HRMN 495-Mini Case Study 2
SAGE Reference
The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
Author: Barry Gerhart
Pub. Date: 2010
Product: SAGE Reference
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4135/9780857021496
Keywords: pay for performance, incentives, staff, agency theory, pay, human resource strategy, executive
compensation
Disciplines: Human Resource Management (general), Human Resource Management, Business &
Management
Access Date: March 2, 2023
Publishing Company: SAGE Publications Ltd
City: London
Online ISBN: 9780857021496
© 2010 SAGE Publications Ltd All Rights Reserved.
Retrieved from https://sk-sagepub-com.ezproxy.umgc.edu/reference/hdbk_humanresourcemgmt/ n13.xml
Compensation
Introduction
Across organizations, the single largest operating cost, on average, is employee compensation or remuner-
ation (Blinder, 1990; European Parliament, 1999; US Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2001). Thus, for an organi-
zation to be successful, it must effectively manage not only what it spends on compensation, but also what
it gets in return. Contextual factors serve to place some limits on compensation decisions. Legal, institution-
al (e.g., labor union), cultural, and market (product and labor) contextual factors vary across countries and
often within countries, meaning that the degree of discretion an organization has in managing compensation
decisions will also vary. Nevertheless, organizations typically have at least some discretion in compensation
design.1 This choice can have a major impact at every level of the organization on decisions made by individ-
uals (through its incentive effects), as well as who those individuals are (through its sorting or self-selection
and selection effects). In other words, compensation can be a major factor in successfully executing an orga-
nization's strategy.
Compensation, or remuneration, can be defined and studied in terms of its key decision/design areas, which
include (Gerhart and Milkovich, 1992; Milkovich and Newman, 2008) how pay varies across (and sometimes
within) organizations according to its level (how much?), form (what share is paid in cash versus benefits?),
structure (how pay differentials depend on job content, individual competencies, job level/promotion, and busi-
ness unit?), basis or mix (what is the share of base pay relative to variable pay and what criteria determine
payouts?), and administration (who makes, communicates, and administers pay decisions?).2
I focus here primarily on the pay basis/mix and, to a lesser extent, the pay level, dimensions. I will often refer
to these two decisions, respectively, as the ‘how to pay?’ and ‘how much to pay?’ decisions (Gerhart and
Milkovich, 1992; Gerhart and Rynes, 2003). The reason for the greater focus on the ‘how to pay’ decision is
that it may be the more strategic of the two in terms of the degree to which an organization can differentiate it-
self from others (Gerhart and Milkovich, 1990). Further, in organizations that differentiate their pay levels from
competitors and that are successful over time (in competitive markets), it may be that their pay levels are not
independent of how they pay. For example, an organization with a strong pay-for-performance plan (PFP) is
more likely to have a high pay level when performance is strong.
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 2 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
I begin with a brief review of theoretical perspectives that help in understanding the potential consequences of
different PFP and pay level decisions. As part of this, I highlight key intervening processes. Finally, I address
potential pitfalls in using PFP and how contextual factors may influence compensation strategy and effective-
ness.3
Effects of Pay
Theoretical Mechanisms
The role of pay, specifically PFP, and its effect on the level and direction of motivation in the workplace has
sometimes been debated and sometimes ignored in the applied psychological literature on motivation. (See
Rynes et al., 2005 for a review, including discussion of theories by Deci, Maslow, and Herzberg.) However,
the facts are that in developed economies, monetary rewards are (a) ubiquitous, (b) a major cost in most or-
ganizations (see above), and (c) as this chapter will help make clear, can have a major impact (positive or
negative) on employee attitudes, choices, and behaviors. Accordingly, in some streams of this literature, it
has been recognized that ‘Money is the crucial incentive’ (Locke et al., 1980: 379) and that ‘the one issue that
should be considered by all organization theories is the relationship between pay and performance’ (Lawler,
1971: 273).
From a psychological perspective, Campbell and Pritchard (1976) observe that motivation can be defined in
terms of its intensity, direction, and persistence. (Together with ability and situational constraints/ opportuni-
ties, motivation contributes to observed behavior.) Thus, to fully evaluate the impact of pay on motivation, one
must look not only at (enduring) effort level, but also the degree to which effort is directed toward desired
objectives.
As Lawler (1971) demonstrates, theories such as reinforcement, expectancy, and equity have deep roots in
psychology. Although compensation research using these theories (with the possible exception of equity the-
ory) is no longer very active, their core ideas provide much of the basis for how scholars and many practition-
ers think of the impact of compensation on employees. A brief review of these theories, as well as the more
economics-based agency and efficiency wage theories follows below. (See Gerhart and Rynes, 2003 for a
more complete review.)
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 3 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
Reinforcement theory (e.g., Skinner, 1953) is based on Thorndike's Law of Effect, which states that a re-
sponse followed by a reward is more likely to recur in the future. By the same token, a response not followed
by a reward is less likely to recur in the future. These two phenomena are reinforcement and extinction, re-
spectively. A notable feature of Skinner's perspective was his adamant avoidance of cognitive processes in
explaining motivation. In Skinner's view, cognitions were by-products of the central driver of motivation, re-
inforcement contingencies in the environment, and so were not necessary or useful in building a science of
behavior.
Subsequently, however, the field of psychology went through its ‘cognitive revolution,’ which departed from
reinforcement theory by focusing on cognitions such as self-reports of attitudes, goals, subjective probabili-
ties, and values. Later theories such as goal-setting (e.g., Locke), expectancy (e.g., Vroom, 1964), and equity
(Adams, 1963), all give cognitions a central explanatory role. At the same time, they also continue to recog-
nize the importance of reinforcement processes as drivers of those cognitions and later behavior. The po-
tential value of studying cognitions as mediators is that factors other than compensation and incentives may
influence goal choice, effort choice, and behaviors. Measuring cognitions and self-reports may be helpful in
understanding why compensation and incentives do or do not work in a particular situations.
In expectancy theory (Campbell and Pritchard, 1976; Vroom, 1964), behavior is seen as a function of ability
and motivation. In turn, motivation (also referred to as effort or force) is viewed as a function of belief sre-
garding expectancy, instrumentality, and valence. Expectancy is the perceived link between effort and perfor-
mance. Instrumentality is the perceived link between performance and outcomes and valence is the expected
value (positive or negative) of those outcomes. There is often a focus on compensation's effect on instru-
mentality. For example, a strong PFP program is likely to generate stronger beliefs that performance leads
to high pay than would a weak PFP program or a seniority-based pay system. However, motivation can be
undermined not only by weak instrumentality (e.g., weak PFP), but also by weak expectancy (e.g., because
of inadequate selection, training or job design) or valence (outcomes that are negative or not sufficiently pos-
itively valued).
The unique contribution of equity theory (Adams, 1963) to motivation is its focus on social comparison
processes. In essence, it states that how an employee evaluates his/her outcomes from work depends on an
assessment of how his/her ratio or outcomes (e.g., perceived compensation and rewards) to inputs (e.g., per-
ceived effort, qualifications, performance) compares to a comparison standard (e.g., a co-worker or peer in
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 4 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
another organization). When the ratios are perceived to be equal, equity is perceived and no action (cognitive
or behavioral) is taken to change the situation. However, to the extent the ratios are not perceived as equal,
there is perceived inequity, and action (behavioral or cognitive) is hypothesized to be taken to restore equity
or balance, especially if the inequity is under reward inequity for the focal person (Lawler, 1971).
One reason for focusing on the role of (in) equity is that so many of its potential behavioral consequences
(e.g., effort withholding, turnover, theft, collective action, legal action, renegotiation of terms) are undesirable
to many or all employers. As a practical matter, many employers use attitude surveys to monitor employee eq-
uity perceptions and attitudes in hopes of finding any problems in compensation or other areas early enough
to head off undesired consequences. Not surprisingly, then, leading textbooks in compensation management
(e.g., Milkovich and Newman, 2008) give a central role to the various aspects of pay equity in helping man-
agers understand how employees react to compensation decisions.
Agency theory starts from the observation that once an entrepreneur hires their first employee, there is sep-
aration of ownership and control (Jensen and Meckling, 1976). The entrepreneur (and/or others having own-
ership stakes, as in a larger firm) retains ownership, but now must deal with an agency relationship, under
which the owner (i.e., principal) contracts with one or more employees (i.e., agents) ‘to perform some service
on their behalf which involves delegating some decision making authority to the agent’ (Jensen and Meck-
ling, 1976: 308). The challenge in an agency relationship is that the agent does not necessarily act in the
best interests of the principal, giving rise to agency costs, which specifically arise from goal incongruence (the
principal and agent have different goals) and information asymmetry (the principal has less information than
the agent regarding the value to the principal of the agent's attributes and behaviors).
To control agency costs, the principal must choose a contracting scheme that is behavior-based (pay based
on observation of behaviors) and/or outcome-based (pay based on outcomes/results such as profits, produc-
tivity, shareholder return). The choice depends on factors such as the relative cost of monitoring behaviors
versus outcomes, their relative incentive effects, and the degree of risk aversion among agents. A key issue is
the hypothesized trade-off between incentive intensity and risk. Generally, it is assumed that incentive inten-
sity can be stronger under outcome-based contracts because they are more objective, and thus less subject
to measurement error (Milgrom and Roberts, 1992). On the other hand, employees, who generally rely on
their job as their predominant source of income, are risk averse. Greater incentive intensity is associated, on
average, with greater performance outcome variability (which also may not be entirely under the agent's con-
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 5 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
trol) and thus, greater compensation risk. Therefore, a compensating differential to the agent for taking on the
greater risk of an outcome-based contract is expected under agency theory. (An implication is that strong in-
centives increase labor cost, meaning that the incentives must drive higher performance to be cost-effective.)
The question is which contract will maximize the gains from incentives, while controlling the costs of shifting
risk to workers (Prendergast, 1999)? Consistent with agency theory, companies having more financial risk
tend to have less risk-sharing/incentive intensity in their compensation for managers and executives (Aggar-
wal and Samwick, 1999; Bloom and Milkovich, 1998; Garen, 1994), with there also being some evidence that
risk-sharing is least likely in very low or very high financial risk situations (Miller et al., 2002). Also consis-
tent with agency theory, as information asymmetries increase, outcome-based contracts are more likely to be
used (Eisenhardt, 1989; Makri et al., 2006; Milkovich et al., 1991).
Although is has been argued that the trade-off between risk and incentives in designing contracts is the main
focus of agency theory (e.g., Aggarwal and Samwick, 1999; Prendergast, 1999), the general focus on con-
tracting in agency theory also suggests an assumption that performance, whether results-based or behavior-
based or both, plays a key role in determining compensation. In economics, while recognizing that agency
costs can compromise the pay-performance relationship, the existence of substantial pay for performance
among executives is generally taken as a given, at least in a country like the US, where stock plans are the
source of most executive wealth creation (Murphy, 1999). However, in other fields (e.g., management), there
is greater skepticism regarding the degree to which executive compensation and performance are related,
with a greater role for power and politics generally being seen. (For a give-and-take on theses issues, see
articles by Bebchuk and Fried, 2006; Conyon et al., 2006. See Devers et al. for a review of recent studies.)
A review and empirical study by Nyberg et al. (2007) suggests that the management literature has underesti-
mated the role of performance, and thus the applicability of agency theory, in determining executive compen-
sation.
Efficiency wage theory seeks to provide an economically rational explanation for why firms have different pay
levels.4 The essential argument is that firms pay high wages either because some aspect of their technology
and/or human resource system requires higher than average quality workers or because monitoring perfor-
mance is more difficult due to information asymmetry (Krueger and Summers, 1998; Yellen, 1984). Paying a
higher than average wage may discourage shirking because the worker at the high-wage firm does not want
to risk losing his/her wage premium (Cappelli and Chauvin, 1991). This effect is expected to be magnified to
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 6 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
the degree that the risk of job loss increases. The unemployment rate is one indicator of risk of job loss and
Yellen (1984) states that ‘Unemployment plays a valuable role in creating work incentives.’5 Another impli-
cation of efficiency wage theory is that supervision and efficiency wages may be substitutes for one another
(Groshen and Krueger, 1990; Neal, 1993). In other words, shirking can be controlled either by having many
supervisors closely monitoring behaviors or by having fewer supervisors but a higher potential wage penalty if
shirking is observed. Lazear (1979: 1266) states that without an appropriate pay system, workers would have
an ‘incentive to cheat, shirk, and engage in malfeasant behavior.’
Theoretical themes and Intervening Processes
To greatly simplify, one can say that in the above theories, pay operates on motivation and performance in
two general ways (Gerhart and Milkovich, 1992; Gerhart and Rynes, 2003; Lazear, 1986). First, there is the
potential for an incentive effect, defined as the impact of pay on current employees’ motivational state. The
incentive effect is how pay influences individual and aggregate motivation, holding the attributes of the work-
force constant and it has been the focus of the great majority of theory and research in compensation, espe-
cially outside of economics.
Second, there is the potential for a sorting effect, which we define as the impact of pay on performance via its
impact on the attributes of the workforce. Different types of pay systems may cause different types of people
to apply to and stay with an organization (self-select) and these different people may have different levels
of ability or trait-like motivation, or different levels of attributes (e.g., team skills) that enhance effectiveness
more in some organizations than in others. Organizations too may differentially select and retain employees,
depending on the nature of their pay level and/or PFP strategies. The self-selection aspect of sorting and its
application to the effects of pay is based primarily on work in economics (e.g., Lazear, 1986), but the idea
is consistent with Schneider's (1987) attraction-selection-attrition (ASA) idea in the applied psychology litera-
ture. Evidence suggests that the magnitude of ASA processes can be substantial (Schneider et al., 1998).
Together, the sorting and incentive ideas provide one broad conceptual framework for thinking about inter-
vening processes in studying the effects of compensation. Another is the ability-motivation-opportunity to con-
tribute (AMO) framework (Appelbaum et al., 2000, Boxall et al., 2007). Compensation seems most likely to
influence workforce ability and motivation, less likely to come into play in the ‘O’ component, which has more
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 7 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
to do with job design and participation in decisions. (As noted later, however, the ‘O’ component and the
AMO dimensions in general are quite relevant in addressing horizontal alignment in HR and compensation.)
The impact of compensation on workforce ability is expected to operate primarily through its sorting effects,
but some forms of compensation (for example, skill-based or competency-based pay) can also directly in-
fluence ability via incentive effects. Management development over time via different job assignments and
experiences (especially those involving upward mobility) is also typically supported by compensation systems
through promotion incentives (sometimes described as tournament systems). Other incentive effects, such as
motivation and effort on the current job, are perhaps more straightforward.
Gerhart and Milkovich (1992) called for compensation research to include intervening variables (and) at ‘mul-
tiple levels’ of analysis in studying compensation and performance, because ‘if a link is found … possible
mediating mechanisms can be examined to help establish why the link exists and whether (or which) causal
interpretation is warranted’ (p. 533). Beyond the general mediating mechanisms discussed above, more de-
tailed intervening variables might include employee attitudes, individual performance and/or competencies,
and employee turnover (broken out by performance levels). Other relevant mediators, depending on the par-
ticular goals of the unit or organization, would be citizenship behavior, teamwork, climate for innovation, mo-
tivation, and engagement. Note that while HR practices such as compensation might be thought of as op-
erating at the level of the organization or work unit, the mediators discussed here are often conceptualized
as individual level processes. Therefore, models (e.g., hierarchical linear modeling, Raudenbush and Bryk,
2002) designed to handle multiple levels may prove useful in empirical work addressing this type of mediaton.
A final mediator that is perhaps obvious, but nevertheless sometimes ignored in research (as opposed to
practice) is cost. Higher pay levels and/or higher staffing levels drive up labor costs. In addition, according to
agency theory, incentive intensity, because it shifts risk to workers, is also expected to drive up pay levels by
requiring a compensating differential for risk. We address the cost issue more fully below.
Effects of Pay Level
Although competitive pressures drive firms to minimize costs and maximize benefits, the cost side means
that, in the absence of higher productivity, quality, superior products development, customer responsiveness
and so forth, firms must keep total labor costs in line with those of competitors by controlling total compen-
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 8 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
sation per employee and/or by controlling employee headcount. In a global world, cost control includes an
ongoing search for the lowest cost location for production, all else being equal (e.g., proximity to customers
and suppliers, worker skill levels) which is to varying degrees, depending on the product, technology, and
work organization, a partial function of labor costs. As Table 13.1 makes clear, labor costs differ significantly
across the world. (What Table 13.1 does not show is that labor costs also vary across companies within many
countries.)
As noted previously, efficiency wage theory suggests that higher wages may have positive sorting and in-
centive effects. More specifically, the observable benefits of higher wages may include (Gerhart and Rynes,
2003): higher pay satisfaction (Currall et al., 2005; Williams et al., 2006; for a review, see Heneman and
Judge, 2000), improved attraction and retention of employees (for a review, see Barber and Bretz, 2000), and
higher quality, effort, and/or performance (e.g., Yellen, 1984; Klass and McClendon, 1996).
Table 13.1 Average hourly labor costs for manufacturing production workers, by country (US dollars), 2005
United States 24
Canada 24
Germany 33
France 25
United Kingdom 26
Spain 18
Czech Republic 6
Japan 22
Mexico 3
Hong Konga 6
Korea 14
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 9 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
Note:Wage rates rounded to nearest dollar except when rate is less than one dollar.
Sources: US Bureau of Labor Statistics, http://www.bls.gov; Banister, J. (2005)
a Special Administrative Region of China
b 2004
c 2002.
In discussing pay level from a public policy perspective, a distinction is sometimes made between ‘low road’
(low pay level) versus ‘high road’ (high pay level) human resource systems (Gerhart, 2007).6 Using the AMO
model, a ‘high road’ policy typically combines higher (‘efficiency’) wages with high levels of worker responsi-
bility and autonomy and often team-based work (O), all of which may require a higher quality workforce (A).
To the extent that the high road HR system is costly, due to not only high wages but also high investment
in AMO areas broadly, it may not align typically as well with a cost leadership business strategy as would a
less costly, low road strategy. Historically, this is perhaps most readily seen in the way that firms often move
low skill work offshore to locations where it can be done much more cheaply. More recently, there has been
a great deal of attention given to the movement of skilled work (e.g., writing computer code; tax preparation)
offshore to less expensive locations. We return later to the question of under what circumstances a high road,
high pay level strategy is most likely effective.
Cost is an outcome that has been explicitly recognized and quantified in cost-benefit models such as utility
analysis (Brogden, 1949; Boudreau, 1991), but the application of utility analysis to compensation, with explicit
attention to not only its benefits, but also the costs of pay programs, has been surprisingly rare (Klaas and
McCledon, 1996; Sturman et al., 2003; Gerhart and Rynes, 2003). This is ironic because, inside of organiza-
tions, it often seems to be cost that gets the lion's share of attention. Cappelli and Neumark (2001) observe
this same omission in much of the broader literature on the effectiveness of HR systems. Indeed, they inter-
pret their findings as indicating that high road HR systems ‘raise labor costs … but the net effect on overall
profitability is unclear’ (p. 766).
I conclude the discussion of pay level at this point because the pay level decision is one that is (or should be)
made in tandem with the how to pay decision (Gerhart and Rynes, 2003). For example, any organization op-
erating in a competitive market will have difficulty being successful over time with a high pay level that is not
Sri Lankab 0.52
Chinac 0.57
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 10 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
paired with high performance at the individual and organizational level. Thus, the how to pay or PFP decision.
Effects of Pay for Performance (PFP)
Types of PFP programs include profit sharing, stock plans, gainsharing, individual incentives, sales commis-
sions, and merit pay (Milkovich and Newman, 2008). As Table 13.2 shows, these programs can be classified
on two dimensions (Milkovich and Wigdor, 1991): level of measurement of performance (e.g., individual, plant,
organization) and type of performance measure (results-oriented or behavior-oriented). It is important to note
that, in practice, many employees are covered by hybrid pay programs (e.g., a combination of merit pay and
profit sharing).
US companies well-known for their use of PFP include Lincoln Electric, Nucor Steel, Whole Foods, Hewlett-
Packard, Southwest Airlines, and General Electric, to name just a few. Each uses a different form of PFP, with
varying degrees of relative emphasis on individual, group/unit, and/or organization level performance. Out-
side the US, in countries with less of a tradition of PFP, there appears to be a movement in some cases (e.g.,
Japan, Korea) toward greater emphasis on PFP at all organization levels. In these and many other countries,
there has been a clear movement toward greater use of PFP for selected employee groups (e.g., executives),
(Towers Perrin, 2006).
Incentive Effects
In a meta-analysis of potential productivity-enhancing interventions in actual work settings, Locke et al. (1980)
found that the introduction of individual pay incentives increased productivity by an average of 30%.7 This
finding was based on studies that were conducted in real organizations (as opposed to laboratories), used
either control groups or before-and-after designs, and measured performance via ‘hard’ criteria (e.g., physical
output) rather than supervisory ratings.
Subsequent research also supports the powerful incentive effects of pay. A meta-analysis by Guzzo et al.
(1985) found that financial incentives had a large mean effect on productivity (d = 2.12).8 More recent meta-
analyses (Jenkins et al., 1998; Judiesch, 1994; Stajkovic and Luthans, 1997) likewise provide strong support
for a significant positive relationship between financial rewards and performance.
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 11 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
There has also been research on plans using collective performance, including gain-sharing, profit sharing,
and stock plans. (For reviews, see Gerhart and Milkovich, 1992; Gerhart and Rynes, 2003.) Without delving
into the specific findings of this literature, a few general observations are in order. First, whereas most of the
individual level research follows the same people over time, thus probably yielding what are essentially incen-
tive effects, studies of plans using collective performance as the dependent variable do not usually hold the
workforce constant as the design often involves between-company and/or longitudinal tracking of companies.
Thus, it is difficult to separate incentive and sorting effects. Second, the set of relevant determinants of col-
lective performance (e.g., profitability) is perhaps larger than in the typical study of individual incentive plans.
Again, this makes it more of a challenge to isolate the impact of compensation relative to other factors.
In studies of executives, keeping in mind that some of these same challenges apply (given that performance
is usually defined as firm-level performance), evidence suggests that PFP plan design may influence a wide
range of strategic decisions (Gerhart, 2000), including staffing patterns, diversification, research and devel-
opment investment, capital investment, and reaction to takeover attempts. Likewise, over time, organizational
strategy is more likely to change when (executive) pay strategy changes (Carpenter, 2000). Thus, there is
consistent evidence that pay strategy does influence managerial goal choice.
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 12 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
Sorting Effects
After reading the studies reviewed above, the reader would be well aware of the incentive mechanism, but
quite possibly unaware of the sorting mechanism as a possible explanation for the observed effects. As not-
ed, to the extent the above studies track the same individuals before and after the intervention, they do in-
deed estimate incentive effects. However, to the degree the individuals making up the workforce changed in
response to a PFP intervention, then at least some of the improvement in performance might be due to a
sorting effect. Lazear (2000), for example, reported a 44% increase in productivity when a glass installation
company switched from salaries to individual incentives. Of this increase, roughly 50% was due to existing
workers increasing their productivity, while the other 50% was attributable to less productive workers quitting
and being replaced by more productive workers over time.
Cadsby et al. (2007) likewise found that both incentive and sorting effects explained the positive impact of
PFP on productivity. Their study, set in the laboratory, was designed so that subjects went through multiple
rounds. In some rounds, subjects were assigned to a PFP plan, while in other rounds they were assigned to
work under a fixed salary plan. In yet other rounds, they were asked to choose either the fixed salary or the
PFP plan to work under (i.e., they were asked to self-select). Cadsby et al. found that by the last rounds in
their experiment, the PFP condition generated 38% higher performance than the fixed salary condition and
that the sorting effect (less risk averse and more productive subjects being more likely to select the PFP con-
dition) was actually about twice as large as the incentive effect in accounting for this 38% difference. In ex-
plaining why they found a sorting effect that was larger than that found by Lazear (which was also substantial),
Cadsby et al. observe that in the Lazear study, few employees chose to leave the organization, presumably
because there was no downside risk to the PFPplan implemented there. Thus, most of the sorting effect in
the Lazear study was probably attributable to new hires being more productive than current employees on av-
erage, without much of the sorting effect being due to lower performing employees leaving the organization.
Evidence suggests that PFP is more attractive to higher performers than to lower performers. For example,
Trank and her colleagues (2002) found that the highest-achieving college students place considerably more
importance on being paid for performance than do their lesser-achieving counterparts. Likewise, persons with
higher need for achievement (Bretz et al., 1989; Turban and Keon, 1993), and lower risk aversion (Cadsby
et al., 2007; Cable and Judge, 1994) also prefer jobs where pay is linked more closely to performance. Since
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 13 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
these are all characteristics that some or most employers desire, such individual differences are important
for employers to keep in mind. Other research shows that high performers are most likely to quit and seek
other employment if their performance is not sufficiently recognized with financial rewards (Salamin and Hom,
2005; Trevor et al., 1997). Conversely, low performers are more likely to stay with an employer when pay-per-
formance relationships are weaker (Harrison et al., 1996).
Finally, to the degree that sorting effects are important, they may make it appear as though the relationship
between pay and performance is weaker than it really is (Gerhart and Rynes, 2003). For example, to the
degree that organizations are selective and valid in their decisions regarding who to hire and who to retain,
the remaining group of employees will be unrepresentative in that their average performance level should in-
crease as selectivity and validity increase (Boudreau and Berger, 1985). So, even if there is little observed
variance in performance and/or pay within this group (i.e., there is range restriction), this selected group of
employees may have above market pay and above market performance. Thus, in this example, there is no
(observed) relationship between pay and performance within the firm, but there would be a significant rela-
tionship between pay and performance between firms. Similarly, on the employee side of the decision, it may
be that high performers self-select such that they are more likely to join and remain with organizations that
have PFP. In summary, even when there is little observed variance in performance ratings and/or pay within
an organization, it may nevertheless be the case that PFP, via sorting effects, have resulted in major differ-
ences in performance between organizations.
The Challenge of Defining and Measuring Performance
A limitation of the meta-analytic evidence reviewed earlier on the effects of PFPis that in most of the included
studies, physical output measures of performance (e.g., number of index cards sorted, number of trees plant-
ed) were available, (and related to this) tasks were simple, and individual contributions were usually separa-
ble (Gerhart and Rynes, 2003).
In contrast, in many jobs, some or all of these three characteristics do not apply (Lawler, 1971). The wide-
spread use of merit pay and its subjective performance measures, is to an extent, a result of this fact
(Milkovich and Wigdor, 1991). While this mismatch is recognized in the applied psychology literature, there
remains little work that uses strong research designs to study more widely used individual-oriented PFP plans
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 14 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
such as merit pay (Heneman, 1992) or hybrids of different PFP programs (Gerhart and Rynes, 2003). The
economics literature is also coming to grips with the performance measurement challenge, acknowledging
that there has been a tendency in discussions of incentives to assume that performance can be ‘easily mea-
sured’ (Gibbons, 1998: 118) and that, as a result, ‘economists have tended to place excessive focus on the
contracts of workers for whom output measures are easily observed’ despite the fact that ‘most people don't
work in jobs like these’ (Prendergast, 1999: 57).
Returning to Table 13.2, recall that performance measures vary in at least two respects. First, as emphasized
in agency theory, they can be results-oriented (e.g., number of units produced) behavior-oriented (e.g., su-
pervisory evaluations of effort or quality)? Second, performance can focus on individual or collective contribu-
tions.
Among the potential advantages of behavior-oriented measures are that they (Gerhart, 2000), can be used for
any type of job, permit the rater to factor in variables that are not under the employee's control (but that nev-
ertheless influence performance), thus reducing the risk-sharing concerns identified in agency theory. They
also allow a focus on whether results are achieved using acceptable means and behaviors, carry less risk
of measurement deficiency, or the possibility that employees will focus only on explicitly measured tasks or
results at the expense of other objectives. On the other hand, the subjectivity/measurement error of behav-
ior-oriented measures (for a review, see Viswesvaran et al., 1996) can make it more difficult for organizations
to justify differentiating between employees (Milkovich and Wigdor, 1991) using stronger incentive intensity
(Milgrom and Roberts, 1992), unless steps are taken to improve reliability and credibility (e.g., using multiple
raters, Viswesvaran et al., 1996). Managers may also have disincentives to differentiate (Murphy and Cleve-
land, 1995).
Results-oriented measures (e.g., productivity, sales volume, shareholder return, profitability), while more ob-
jective and thus often more credible to employees as a basis for differentiation, and thus more typically used
to provide more powerful incentives, also have potential drawbacks. As noted, relevant objective measures
are not available for most jobs, especially at the individual level. Moreover, as also noted, agency theory em-
phasizes that results-based plans (e.g., individual incentives, gainsharing, profit-sharing) increase risk-bear-
ing among employees (Gibbons, 1998). Poor performance on such measures (and thus decreasing or dis-
appearing payouts), especially if attributed to factors employees see as beyond their own control (e.g., poor
decisions by top executives), tend to result in negative employee reactions, often resulting in pressure to ei-
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 15 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
ther revise the plan in a way that weakens incentives (Gerhart, 2001) or to abandon the plan (e.g., Petty et al.,
1992). Finally, narrowly defined results-oriented measures may result in some aspects of performance being
ignored and undesirable means used to maximize incentive payouts.
Performance measures also vary according to whether they emphasize individual or group (or collective) per-
formance. Incentive effects (in terms of instrumentality perceptions) are generally stronger under individual
performance plans (Schwab, 1973). Also, positive sorting effects may be realized as the most productive and
achievement-oriented employees appear to prefer or gravitate to such plans (e.g., Bretz et al., 1989; Lazear,
1986; Trank et al., 2002; Trevor et al., 1997). On the other hand, too much focus on individual performance
may undermine cooperation and teamwork, which are widely viewed as increasingly important in gaining com-
petitive advantage through people (Deming, 1986; Pfeffer, 1998).
However, using group-based incentives creates other challenges, not only with respect to sorting effects, but
also incentive effects, especially in anything but small groups: ‘Unless the number of individuals in a group is
quite small, or unless there is coercion or some other special device to make individuals act in their common
interest, rational self-interested individuals will not act to achieve their common or group interests’ (Olson,
1965: 1–2, emphasis in the original). Theory and research across fields (e.g., variously described as the com-
mon-resource problem, public-goods problem, free-rider problem, or social loafing problem) has identified a
fundamental challenge in using group incentives (Gerhart and Rynes, 2003; Kidwell and Bennett, 1993); when
people share the obligation to provide a resource (e.g., effort), it will be undersupplied because the residual
returns (e.g., profit sharing payouts) to the effort are often shared relatively equally, rather than distributed in
proportion to contributions.
In summary, performance measures must have a meaningful link to what the organization is trying to accom-
plish, be sufficiently inclusive of key aspects of performance, balance sometimes competing objectives, and
be seen as fair and credible by employees. Organizations often attempt to achieve these goals by using multi-
ple measures of performance, aggregate and individual, results and behavior-oriented (e.g., as in a Balanced
Scorecard), and adjusting incentive intensity, to an important extent, based on the degree to which valid and
credible performance measurement is believed to be achievable. The main constraint on using multiple mea-
sures is the complexity introduced and the risk that this will work against employees' understanding of the
plan and, thus, their motivation. Indeed, even among executives, understanding and the perceived value of
stock options appears to diverge from that provided by standard financial models (Devers et al., 2007).
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 16 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
Cautions and Pitfalls
Any discussion of PFP ‘must consider whether the potential for impressive gains in performance’ from such
plans is ‘likely to outweigh the potential problems, which can be serious’ (Gerhart, 2001: 222). Indeed, using
such plans, perhaps especially so when combined with strong incentive intensity, has been described as ‘a
high risk, high reward strategy’ (Gerhart et al., 1996: 222).
Of course, there are risks in choosing a high pay level as well, especially if it's not linked to high performance.
In a global world, contracts (implicit or explicit) between organizations and employees that were once good for
both may no longer beviable for one or both parties. This change may occur over time (e.g., the automobile
industry in the US and Europe), leading to either changes in the employment contract (lower wages/benefits
and/or more productivity/flexibility in tasks/hours) or a change in the location of production to a lower-cost part
of the country or the world. In the absence of either or both changes in response to changing competitive
conditions, market share and profitability, and ultimately survival, are put at risk.
Returning to the risks in using PFP, several issues can come into play. First, PFP may not be implemented
with sufficient strength. It may exist as a stated policy, but not as a meaningful practice experienced by em-
ployees. Even where (e.g., in the United States) most private sector organizations tend to claim that they
have PFP policies (or researchers claim that they are studying PFP policies), there is, in fact, sometimes
little meaningful empirical relationship between pay and performance (Gerhart and Milkovich, 1992; Gerhart
and Rynes, 2003; Trevor et al., 1997). In the case of merit pay, for example, two factors that often weaken
its strength are lack of differentiation in performance ratings and lack of differentiation in pay increases even
when performance ratings do vary. Not surprisingly then, when employees are asked about how much PFP
there is in their own organizations, they tend to say ‘not very much.’ In a survey of employees in 335 com-
panies conducted by the Hay Group (2002), employees were asked whether they agreed with the statement,
‘If my performance improves, I will receive better compensation’. Only 35% agreed, whereas 27% neither
agreed nor disagreed, and 38% disagreed with this statement.
A second potential problem, somewhat ironically, is that the implementation of PFP may sometimes ‘work’
too well. Here, the danger is that a PFP program can act as a blunt instrument that may result in unintended
and harmful consequences. Successful organizations must balance multiple objectives (e.g., customer rela-
tionships and long-term earnings against short-term opportunistic earnings). In designing an incentive plan
to support this balance, it must be kept in mind that people tend to do what is rewarded and objectives not
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 17 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
rewarded tend to be ignored. Lawler (1971: 171) warned that ‘it is quite difficult to establish criteria that are
both measurable quantitatively and inclusive of all the important job behaviors,’ and ‘if an employee is not
evaluated in terms of an activity, he will not be motivated to perform it.’ Based on their laboratory study, Wright
et al. (1993) concluded that ‘When individuals are committed to difficult goals, they may strive to achieve
these goals at the expense of the performance of other behaviors that are necessary for organizational effec-
tiveness' (p. 129). Prendergast (1999: 8) likewise argues that ‘Contracts offering incentives can give rise to
dysfunctional behavioral responses, whereby agents emphasize only those aspects of performance that are
rewarded.’ Milgrom and Roberts (1992: 228) refer to this as the equal compensation principle: ‘If an employ-
ee's allocation of time or attention between two different activities cannot be monitored by the employer, then
either the marginal rates of return to the employee must be equal, or the activity with the lower marginal rate
of return receives no time or attention.’
How long a PFP plan remains in place is sometimes used as a measure of its success. While a short-term
gain in performance from a pay plan that does not last long should not be dismissed, it is nevertheless useful
to keep in mind that, in a fair number of cases, such plans do not last long (Gerhart et al., 1996). For example,
Beer and Cannon's analysis (2004) of 13 PFP ‘experiments’ conducted at Hewlett-Packard in the mid-1990s
found that, in 12 of the 13 cases, the program did not survive.
All else equal, a plan that generates longer-term performance gains is preferred and changing plans too
often can result in a counterproductive ‘flavor-of-the-month’ perception among employees (Beer and Cannon,
2004). Data on survival rates is also important for drawing statistical conclusions (Gerhart et al., 1996). Plans
that survive for short periods are more likely to be excluded from studies of pay plan effectiveness, thus re-
sulting in the plans included in the sample looking more effective than they really are in the full population.
While the risks of PFP programs must be acknowledged and understood, the ‘high reward’ aspect of ‘high
risk, high reward’ means that not making sufficient use of PFP can put an organization at risk in a different
way in terms of its competitiveness. Second, PFP programs can be one critical piece in a strategy to change
the culture of an organization, especially if there is sufficient hiring and turnover to allow sorting effects to
change workforce composition. In the case of a start-up company or location, PFP and other aspects of com-
pensation and HR can be used to set the cultural tone and achieve fit from the beginning.
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 18 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
Alignment and Contextual Factors
In view of the challenges in designing and implementing PFP plans, it is useful to consider how contextual
factors might affect whether a PFP plan is likely to be successful. The preceding discussion regarding chal-
lenges in measuring performance has begun to take us down that path. A further discussion of contextual
factors and alignment follows below.
Alignment
Terms such as alignment, synergy, fit, and complimentarity describe the idea that the effects of two or more
factors are non additive and dependent on contextual factors.9 According to Milgrom and Roberts (1992:
108): ‘Several activities are mutually complementary if doing more of any activity increases (or at least does
not decrease) the marginal profitability of any other activity in the group’ (p. 108). They then propose a more
string ent definition: ‘a group of activities is strongly complementary when raising the levels of a subset of
activities in the group greatly increases the returns to raising the levels of the other activities’ (p. 109). An
example given by Gerhart and Rynes (2003) is where a gainsharing program alone results in an average per-
formance increase of 10%, while a suggestion system alone results in an average performance increase of
10%. However, when used in combination, their total effect is not additive (i.e., 20%), but is rather non-addi-
tive (e.g., 30%). So, the effect of the gainsharing program is contingent on a contextual factor, in this case,
another aspect of HR (Gerhart and Rynes, 2003).
There are two general classes of contingency factors: person and situation. Our earlier discussion of sorting
effects highlighted some of the relevant person factors (e.g., risk aversion, need for achievement, academic
performance) that predict preference for PFP. In addition, other person characteristics may predict prefer-
ences for particular types of PFP. For example, Cable and Judge (1994) found that individual-based PFP was
preferred, on average, by those with high self-efficacy, but as might be expected, less preferred, on average,
by those scoring high on collectivism.
There are three key aspects of pay strategy alignment or fit that focus on the situation or environmental
context (Gerhart, 2000; Gerhart and Rynes, 2003): horizontal alignment (between pay strategy and other di-
mensions of HR management, as in the gain-sharing example above), vertical alignment with organizational
strategy (i.e., corporate and business strategy), and internal alignment between different dimensions of pay
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 19 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
strategy (e.g., pay level and pay basis). Only a brief review is provided here. (For more detail, see Gerhart,
2000; Gerhart and Rynes, 2003; Gomez-Mejia and Balkin, 1992; Milkovich, 1988).
The primary focus of the pay strategy literature has been on vertical alignment. Aspects of corporate strategy
such as the process, degree and type of diversification (Kerr, 1985; Gomez-Mejia, 1992; Pitts, 1976) and the
firm's life cycle (e.g., growth, maintenance), (Ellig, 1981) are associated with different compensation strate-
gies (Gomez-Mejia and Balkin, 1992; Kroumova and Sesis, 2006; Yanadori and Marler, 2006). Evidence also
suggests performance differences based on fit such that growth firms do perform better with an incentive-
based strategy (Balkin and Gomez-Mejia, 1987) and that the effectiveness of an incentive-based strategy
depends to a degree on the level of diversification (Gomez-Mejia, 1992). Alignment of pay strategy with busi-
ness strategy (e.g., Porter, 1985; Miles and Snow, 1978) may also have performance consequences (e.g.,
Rajagopolan, 1996). Another developing stream of work on non-executives at the business unit level focuses
on the alignment between pay strategy and manufacturing strategy (Shawetal., 2002; Snell and Dean, 1994).
Finally, as noted previously, consistent with agency theory, companies having more financial risk tend to have
less risk-sharing in their compensation for managers and executives (Aggarwal and Samwick, 1999; Bloom
and Milkovich, 1998; Garen, 1994). Thus, both the risk aversion of the individual and risk properties of the
situation are relevant (Wiseman et al., 2000).
Turning to the role of pay level in vertical alignment, as noted earlier, the potential benefits of high wages may
be more important in some firms than in others. Higher pay levels, either for the organization as a whole or for
critical jobs, may be well-suited to particular strategies, such as higher value-added customer segments. The
key work recognizing that firms differ in their choice of low road versus high road HR systems, even within
narrow industries, has been conducted by Hunter (2000) in health care and Batt (2001) in telecommunica-
tions. Batt, for example, reported that firms having a focus on large-business customers paid 68% higher than
firms with no dominant customer focus and that most of this higher pay was due to hiring workers with higher
levels of human capital. Similarly, evidence suggests that organizations making greater use of so-called high
performance work practices (teams, quality circles, total quality management, job rotation) also pay higher
wages (Osterman, 2006).
Boxall and Purcell (2003: 68) provide a nice summary, which only needs to be amended with the important
observation that, as we have just seen, the value-added created may differ within sectors according to firm
differences in strategy:
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 20 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
Overall, research suggests that the sort of HR practices that foster high commitment from talented
employees are most popular in those sectors where quality is a major competitive factor and where
firms need to exploit advanced technology (as in complex manufacturing) or engage in a highly
skilled interaction with clients (as in professional services). In these sorts of higher value-added sec-
tors, firms need more competence and loyalty from their employees and are more able to pay for
them. In sectors where these conditions are not met—where output per employee is not high—em-
ployers adopt more modest employment policies.
In contrast to the work on vertical alignment, horizontal alignment of pay strategy with other employment prac-
tices has been studied, mostly using non-executive employees and mostly in the context of work on so-called
high-performance work systems and HR systems. The effect of an HR system on effectiveness is thought to
operate, as noted earlier, via the intervening variables of ability, motivation, and opportunity, or AMO (Appel-
baum et al., 2000; Batt, 2002; Boxall and Purcell, 2003; Gerhart, 2007). One problem with studying horizontal
fit, however, is that the hypothesized role of pay and/or PFP, as well as the way these constructs are oper-
ationalized, tends to differ across studies, making it difficult to draw robust conclusions about what other HR
strategy elements work best with particular pay and PFP approaches (Becker and Gerhart, 1996; Gerhart and
Rynes, 2003).
Nevertheless, certain potential areas of fit and mis-fit can be identified (Gerhart and Rynes, 2003; Rynes et
al., 2005). For instance, with respect to the ‘O’ component, it seems likely that group-based incentive plans
(e.g., gainsharing, profit sharing, stock options) will be more effective in smaller groups (Kaufman, 1992;
Kruse, 1993) than in larger groups or organizations. In addition, in situations where work is more interdepen-
dent, it may be that some shift in emphasis from individual performance to group performance will be more
effective (e.g., Shaw et al., 2002). Nevertheless, it must be kept in mind that even where tasks are interde-
pendent, if there are individual differences in ability and/or performance that are important, then placing too
little weight on individual performance in compensation can lead to undesired sorting effects, such that high
performers may not join or remain with the group or organization.
The issue of horizontal alignment can also be approached more broadly. Although compensation is extremely
important in motivation and effectiveness, it is important to continue to keep in mind that compensation is part
of a broader employment relationship, broader than some of the contract notions we have discussed, which
center on the compensation aspect. The literature on HR systems (e.g., the AMO framework) conveys this
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 21 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
broader view as does work on psychological contracts (e.g, Rousseau and Ho, 2000; Tsui et al., 1997). Like-
wise, earlier work by Herbert Simon (1957), for example, viewed employment as a relationship where mutual
(longer-term) obligations on the part of the employee and employer could be efficient. The hope is that an
organization will obtain the ‘consummate cooperation’ of employees, ‘an affirmative job attitude [that] includes
the use of judgment, filling gaps, and taking initiative’ (Williamson et al., 1975: 266). Organizations often seek
to support this objective through employee ownership. For example, roughly one-half of the publicly traded
companies on the 100 Best Companies to Work For list offer stock options to all or nearly all employees (For-
tune, 1999: 126).
The third area of fit, internal alignment, has been the least studied. The work of Gomez-Mejia and Balkin
(1992) has sought to identify overarching compensation strategies, but more work is needed to document
which aspects of pay tend to cluster together in organizations and whether certain clusters are more effective
and/or what contingency factors are most important. In any event, the modest evidence that exists concern-
ing the degree of actual alignment between pay and other HR strategy dimensions suggests that there is less
alignment than one might wish (Wright et al., 2001).
Although it could be included as a part of vertical alignment, another type of alignment that is important is that
between pay strategy and country. Countries differ on a multitude of dimensions that can affect management
practice (Dowling et al., forthcoming), including the regulatory environment (e.g., requirements for worker par-
ticipation in firm governance), institutional environment (e.g., strength of labor unions, accepted HR practices
in areas like compensation), and cultural values (e.g., Hofstede's (1980) dimensions of individualism/collec-
tivism, long-term orientation, masculinity-femininity, power distance, and uncertainty avoidance). As such, a
good deal of attention has been devoted to the constraints that organizations face when it comes to choosing
which HR and pay strategies (a) can be implemented, and (b) if able to be implemented, which will be effec-
tive. Thus, organizations must decide how best to balance standardization and localization in designing HR
and pay practices.
While practices that are effective in one country are not necessarily going to be effective or even feasible in
another country (due, for example, to legal or strong institutionalized traditions) one should be careful not to
give too much weight to contingency factors generally, including country. For example, in the case of the five
cultural values dimensions made famous by Hofstede (1980, 2001), evidence shows that country actually ex-
plains only a small percentage of variance in individual employee cultural values (Gerhart and Fang, 2005).
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 22 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
There is good reason to believe that organizations have considerable room to be different from the country
norm in many countries in at least some key areas of HR (Gerhart and Fang, 2005) and pay strategy (Bloom
and Milkovich, 1999).
Also, country norms as they relate to HR and pay strategy can and do change. As mentioned earlier, one
example, is executive compensation. Countries like Germany, South Korea, and Japan changed from essen-
tially no use of long-term incentives (e.g., stock options, stock grants) for top executives in 1998 to substantial
use by 2005 (Towers Perrin, 2006). Another example mentioned earlier is the significant change in South
Korea (Choi, 2004) and in Japan (Morris et al., 2006; Jung and Cheon, 2006; Robinson and Shimizu, 2006)
away from seniority-based pay toward PFP. A third example is the dramatic decline in private sector unionism
in the United States, which stands at 7.4% of the workforce in 2006. A fourth example is the decentraliza-
tion (e.g., from industry to firm or plant level) of collective bargaining in many parts of the world (Katz et al.,
2004). Finally, in their multi-country study, Katz and Darbishire (2002) highlight what they call ‘converging di-
vergences,’ to indicate that there is a set of multiple employment/HR system models shared across countries,
with the multiple and different models existing in each country to varying degrees.
Thus, it is important to recognize not only institutional pressures toward conformity in a country, but also that,
at least in some respects, depending on the country, the timeframe, and the particular policy, there can be
room to be unique and the strategy literature tells us that being the same as everyone else is unlikely to
generate anything more than competitive parity, whereas being different, while perhaps being more risk, has
the potential to generate sustained competitive advantage (e.g., the resource based view of the firm; Barney,
1991). Some work has been done addressing how the RBV is relevant to HR strategy broadly (Becker and
Gerhart, 1996; Colbert, 2004; Barney and Wright, 1998), but beyond Gerhart et al. (1996) there has not been
much application to pay strategy.
Turning to methodology, a challenge in studying contextual or contingent effects is that if only firms and units
that achieve some minimal level of alignment survive (Hannan and Freeman, 1977), alignment may be so
important that it is almost impossible for the researcher to observe substantial departures from alignment
(Gerhart et al., 1996; Gerhart and Rynes, 2003). In this case, restricted range in alignment would reduce the
statistical power available to observe a relationship between alignment and performance. This may help ex-
plain why the idea of fit, while often thought to be critical, has not received as strong support as might be
expected in HR research broadly and in the area of compensation, specifically (Gerhart et al., 1996; Gerhart,
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 23 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
2007; Wright and Sherman, 1999).
Finally, although fit is typically seen as an important goal, this should perhaps be tempered by the possibility
that fit can be a double-edged sword when it comes to compensation and HR systems. Gerhart et al. (1996)
pointed out that the system (and resulting workforce) that fits the current business strategy may quickly be-
come a poor fit if the business strategy changes. A less tightly aligned set of HR practices, where bets were
hedged, might make a successful adaptation more likely. As Boxall and Purcell (2003: 56) put it: ‘In a chang-
ing environment, there is always a strategic tension between performing in the present context and preparing
for the future.’ Perhaps in recognition of the limitations of static vertical fit, some recent work on HR systems
emphasizes the importance of agility in HR systems and strategy (Dyer and Shafer, 1999) and relatedly, of
flexibility (Wright and Snell, 1998), or what might be seen as a capability for achieving dynamic fit. As a key
part of an HR system, compensation must then be evaluated on an ongoing basis to consider its contribution
to flexibility. Some examples of compensation programs that are seen as promoting flexibility are skill-based
and competency-based pay, as well as broadbands (in place of more detailed pay grades).
Conclusion
Compensation involves decisions in multiple areas. My focus in this chapter has been on PFP and, to a lesser
extent, pay level. I provided an overview of some of the most important theoretical approaches in under-
standing the potential impact of compensation decisions on performance. I have highlighted the potential for
well-designed PFP plans to make a substantial contribution to organization performance through effects on
intervening mechanisms such as incentive and sorting. I have also noted the potential for PFP plans to cause
serious problems, often as a result of unintended consequences. To an important extent, these unintended
consequences stem from the difficulty in specifying and measuring performance, a challenge that is perhaps
often overlooked and/or underestimated in the literature on PFP.
I suggested that the probability of success of PFP plans might be improved by effective alignment with con-
textual factors such as organization and human resource strategy. However, no matter how well thought-out
and planned, the fact remains that the stronger the incentive intensity, the greater not only their potential pos-
itive impact, but also their potential to have a negative impact. At the same time, the risk of having strong
incentives must be balanced against the risk that using weaker incentives will miss the opportunity to help
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 24 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
drive stronger performance. In closing, I note that firms achieve success by taking different paths, which vary
both in terms of how much they pay and how they pay, including how strong incentives they use.
Notes
1 Even in an environment where there is little discretion in compensation policy and practice (e.g., because
of legal and institutional forces within a particular country), an organization can often obtain greater discretion
by expanding its business in a different environment (e.g., a different industry, a different country, etc.) that
permits greater discretion in policy and practice.
2 Benefits represent a substantial share of compensation cost to employers in the US, for example, given that
many (especially larger) companies fund retirement and health care for employees.
3 Compensation can be defined to include non-monetary rewards as well. Both monetary and non-monetary
rewards are important in the workplace. For a review of the importance of monetary and non-monetary re-
wards in the workplace, see Rynes et al. (2004). However, monetary compensation is unique among rewards
in the following respects (Gerhart and Rynes, 2003; Lawler, 1971; Rottenberg, 1956). First, compensation is
one of the most visible aspects of a job to both current employees and job seekers. Second, unlike some
other job characteristics (e.g., job responsibility, working in teams), most people prefer more money to less.
Third, money can be instrumental for meeting a wide array of needs, including economic consumption, self-
esteem, status, and feedback regarding achievement. Given the central importance of monetary compensa-
tion, as well as limits on what can be covered in a single chapter, the main focus here is on pay or monetary
rewards.
4 A strict, traditional, neoclassical economics view would find the notion that employers (at least within a par-
ticular market) have a choice when it comes to pay level to be misguided, because the forces of supply and
demand yield, in the long run, a single going/market wage that all employers must pay to avoid too high costs
in the product market on the one hand and the inability to attract and retain a sufficient quantity and quality of
workers in the labor market on the other. The only way that an employer could pay higher wages than other
employers would be if better quality workers were hired. In that case, the ratio of worker quality to cost would
be unchanged, meaning both that the apparent difference in pay levels was not real, disappearing upon ap-
propriate adjustment for worker quality and that employers would not necessarily realize any advantage from
using a high wage, high worker quality strategy. However, evidence of persistent and arguably non-illusory
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 25 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
differences in compensation levels (see Gerhart and Rynes, 2003 for a review) between companies operating
in the same market has resulted in greater attention to why such differences exist and more general acknowl-
edgment, including in economics (Boyer and Smith, 2001), recognition that employers have some discretion
in their choice of pay level. In response, efficiency wage theory provides an economics-based rationale for
why some firms may benefit from higher (lower) wages.
5 This idea is similar to Karl Marx's concept of the ‘reserve army’ of unemployed being used by employers to
keep their workforces in line.
6 This section draws freely on Gerhart (2007).
7 This section draws freely on Gerhart (2008).
8 The d statistic is defined as the difference between the dependent variable mean for Group A versus Group
B, divided by the pooled standard deviation of Groups A and B. Thus, it gives the difference between Group
A and B in terms of standard deviation units.
9 This section draws freely on Gerhart and Rynes (2003).
BarryGerhart
References
Adams, J. S.‘Toward an understanding of inequity’Journal of Abnormal Psychology67:422–36. (1963)
Aggarwal, R. K.Samwick, A. A.‘The other side of the trade-off: The impact of risk on executive compensa-
tion’Journal of Political Economy107:65–105. (1999)
Appelbaum, E., Bailey, T., Berg, P., and Kalleberg, A. (2000) Manufacturing Advantage: Why High Perfor-
mance Work Systems Pay Off. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
Barney, J. B.‘Firm resources and sustained competitive advantage’Journal of Management17:99–120. (1991)
Barney, J. B.Wright, P. M.‘On becoming a strategic partner: The role of human resources in gaining competi-
tive advantage’Human Resource Management37:31–46. (1998)
Barber, A. E., and Bretz, R. D. Jr. (2000) Compensation, attraction and retention, in S. L. Rynes and B. Ger-
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 26 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
hart (eds), Compensation in Organizations, pp. 32–60. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Batt, R.‘Explaining intra-occupational wage inequality in telecommunications services: customer segmen-
tation, human resource practices, and union decline’Industrial and Labor Relations Review54(2A):425–49.
(2001)
Balkin, D. B.Gomez-Mejia, L. R.Matching compensation and organizational strategiesStrategic Management
Journal11153–169. (1987)
Bebchuk, L. A.Fried, J. M.‘Pay without performance: Overview of the issues’The Academy of Management
Perspectives20(1):5–24. (2006)
Becker, B.Gerhart, B.‘The impact of human resource management on organizational performance: Progress
and prospects’Academy of Management Journal39:779–801. (1996)
Beer, M.Cannon, M. D.‘Promise and peril in implementing pay-for-performance’Human Resource Manage-
ment43:3–20. (2004)
Blinder, A. S. (ed.) Paying for productivity. Washington, D. C.: Brookings Institution.
Bloom, M.Milkovich, G. T.‘Relationships among risk, incentive pay, and organizational performance’Academy
of Management Journal41:283–97. (1998)
Boyer, G. R.Smith, R. S.The development of the neoclassical tradition in labor economics. Industrial and La-
bor Relations Review54199–223. (2001)
Boudreau, J. W. (1991) ‘Utility analysis for decisions in human resource management’, in M. D. Dunnette and
L. M. Hough (eds), Handbook of Industrial and Organizational Psychology. Palo Alto, CA: Consulting Psy-
chologists Press, 2nd edn, pp. 621–745.
Boxall, P., and Purcell, J. (2003) Strategy and Human Resource Management. Hampshire, England: Palgrave
Macmillan.
Boudreau, J. W.Berger, C. J.Decision-theoretic utility analysis applied to employee separations and acquisi-
tionsJournal of Applied Psychology [monograph]73467–81. (1985)
Branch, S.The 100 best companies to work for in AmericaFortuneJanuary66–80. (1999)
Bretz, R. D.Ash, R. A.Dreher, G. F.‘Do people make the place? An examination of the attraction-selection-at-
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 27 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
trition hypothesis’Personnel Psychology42:561–81. (1989)
Brogden, H. E.‘When testing pays off’Personnel Psychology2:171–85. (1949)
Cable, D. M.Judge, T. A.‘Pay preferences and job search decisions: A person-organization fit perspective’Per-
sonnel Psychology47:317–348. (1994)
Cadsby, C. B.Song, F.Tapon, F.‘Sorting and incentive effects of pay-for-performance: An experimental inves-
tigation’Academy of Management Journal50:387–405. (2007)
Carpenter, M. A.The price of change: The role of CEO compensation in strategic variation and deviation from
industry strategy normsJournal of Management261179–98. (2000)
Campbell, J. P., and Pritchard, R. D. (1976) ‘Motivation theory in industrial and organizational psychology’, in
M. D. Dunnette (ed.), Handbook of Industrial and Organizational Psychology. Chicago, IL: Rand McNally, pp.
63–130.
Capelli, P.Chauvin, K.‘An interplant test of the efficiency wage hypothesis’Quarterly Journal of Econom-
ics106(3):769–87. (1991)
Cappelli, P.Neumark, D.‘Do “High-Performance” work practices improve establishment-level outcomes?’In-
dustrial and Labor Relations Review54(4):737–75. (2001)
Colbert, B. A.The complex resource-based view. Strategic Management Journal29341–58. (2004)
Conyon, M. J.‘Executive compensation and incentives’The Academy of Management Perspec-
tives20(1):25–44. (2006)
Currall, S. C.Towler, A. J.Judge, T. A.Kohn, L.‘Pay satisfaction and organizational outcomes’Personnel Psy-
chology58:613–40. (2005)
Deming, W. E. (1986) Out of the crisis. Cambridge: MIT, Center for Advanced Engineering Study.
Devers, C. E.Cannella, A. A.Reilly, G. P.Yoder, M. E.Executive Compensation: A multidisciplinary review of
recent developments. Journal of Management33:1016–72. 2007.
DowlingP. J., Festing, M., and Engle, A. D. Sr. (2008) International Human Resource Management. (5th
edn)London: Thomson Learning.
Dyer, L., and Shafer, R. A. (1999) ‘From human resource strategy to organizational effectiveness: Lessons
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 28 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
from research on organizational agility’, in P. Wright, L. Dyer, J. Boudreau and G. Milkovich (eds), Strategic
Human Resources Management in the Twenty-First Century. Supplement to G. R. Ferris (ed.), Research in
Personnel and Human Resources Management. Stanford, CT: JAI Press. pp. 145–74.
Eisenhardt, K. M.‘Agency- and institutional-theory explanations: The case of retail sales compensation’Acad-
emy of Management Journal31:488–511. (1989)
Ellig, B. R.Compensation elements: Market phase determines the mixCompensation Review(Third Quar-
ter)30–8. (1981)
European Parliament (1999) Labour Costs and Wage Policy within EMU. Directorate-General for Research,
Economic Affairs Series, ECON 111 EN. Luxembourg.
Garen, J. E.‘Executive compensation and principal-agent theory’Journal of Political Economy102:1175–200.
(1994)
Gerhart, B. (2000) ‘Compensation strategy and organizational performance’, in S. L. Rynes and B. Gerhart
(eds), Compensation in Organizations. San Francicso: Jossey-Bass. pp. 151–194.
Gerhart, B. (2001) ‘Balancing results and behaviors in pay for performance plans’, in Charles Fay (ed.), The
Executive Handbook of Compensation. Free Press. pp. 214–37.
Gerhart, B. (2007) ‘Horizontal and vertical fit in human resource systems’, in C. Ostroff and T. Judge (eds),
Perspectives on Organizational Fit. SIOP Organizational Frontiers Series. New York: Lawrence Erlbaum As-
sociates, Taylor and Francis Group. pp. 317–48.
Gerhart, B. (2008) Compensation. In John Storey and Patrick Wright (eds), The Routledge Companion to
Strategic Human Resource Management. London, U. K.: Routledge.
Gerhart, B.Fang, M.‘National culture and human resource management: assumptions and evidence’Interna-
tional Journal of Human Resource Management16:975–90. (2005)
Gerhart, B.Milkovich, G. T.‘Organizational differences in managerial compensation and financial perfor-
mance’Academy of Management Journal33:663–91. (1990)
Gerhart, B., and Milkovich, G. T. (1992) ‘Employee compensation: Research and practice’, in M. D. Dunnette
and L. M. Hough, (eds), Handbook of Industrial and Organizational Psychology, 2nd edn. Palo Alto, CA: Con-
sulting Psychologists Press, Inc. pp 481–570.
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 29 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
Gerhart, B., and Rynes, S. L. (2003) Compensation: Theory, evidence, and strategic implications. Thousand
Oaks, CA: Sage.
Gerhart, B., Trevor, C., and Graham, M. (1996) ‘New Directions in Employee Compensation Research’, in G.
R. Ferris (ed.), Research in Personnel and Human Resources Management. pp. 143–203.
Gibbons, R.‘Incentives in organizations’Journal of Economic Perspectives12:115–32. (1998)
Gomez-Mejia, L. R., and Balkin, D. B. (1992) Compensation, Organizational Strategy, and Firm Performance.
Cincinnati, Ohio: Southwestern Publishing.
Groshen, E.Krueger, A. B.‘The structure of supervision and pay in hospitals’Industrial and Labor Relations
Review43:S134-S46. (1990)
Guzzo, R. A.Jette, R. D.Katzell, R. A.‘The effects of psychologically based intervention programs on worker
productivity: A meta-analysis’Personnel Psychology38:275–91. (1985)
Harrison, D.AVirick, M.William, S.‘Working without a net: Time, performance, and turnover under maximally
contingent rewards’Journal of Applied Psychology81:331–45. (1996)
HayGroup (2002) Managing Performance: Achieving Outstanding Performance Through a ‘Culture of Dia-
logue.’ Working Paper.
Hannan, M. T.Freeman, J.The population ecology of organizations. American Journal of Sociolo-
gy>82929–64. 1977.
H. G.HenemanIII, and Judge, T. A. (2000) ‘Compensation attitudes’, in S. L. Rynes and B. Gerhart (eds),
Compensation in Organizations. San Francicso: Jossey-Bass. pp. 61–103
Hofstede, G. (1980) Culture's consequences: International differences in work-related values. Beverly Hills,
CA: Sage.
Hofstede, G. (2001) Culture's consequences: Comparing values, behaviors, institutions, and organizations
across nations. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 2 nd Edition.
Hunter, L. W.‘What determines job quality in nursing homes?’Industrial and Labor Relations Re-
view53:463–81. (2000)
Jenkins, D. G. Jr.Mitra, A.Gupta, N.Shaw, J. D.‘Are financial incentives related to performance? A meta-ana-
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 30 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
lytic review of empirical research’Journal of Applied Psychology83:777–87. (1998)
Jensen, M. C.Meckling, W. H.‘Theory of the firm: Managerial behavior, agency costs, and ownership struc-
ture’Journal of Financial Economics3:305–60. (1976)
Judiesch, M. K. (1994) The effects of incentive compensation systems on productivity, individual differences
in output variability and selection utility. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Iowa.
Jung, E.Cheon, B.Economic crisis and changes in employment relations in Japan and KoreaAsian Sur-
vey46(3)457–76. (2006)
Katz, H. C., and Darbishire, (2002) Converging Divergences: Worldwide Changes in Employment Systems.
Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
Katz, H. C., Lee, W., and Lee, J. (2004) The New Structure of Labor Relations: Tripartism and Decentraliza-
tion. Ithaca, NY: ILR Press/Cornell University.
Kaufman, R. T.The effects of Improshare on productivity. Industrial and Labor Relations Review45311–22.
(1992)
Kruse, D. L. (1993) Profit sharing: Does it make a difference?Kalamazoo, MI: Upjohn Institute.
Kerr, J. L.Diversification strategies and managerial rewards. Academy of Management Journal28155–79.
(1985)
Kidwell, R. E.Bennett, N.‘Employee propensity to withhold effort: A conceptual model to intersect three av-
enues of research’Academy of Management Review18:429–56. (1993)
Klaas, B. S.McCledon, J. A.‘To lead, lag, or match: Estimating the financial impact of pay level policies’Per-
sonnel Psychology49:121–41. (1996)
Kroumova, M. K.Sesis, J. C.‘Intellectual capital, monitoring, and risk: What predicts the adoption of employee
stock options?’Industrial Relations45:734–52. (2006)
Krueger, A. B.Summers, L. H.‘Efficiency wages and the inter-industry wage structure’Econometri-
ca56:259–93. (1988)
E. E.LawlerIII (1971) Pay and Organizational Effectiveness. New York: McGraw-Hill.
Lazear, E. P.‘Why is there mandatory retirement?’Journal of Political Economy87:1261–84. (1979)
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 31 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
Lazear, E. P.‘Salaries and piece rates’Journal of Business59:405–32. (1986)
Lazear, E. P.‘Performance pay and productivity’American Economic Review90:1346–61. (2000)
Locke, E. A., Feren, D. B., McCaleb, V. M., Shaw, K. N., and Denny, A. T. (1980) ‘The relative effectiveness of
four methods of motivating employee performance’, in K. D. Duncan, M. M. Gruenberg and D. Wallis (eds.),
Changes in Working Life. New York: Wiley. pp. 363–88.
Makri, M.Lane, P. J.Gomez-Mejia, L.CEO incentives, innovation, and performance in technology-intensive
firms. Strategic Management Journal271057–80. (2006)
Miles, R. E., and Snow, C. C. (1978) Organizational Strategy, Structure, and Process. New York: McGraw-
Hill.
Miller, J. S.Wiseman, R. M.Gomez-Mejia, L. R.The fit between CEO compensation design and firm risk. Acad-
emy of Management Journal45:745–56. 2002.
Milgrom, P., and Roberts, J. (1992) Economics, Organization, and Management. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Pren-
tice-Hall.
Milkovich, G. T.‘A strategic perspective on compensation management’Research in Personnel and Human
Resources Management6:263–88. (1988)
Milkovich, G. T.Gerhart, B.Hannon, J.‘The effects of research and development intensity on managerial com-
pensation in large organizations’Journal of High Technology Management Research2:133–50. (1991)
Milkovich, G. T., and Newman, J. M. (2008) Compensation. Boston: McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 9th edition.
Milkovich, G., and Wigdor, A. (1991) Pay for Performance: Evaluating Performance Appraisal and Merit Pay.
Washington, DC: National Academy Press.
Morris, J.Hassard, J.McCann, L.New organizational forms, human resource management and structural con-
vergence? A study of Japanese organizations. Organization studies271485–511. (2006)
Murphy, K. J. (1999) ‘Executive compensation’, in O. Ashenfelter and D. Card (eds), Handbook of Labor Eco-
nomics, Volume 3. Amsterdam: North Holland. pp. 2485–567.
Murphy, K. R., and Cleveland, J. N. (1995) Understanding Performance Appraisal. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Publications.
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 32 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
Neal, D.Supervision and wages across industries. Review of Economics and Statistics75409–17. (1993)
Nyberg, A. J., Fulmer, I. S., and Gerhart, B. (2007) Correcting Misconceptions about CEO Pay for Perfor-
mance: An Alternative Approach for Evaluating the Alignment Between CEO Return and Shareholder Return.
Unpublished Manuscript, School of Business, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Olson, M. (1965) The logic of collective action: Public Goods and the Theory of Groups. Cambridge, MA: Har-
vard University Press.
Osterman, P.The wage effects of high performance work organization in manufacturing. Industrial and Labor
Relations Review59187–204. (2006)
Petty, M. M.Singleton, B.Connell, D. W.‘An experimental evaluation of an organizational incentive plan in the
electric utility industry’Journal of Applied Psychology77:427–36. (1992)
Pfeffer, J. (1998) The human equation: Building profits by putting people first. Boston: Harvard Business
School.
Pitts, R. A.‘Diversification strategies and organizational policies of large diversified firms’Journal of Economics
and Business8:181–88. (1976)
Porter, M. (1985) Competitive Advantage. New York: Free Press.
Prendergast, C.‘The provision of incentives in firms’Journal of Economic Literature37:7–63. (1999)
Rajagopalan, N.‘Strategic orientations, incentive plan adoptions, and firm performance: Evidence from elec-
tric utility firms’Strategic Management Journal18:761–85. (1996)
Raudenbush, S. W., and Bryk, A. S. (2002) Hierarchical linear models. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publica-
tions.
Robinson, P.Shimizu, N.Japanese corporate restructuring: CEO priorities as a window on environmental and
organizational changeAcademy of Management Perspectives20(3)44–75. (2006)
Rottenberg, S.‘On choice in labor markets’Industrial and Labor Relations Review9:183–99. (1956)
Rousseau, D. M., and Ho, V. T. (2000) Psychological contract issues in compensation. In Rynes and Gerhart
(eds). In S. L. Rynes and B. Gerhart (eds), Compensation in Organizations, pp. 273–310. San Francisco, CA:
Jossey-Bass.
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 33 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
Rynes, S. L., Gerhart, B., and Parks, L. (2004) Annual Review of Psychology, Personnel psychology: Perfor-
mance evaluation and pay for performance. 56:571–600.
Salamin, A.Hom, P. W.‘In search of the elusive U-shaped performance-turnover relationship: are high per-
forming Swiss bankers more liable to quit?’Journal of Applied Psychology90:1204–16. (2005)
Schneider, B.Hanges, P. J.Smith, B.Salvaggio, A. N.‘Which comes first: employee attitudes or organizational
financial and market performance’Journal of Applied Psychology88:836–51. (2003)
Schwab, D. P.‘Impact of alternative compensation systems on pay valence and instrumentality percep-
tions’Journal of Applied Psychology58:308–12. (1973)
Schneider, B.‘The people make the place’Personnel Psychology40:437–53. (1987)
Schneider, B.Smith, D. B.Taylor, S.Fleenor, J.Personality and organizations: A test of the homogeneity of per-
sonality hypothesis. Journal of Applied Psychology83462–70. 1998.
ShawJ. D.GuptaN.DeleryJ. E.‘Pay dispersion and workforce performance: Moderating effects of incentives
and interdependence’Strategic Management Journal23:491–512. (2002)
Simon, H. A. (1957) Models of Man. New York: John Wiley and Sons.
Skinner, B. F. (1953) Science and Human Behavior. New York: Macmillan.
Snell, S. A.Dean, J. W. Jr.‘Strategic compensation for integrated manufacturing: The moderating effects of
jobs and organizational inertia’Academy of Management Journal37:1109–40. (1994)
Stajkovic, A. D.Luthans, F.‘A meta-analysis of the effects of organizational behavior modification on task per-
formance, 1975–1995’Academy of Management Journal40:1122–49. (1997)
Sturman, M. C.Trevor, C. O.Boudreau, J. W.Gerhart, B.‘Is it worth it to win the talent war? Evaluating the utility
of performance-based pay’Personnel Psychology56:997–1035. (2003)
Trank, C. Q.Rynes, S. L.Bretz, R. D. Jr.‘Attracting applicants in the warfortalent: Differences in work prefer-
ences among high achievers’Journal of Business and Psychology17:331–45. (2002)
Towers Perrin (2006) Worldwide total remuneration, 2005–2006. http://www.towersperrin.com
Trevor, C. O.Gerhart, B.Boudreau, J. W.‘Voluntary turnover and job performance: Curvilinearity and the mod-
erating influences of salary growth and promotions’Journal of Applied Psychology82:44–61. (1997)
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 34 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
Tsui, A. S.Pearce, J. L.Porter, L. W.Tripoli, A. M.‘Alternative approaches to the employee-organization rela-
tionship: Does investment in employees pay off?’Academy of Management Journal40:1089–1121. (1997)
Turban, D. B.Keon, T. L.Organizational attractiveness: An interactionist perspectiveJournal of Applied Psy-
chology78184–193. 1993
U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. 2001. Productivity and costs. http://www.bls.gov/lpc/peoplebox.htm.
Viswesvaran, C.Ones, D. S.Schmidt, F. L.‘Comparative analysis of the reliability of job performance rat-
ings’Journal of Applied Psychology81:557–74. (1996)
Vroom, V. H. (1964) Work and Motivation. New York: Wiley.
Weiss, A. (1987) ‘Incentives and worker behavior: Some evidence’, in H. R. Nalbantian (ed.), Incentives, Co-
operation, and Risk Taking. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield. pp. 137–150.
Williams, M. L.McDaniel, M. A.Nguyen, N. T.‘A meta-analysis of the antecedents and consequences of pay
level satisfaction’Journal of Applied Psychology91:392–413. (2006)
Wiseman, R. M., Gomez-Mejia, L. R., and Fugate, M. (2000) Rethinking compensation risk, in S. L. Rynes
and B. Gerhart (eds), Compensation in Organizations, 32–60. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Williamson, O. E.Wachter, M. L.Harris, J. E.‘Understanding the employment relation: The analysis of idiosyn-
cratic exchange’Bell Journal of Economics6:250–80. (1975)
Wright, P. M.George, J. M.Farnsworth, S. R.McMahan, G. C.‘Productivity and extra-role behavior: The effects
of goals and incentives on spontaneous helping’Journal of Applied Psychology78:374–81. (1993)
Wright, P. M.McMahan, G.Snell, S.Gerhart, B.‘Comparing line and HR executives’ perceptions of HR effec-
tiveness: Services, roles, and contributions’Human Resource Management40:111–24. (2001)
Wright, P. M., and Sherman, W. S. (1999) ‘Failing to find fit in strategic human resource management: Theo-
retical and empirical problems’, in P. Wright, L. Dyer, J. Boudreau, and G. Milkovich (eds), Strategic Human
Resources Management in the Twenty-First Century. Supplement to G. R. Ferris (ed.), Research in personnel
and human resources management.Stanford, CT: JAI Press, pp. 53–74.
Wright, P. M.Snell, S. A.‘Toward a unifying framework for exploring fit and flexibility in strategic human re-
source management’Academy of Management Review23:756–73. (1998)
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 35 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management
Yanadori, Y.Marler, J. H.‘Compensation strategy: Does business strategy influence compensation in high-
technology firms?’Strategic Management Journal27:559–70. (2006)
Yellen, J. L.‘Efficiency wage models of unemployment’American Economic Review74:200–5. (1984)
• pay for performance
• incentives
• staff
• agency theory
• pay
• human resource strategy
• executive compensation
https://doi.org/10.4135/9780857021496
SAGE
© SAGE 2010
SAGE Reference
Page 36 of 36 The SAGE Handbook of Human Resource Management