Industry viewpoints and opinions

Monday, July 28, 2008

Behavioral Science


The Roman historian Pliny the Elder wrote, “In Rome... the soldier’s pay was originally salt”. In the days before refrigeration, salt was widely used as a preservative and it was also believed to have healing powers, thus it became a currency of the realm.

Etymologically then, the word ‘salary’ comes from the Latin word for salt (‘sal’). Eventually this word salarium came to signify anything given in a stipend form or wages in exchange for labor.

We’ve discussed the idea of ‘non-cash rewards’ in the blog before, but salt was not exactly what I had in mind!

These days, we see forward-thinking companies using compensation strategically; which is to say, companies recognize the need to pinpoint incentives in order to modify, enhance and refine the behavior of their sales team – or any group in the company for whom an incentive may modify behavior.

I like to think of the finance and sales executives who modify and tweak their teams’ compensation plans as “behavioral scientists”; like any good scientist, they experiment with various inducements in order to observe the resulting behavior and thus determine whether the desired effect has taken place.

While there is plenty of art to setting comp plans that achieve the desired effect, there remains a heaping helping of science to it as well – in the sense that one needs to fine-tune plans over a period of time to see what’s working and what’s not.

This harkens back to the crucial piece of why we pay variable compensation in the first place: we expect it WILL change behavior. With this in mind, why would you ever want to do this without giving everyone involved real-time, web-based visibility? Without this level of dynamic access to your data across your entire organization, how will you know in a timely fashion if success has been achieved?

Or when small tweaks do need to be made, how can one feel comfortable with the possible outcome without modeling the possible changes using some specific assumptions? Tinkering blindly with an Excel-based compensation structure is a recipe for disaster.

With an on-demand compensation system, a company achieves a real, tangible competitive advantage. Several models can be quickly tested and refined without affecting any of your field personnel. When a SPIF program or new comp plans are ready to be launched, your company has the ability to move in a swift, nimble fashion.

People like to throw around the idea of ‘strategic advantages’ that can help give a company a leg up on its competition, but few strategic advantages have this ability to streamline your entire organization.

Let me illustrate what I mean with a real life example: Recently, a nationally-known auto parts retailer instituted these types of changes in their company. Faced with a struggling economy, a set of executives decided to look for innovative ways to boost their same-store sales. They settled on incenting their floor employees with variable compensation in order to sell more product; and they extended this also to their shop employees as a way to get them to open (and close) a higher number of service tickets per day. In addition, they gave their people web-based visibility into the compensation system so they could see, dynamically, what they were earning.

Prior to the launch of this new direction, several executives of the auto parts retailer expressed their concern that there was sure to be backlash from parts of the rank-and-file, because hourly wages for these in-store employees were cut nearly in half – though their potential for earnings became far higher than before. Management even expected a noticeable amount of attrition; surely hourly employees would quit in significant numbers if they were unwilling to be subjected to this new, unknown direction?

However, the result was a roaring success. Same-store sales jumped significantly and one region reported that their shop employees were getting through roughly four times the number of service tickets they had previously.

What originally had started as a pilot that might slowly be expanded around the country, immediately became fast-tracked for a wide-scale rollout.

This forward-thinking company is experiencing the benefits of conducting some behavioral science in the name of improving their business.

Throw on a white lab coat and join me as a part-time behavioral scientist – I think you’ll enjoy it.

“Science is a wonderful thing if one does not have to earn one's living at it.”
--Sir Humphry Davy (1778-1829)
Scientist, inventor, the pioneer of electrolysis, laid the groundwork for modern chemistry

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posted by Christopher W. Cabrera at

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