Reward your employees
Reward your employees
Having an effective reward
program in place can help solve many of your HR issues.

Mr. Shoukat Ali
Abbasi is a HR professional with professional work experience of almost 8 Years
in HR & OD in complex and multi culture environment of different
organizations across the country. His area of interest are Organizational
Psychology, Organizational Behavior, Employee Relations, and Organizational
Development. Mr. Shoukat Ali has been a lead Trainer for various sectors
like; corporate sector, social sector, and public sector. He is currently
working as Deputy Registrar-HRM with Sukkur IBA University, Sukkur,
Pakistan.
Every company needs a strategic reward system for
employees that address these four areas: compensation, benefits, recognition
and appreciation. The problem with reward systems in many businesses today is
twofold: They're missing one or more of these elements (usually recognition
and/or appreciation), and the elements that are addressed aren't
properly aligned with the company's other corporate strategies.
A winning system should recognize and reward two
types of employee activity-performance and behavior. Performance is the easiest
to address because of the direct link between the initial goals you set for
your employees and the final outcomes that result. For example, you could
implement an incentive plan or recognize your top salespeople for attaining
periodic goals.
Rewarding specific behaviors that made a difference
to your company is more challenging than rewarding performance, but you can
overcome that obstacle by asking, "What am I compensating my employees
for?" and "What are the behaviors I want to reward?" For
example, are you compensating employees for coming in as early as possible and
staying late, or for coming up with new ideas on how to complete their work
more efficiently and effectively? In other words, are you compensating someone
for innovation or for the amount of time they're sitting at a desk? There's
obviously a big difference between the two.
The first step, of course, is to identify the
behaviors that are important to your company. Those activities might include
enhancing customer relationships, fine-tuning critical processes or helping
employees expand their managerial skills. When business owners think of reward systems, they
typically put compensation at the top of the list. There's nothing wrong with
that, since few people are willing or able to work for free. But the right
strategy should also include an incentive compensation plan that's directly
linked to the goals of your company for that period. You might want to include
some type of longer-term rewards for key individuals in your organization.
Historically, this has often included some form of equity ownership.
Benefits are another type of reward in a strategic
reward system, and your employees are definitely going to notice the types of
benefits you provide. Companies that don't match or exceed the benefit levels
of their competitors will have difficulty attracting and retaining top workers.
This is one reason an increasing number of businesses are turning to
professional employer organizations like Admini staff to gain access to a
broader array of company benefits.
However, you can't diminish the importance of
recognition and appreciation as integral components of a winning strategic
reward system. These two elements rarely receive the attention they deserve
from business owners, which is amazing because they're the low-cost/high-return
ingredients. Employees like to know whether they're doing good, bad or average,
so it's important that you tell them.
Recognition means acknowledging someone before
their peers for specific accomplishments achieved, actions taken or attitudes
exemplified through their behavior. Appreciation, meanwhile, centers on
expressing gratitude to someone for his or her actions. Showing appreciation to
your employees by acknowledging excellent performance and the kind of behavior
you want to encourage is best done through simple expressions and statements.
For example, you might send a personal note or stop by the employee's desk to
convey your appreciation. Another approach is to combine recognition and
appreciation in the form of a public statement of thanks in front of the
employee's co-workers or team, citing specific examples of what they've done
that has positively impacted the organization.
Now that you know what it should include, it's time
to review your strategic reward system. Does it address compensation, benefits,
recognition and appreciation? Is it aligned with your remaining business
strategies? Is it driving the right behaviors for your company, as well as your
performance goals? If it needs fixing, don't wait. It can mean the difference
between your business' success and failure.
Note: Please write back with comments, feedback, and suggestions (if any).
Note: Please write back with comments, feedback, and suggestions (if any).

Good write-up! These kinds of rewards enhance the employee motivation for better performance.
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