They [PIA] recommend taking a fresh look at pricing & estimating, citing that profit leaders have higher profits as a result of lower costs or higher prices.
Their employee recommendations include:
• Focusing on education & training,
• Being all-inclusive in benefits, awards, profit sharing & bonuses,
• Sharing in gains in good years & pains in bad years,
• Sharing financial status, business plans, strategies & information,
• Investing in education & training,
• Linking performance & reward.
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Hmmmm...
"profit leaders have higher profits as a result of lower costs or higher prices."
Now that's an insight - increase profits by either lowering costs or increasing prices. If you increase prices you lose business to your competition because the print services market is very price sensitive. So you can't do that. You might potentially lower costs though.
"1 Focusing on education & training,
2 Being all-inclusive in benefits, awards, profit sharing & bonuses,
3 Sharing in gains in good years & pains in bad years,
4 Sharing financial status, business plans, strategies & information,
5 Investing in education & training,
6 Linking performance & reward."
#1 and #5 are basically the same. Both will increase your costs and will either motivate the employee to ask for a salary increase (cost increase) now that they are better trained for their job or to leave the company for a better paying job at your competitor's shop. You've invested in your competition. Oh, and if if they weren't already trained to do their job - why did you hire them?
#2 and #3 are, except for benefits, basically the same. All those benefits increase your costs. Profit sharing and bonuses rewards employees, unlike management, for factors of the company's success over which they have no control or personal stake. The net effect is that it increases costs by reducing profit margins. And if employees are to share in profits, shouldn't they also share in company losses?
#4 Sharing financial status, business plans, strategies & information. Really? If it's a public company then financial info is already shared. If private, it's none of their business. This only makes sense if the print shop is a cooperative and I doubt there are many of those. In any case, giving employees that kind of information will only demoralize them if they disagree with management's plans and strategies but have no power to change it except to quit. Interestingly, the PIA doesn't appear to share its financial information.
#6 Linking performance and reward. In your typical printshop performance is linked to the equipment and systems that management has put in place. Performance factors over which most employees have no say. So, by linking performance to reward you are effectively punishing the employee for the performance of management.
W. Edwards Deming, the father of the Quality movement, whose methodologies were key to enabling Japan's manufacturing to rise from the ashes of WW 2 had some thoughts worth considering:
"The idea of a merit rating is alluring. The sound of the words captivates the imagination: pay for what you get; get what you pay for; motivate people to do their best, for their own good.
The effect is exactly the opposite of what the words promise."
"The merit rating nourishes short-term performance, annihilates long-term planning, builds fear, demolishes teamwork, [and] nourishes rivalry and politics. It leaves people bitter, crushed, bruised, battered, desolate, despondent, dejected, feeling inferior, some even depressed, unfit for work for weeks after receipt of rating, unable to comprehend why they are inferior. It is unfair, as it ascribes to the people in a group differences that may be caused totally by the system that they work in."
"the system that people work in and the interaction with people may account for 90 or 95 percent of performance."
"The supposition is prevalent the world over that there would be no problems in production or service if only our production workers would do their jobs in the way that they were taught. Pleasant dreams. The workers are handicapped by the system, and the system belongs to the management."
Rant over. ;-)