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Much of the empirical literature on PRP (Performance Related Pay) focuses on a question of whether the firm can increase firm performance in general and enterprise productivity in particular by introducing PRP and if so, how much. However, not all PRP programs are created equal and PRP programs...
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Much of the empirical literature on PRP (Performance Related Pay) focuses on a question of whether the firm can increase firm performance in general and enterprise productivity in particular by introducing PRP and if so, how much. However, not all PRP programs are created equal and PRP programs...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011859633
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This paper studies a retail chain that introduced a sales incentive plan that rewarded for exceeding a sales target and subsequently cut the incentive intensity in addition to increasing the target. Utilizing monthly panel data for 54 months for all 53 units of the chain the paper shows that the...
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This paper explores performance measurement in incentive plans. On the basis of theory, we argue that differences in the nature of jobs between blue‐ and white‐collar employees lead to differences in incentive systems. We find that performance measurement for white‐collar workers is...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014040611