded — Earning $27,000 in One Month.

It wasn't Jeff Neal's first attempt at a side gig, and before long, the "prototypical millennial side-hustler" realized his product had major potential.

Business News

Bill Gates Just Said These Are Some Of His Top Five Favorite Books Of All Time

The billionaire typically releases a favorite book of the year list. But he switched it up on Monday and released some of his all-time favorites.

Leadership

4 Out of 5 Entrepreneurs Step Down as CEO — Here Are 3 Things You Need to Do So You're Not One of Them.

Navigating the journey from entrepreneur to CEO is a profound transformation, one that often separates visionary founders from effective business leaders.

Business News

Chipotle Customer Throws Food At Employee in Brawl, Judge Offers Employment Instead of Jail Time

The video of the September 5 altercation quickly went viral on Reddit.