With over 25 years of frontline experience Tom Shay is America's leading small business
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Incentives, rewards and bonuses
Making incentives, rewards and bonuses work in your business
Early in the fall we went to the university in Fayetteville to watch a football game. We had been invited to participate in a tail gate party that was to last all day. As we enjoyed the cookout, our host told of his having parked at this location for many years. He went on to explain how he had been moved from one area of the acreage to another.
What caught our attention was his comment about the years when a bank had reserved a sizable part of the area for their employees. Knowing what our friend had paid for his parking area, the expenditure by the bank was quite sizable.
We were very surprised as our friend explained that for all the time the bank rented their area, not a single employee had ever used it.
Incentives, rewards and bonuses work only if they mean something to the employee. But, aren’t all three just different ways of saying the same thing? No!
There is a difference and with a bit of clarification, you can make all three work for you and your store.
We first look at the “bonus”. A bonus is a gift to your employee. There should be no schedule or expectation to an employee receiving a bonus. Perhaps everyone pitched in to help decorate the store for Christmas. Treating everyone to dinner by having it delivered could be a bonus. The bonus does not have to go to everyone. The bonus does not have to tie to any particular deed or action. It is simply a way of appreciating an employee.
A “reward” is for an employee doing something that is unique; perhaps it is for solving a problem. In either case, it is something that creates a substantial benefit for the store. In the case of our store, we had an employee who found a way to make a substantial savings with the cooling and heating system.
The savings came when this person found a way to install a timer on the system. This eliminated the occasion when someone left the system on all night. We also found an additional savings by being able to turn off the system 45 minutes before we closed and maintaining a comfortable temperature through closing. Together these two changes, all because of one person finding a way to install a timer, produced a substantial savings each year.
In our business this person received a sizable check for their effort. And the check was announced and handed to this person in front of all their co-workers as a way of showing to everyone that we appreciate the extra efforts.
Perhaps, the “incentive” is what most of us think of. With incentives there are recognizable goals and measurements. Employee are told what it takes to earn the reward and how to do so. An incentive is like a game. You will find employees that want to participate because they want to win the incentive. Unfortunately, many of us find employees who would rather ask you to give them a pay increase. With incentives you find who understands what you want to achieve in your store and who is willing to work to achieve it. Incentives can be given to individuals as well as to a group of employees or all employees.
We offer a simple formula for establishing how an incentive works in your business. Is your goal a sales increase? Decreasing shoplifting? Diminishing expenses? With each of these you should be able to determine a dollar amount for the value to your business. The second step is determining which employees are achieving that goal for your business. Again, it could be an individual; a group of employees, or all employees.
Offered only as an example, perhaps you will take half of the value of the goal and divide it between those employees who make it happen. The other half of that money goes to the store. A sizable portion should go to your store because there is no reason to achieve a goal without your business having some benefit.
One last point. When I have explained the bonus, reward and incentive to a store owner, I have heard a response of, “I refuse to give something to an employee for doing something I am already paying them to do”.
My answer is, “I agree with you. And when you find a way to get all you want out of your employees without any of these three, call me. I would like to come watch as I would want to write a book about you and your store”.
I am still waiting for the first call. You can make a reward, bonus and incentive work in your store.
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This article is copyrighted by Tom Shay and Profits Plus Solutions, who can be reached at: PO Box 128, Dardanelle, AR. 72834. Phone 727-823-7205. It may be printed for an individual to read, but not duplicated or distributed without expressed written consent of the copyright owner.
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Are you selling something or persuading the customer? With your employees are you repeatedly telling that employee or are you persuading them to excel?
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All this plus the Internet Tool for Your Business and a staff incentive idea for your business.
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With over 25 years of frontline experience Tom Shay is America's leading Small Business
Management
Expert. He's a "Must Have" for your next event.
Every time I see the logo for Target stores, I think about small businesses and the need to know which people to target as their customers. Of course, of most importance is the person who has spent any money with your business.
I ask businesses if they know how much the average person spends with their business. Most offer a quick response with a dollar amount. That answer is incorrect as they are telling me what the average existing customer is spending. The average person in any community spends no money with that small business.
Looking for new customers without any plan of how to do so is just spending money. That is why every small business needs to know how to find and use information. Find ideas in the March Small Business Advisory.
Employee retention; is it important? Or is it easier to lose an employee and wait for the next applicant to walk in the door? The Small Business News for March shares some statistics of the expense you incur when you make the change instead of working to retain a current employee.
Article of the Month
It is baseball season and we use the sport as an explanation of the cost of growing your business. In Boston's Fenway Park, left field has a wall that is know as the green monster.
And that is what growing your business is - a monster! You can't successfully grow your business without a plan and knowing you will have the cash on hand to pay for the growth.
Book of the Month
Are you selling something or persuading the customer? With your employees are you repeatedly telling that employee or are you persuading them to excel?
Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Ciaidini is our suggested book for March 2026. Most definitely an appropriate read.
All this plus the Internet Tool for Your Business and a staff incentive idea for your business.