¶ … Profit Sharing and Other Incentives as Employee Development Performance Motivational Tools and the Relationship between Managerial Support and Employee Commitment to the Organization
The impact of profit sharing and other incentives on employee development and organizational growth is measured in various companies around the world. From Keller Williams to Southwest Airlines companies are utilizing incentives, such as 401ks, profit sharing plans, insurance plans, even pre-tax commuter benefits, because like Southwest they believe that their "greatest asset" is their employee (Southwest Report, 2010, p. 45). According to servant leadership theory, by offering managerial support that is designed to benefit and assist the worker, a higher degree of employee commitment to the organization can take place. Thus, companies such as Keller Williams promote mottos like "God, Family, Business" in that order to show that in their workplace environment what comes first is not business but that which is more important than business: family and God. In effect, the workplace environment under this direction becomes familial and fosters a "spirit of mission" that is located in the overall objective of the employees to not only be successful in their careers but also to be successful as people, i.e., good, understanding, ethical, supportive, unified, and giving. In other words, the theory of servant leadership is combined with the theory of directional leadership in order to enhance employee development and facilitate employee commitment to the organization and its objectives. This is made easier and more possible because it is emphasized under these two theoretical approaches that the organization's objectives are identical to the employee's objectives.
How It Works
At Southwest, for instance, the workplace culture is represented by the public company's ticker symbol on the NYSE: LUV. The "Luv" (love) culture embodied by Southwest is rooted in the founders' concept of an airline that prides itself on delivering first-class customer service -- which, to do so, requires first-class employee service; i.e., by taking care of its employees, Southwest believes its employees will in turn take care of its customers. It is very much a pay-it-forward type of mentality that is encouraged in the organization and one that has succeeded at a high level in establishing a winning track record of high employee performance ratings among patrons (Gallo, 2013). Southwest is not alone either in the airline industry: it is joined by Virgin Airlines in offering the kind of employee care and incentivizing that makes workers want to be part of the team. Part of that incentivizing is found in ideas like profit-sharing -- but not all of it. Some of the most important incentives are found simply in the way that managers give support to employees.
Few companies embody the concept of managerial support the way that Keller Williams does. While the individual real estate agents who work for Keller Williams brokerage houses around the world are technically not employed and therefore do not "have" managers, the KW offices utilize a system of agent reciprocity rooted in the management support system doctrine. In other words, senior agents provide guidance (often 24/7) to young or inexperienced agents in order to help them establish and further their careers as well as their commitment to the office. The world of real estate is one in which various brokerages are often competing for talent, so keeping top-performing agents at any given company is a task in and of itself. The Keller Williams approach to recruiting and keeping talent is found in its vision of reciprocity: if you give us your talents, we will give you everything we have. Thus, the KW profit-sharing program is set up in such a way that each office divides the profits "so that the owners who risked their investments enjoy roughly 52% of the profit and the associates who helped grow the company enjoy roughly 48% of the profit" (Thompson, 2009, p. 3). This nearly equal spit of profits has a two-fold strategy at its heart: first, it indicates that owners and associates are on an equal footing and that both depend upon one another for success; second, it rewards employees for growing the market center by bringing in new agents. The profit-sharing system is set up to share the profits of agents with those in the office who helped to recruit them. Thus, if Agent X brings three new agents to the company, a percentage of their profits will be shared between the owners of the market center Agent X since he is responsible for their being there in the first place. It is a system of reciprocity that is attractive for agents and in return they are compelled to help teach, guide and support new...
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