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A law that sets wage rates for laborers employed by contractors working for the federal government |
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Walsh-Healey Public Contract Act (1936) |
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A law that requires minimum wage and working conditions for employees working on any government contract amounting to more than $10,000 |
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Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act |
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Definition
makes it unlawful for employers to discriminate against any individual with respect to hiring, compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment because of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin |
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Direct Financial Payments |
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pay in the form of wages, salaries, incentives, commissions, and bonuses |
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Indirect Financial Payments |
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Pay in the form of financial benefits such as insurance |
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Fair Labor Standards Act (1938) |
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This act provides for minimum wages, maximum hours, overtime pay for nonexempt employees after 40 hours of work per week, and child labor protection. The law has been ameded many times and covers most employees |
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an ammendment to the fair labor standards act designed to require equal pay for women doing the same work as men |
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Employee Retirement Income Security Act |
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The law that provides government protection of pensions for all employes with company pension plans. It also regulates vesting rights (employees who leave before retirement may claim compensation from the pension plan. |
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Age Discrimination in Employment Act |
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Prohibits age discrimination against employees who are 40 yars of age and older in all aspects of employment including compensation |
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a total reward package specifically aimed at eliciting the employee behaviors the firm needs to support and acheive its competitive strategy |
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The Americans with Disabilities Act |
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prohibits discrimination against qualified persons with disailities in all aspects of employment including compensation |
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The Family and Medical Leave Act |
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entitles eligible employees both men and women to take up to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave for the birth of a child or for the care of a child, spouse, or parent |
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Term
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how a jobs pay rate in one company compares to the jobs pay rate in ither companies |
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how fair the jobs pay rate is when compared t other jobs within the same company |
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how far an individuals pay compared with what his or her co-workers are earning for the same or very similar jobs within the company |
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the perceived fairness of the process and procedures to make decisions regarding the allocation of pay |
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a salary inequity problem, generally caused by inflation, resulting in longer-term employees in a position earning less than workers entering the firm today |
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monitor and maintain external equity |
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Job analysis and evaluation |
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Definition
to maintain internal equity |
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Performance appraisal and incentive pay |
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to maintain individual equity |
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comunications, grievance mechanisms, and employees participation |
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to help ensure that employees view the pay pocess as transparent and fair |
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the equity theory of motivation |
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states that if a person perceives an inequity, the person will be motivated to reduce or eliminate the tension and perceived inequality |
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Establishing pay rates Step 1: the salary survey |
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Definition
- aimed at determining prevailing wage rates - Formal written questionaire surveys are the most comprehensive, but telephone surveys and newspaper ads are also sources of information |
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a job that is used to anchor the employers pay scale and around which other jobs are arranged in order or relative worth |
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Establishing pay rates Step 2: Job Evaluation |
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- a systematic comparison done in order to determine the worth of one job relative to another Compensable factor- a fundamental compensable element of a job, such as skilss, effort, responsibility, and working conditions |
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Preparing for the job evaluation |
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Definition
identifying the need for the job evaluation getting the cooperation of employees choosing an evaluation committee performing the actual evaluation |
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- obtain job information - select and group jobs - select compensable factors -rank jobs - combine ratings |
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Term
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raters categorize jobs into groups or classes of jobs that are of roughly the same value for pay purposes -classes contain similar jobs - grades are jobs that are similar in difficulty but otherwise different - jobs are classes by the amount or level of compensable factors they contain |
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Definition
a quantitative technique that involves: - identifying the degree to which each compensable factors are present in the job - awarding points for each degree of each factor - calculating a total point value for the job by adding up the corresponding points for each factor |
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Definition
each job is ranked several times- once for each of the several compensable factors - the rankings for each job are combined into an overall numerical rating for the job |
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computerized job evaluations |
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Definition
- a computerized system that uses a structured questinnaire and statistical models to streamline the job evaluation process Advantages to this include: - simplify job analysis - help keep job descriptions up to date - increase evluation objectivity - reduce time spent in committee meetings - ease the burden of system maintenance |
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Establishing pay rates Step 3: group similar jobs into pay grades |
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Definition
a pay grade is comprised of jobs of appx. equl difficulty or importance established by job evaluation -point method - ranking method - classification method |
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Establishing Pay Rates Step 4: Price each pay grade |
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Definition
wage curve - shows the pay rates urrently paid for jobs in each pay grade, relative to the points or ranking assigned to each job or grade by the job evaluaton - Shows the relationships between the value of the job as determined by one of the job evaluation methods and the current average pay rates for your grades |
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Establishing pay rates Step 5: Fine-tune pay rates |
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Definition
developing pay ranges - flexibility in meeting external job market rates - easier for employees to move into higher pay grades - allows for rewarding performance differences and seniority Correcting out-of-line ranges - raising underpaid jobs to the minimum of the rate range for their pay scale - freezing rates or cutting pay rates for overpaid jobs to maximum in the pay range for their pay grade |
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Term
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Definition
where the company pays for the employees range, depth, and types of skills and knowledge, rather than for the job title he or she holds |
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main components of skill/competency/knowledge-based pay programs |
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Definition
- a system that defines specific skills, and a process for tying the persons pay to his or her skill - A training system that lets employees seek and acquire skills - a formal competency testing system - a work design that lets employees move among jobs to permit work assignment flexibility |
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competency- based pay: Pros and Cons |
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Definition
Pros: - High Quality - Lower absenteeism and fewer accidents Cons: -Pay program implementation problems - cost implications of paying for unused knowledge, skills, and behaviors - complexity of program - uncertainty that the program improves productivity |
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Definition
consolidating salary grades and ranges into just a few wide levels or bands, each of whch contains a relatively wide range of jobs and salary levels |
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Factor Comparison Job Evaluation Method |
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Definition
1. obtain job information 2. select key benchmark jobs 3. rank key jobs by factor 4. distribute wage rates by factors 5. rank key jobs according to wages assigned o each factor 6. compare the two sets of rankings to screen out unusable key jobs 7. construct the job-comparison scale 8. use the job-comparison scale |
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Point Method of Job Evaluation |
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Definition
1. determine clusters of jobs to be evaluated 2. collect job information 3. select compensable factors 4. define compensable factors 5. define factor degrees 6. determine relative vales of factors |
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financial rewards paid to workers whose production exceeds a predetermined standard |
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Definition
popularized scientific management and the use of financial incentives in the late 1800's |
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the tendency of employees to work at the slowest pace possible and to produce at the minimum acceptable level |
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Law of Individual Differences |
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Definition
-the fact that people differ in personality, abilities, values, and needs - different people react in different incentives in different ways - managers should be aware of employee needs and fine-tune the incentives offered to meet their needs - money is not the only motivator |
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maslows hierarchy of needs |
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Definition
- physiological - security - social - self-esteem -self actualization - lower needs must be satisfied before higher level needs can be addressed or become of interest to the individual |
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Herzberg's hygiene-motivator theory |
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Definition
- hygienes (extrinsic job factors) inadequate working conditions, salary, and incentve pay can cause dissatisfaction and prevent satisfaction - Motivators (intrinsic job factors) job enrichment (challenging job, feedback and recognition) addresses higher-level (achievement, self-actualization) needs |
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Term
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Definition
-behaviors are motivated by the underlying need for competence and self-determination - Offering an extrinsic reward for an intrinsically motivatedact can conflict with the acting individuals internal sense of responsibility - some behaviors are best motivated by job challenge and recognition, others by financial rewards |
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Term
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Definition
- a persons motivation to exert some level of effort is a function of three things: -Expectancy- that effort will lead to performance - instrumentality- that connection between performance and the appropriate reward - Valence- the value the person places on the reward |
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Variable Pay (organizational focus) |
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Definition
a team or group incentive plan that ties pay to some measure of the firms overall profitability |
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Variable Pay (individual focus) |
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any plan that ties pay to individual productivity or profitability, usually as one time lump payments |
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Pay for performance plans |
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Definition
- individual incentive/recognition programs - sales compensation programs - team/group-based variable pay programs - organization wide incentive programs - executive incentive compensation programs |
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Term
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Definition
a fixed sum is paid for each unit the worker produces under an established piece rate standard. An incentive may be paid for exceeding the piece rate standard |
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Term
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Definition
the worker gets a premium equal to the percentage by which his or her performance exceeds the established standard |
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pros and cons of piecework |
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Definition
- easily understandable, equitable, and powerful incentives - employee resistance to changes in standards or work processes affecting output - quality problems caused by overriding output focus - possibility of violating minimum wage standards - employee dissatisfaction when incentives either cannot be earned due to external factors or are withdrawn due to a lack of need for output |
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Term
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Definition
a permanent cumulative salary increase the firm awards to an indvidual employee based on his or her individual performance |
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Term
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Definition
programs offered by online incentives firms that improve and expedite the awards process - broader range of awards - more immediate awards |
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enterprise incentive management |
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Definition
software that automates the planning, calculation, modeling and management of incentive compensation plans, enabling companies to align their employees with corporate strategy and goals |
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Term
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Definition
pay is a combination of salary and commissions usual with a sizable salary component - plan gives salespeople a floor to their earnings - salary component covers company specified service activities - plans tend to become complicated and misunderstandings can result |
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commission plus drawing account plan |
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Definition
commissions are paid but a draw on future earnings helps the salesperson to get through low sales periods |
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commission plus bonus plan |
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Definition
- pay is mostly based on commissions - small bonuses are paid for directed activities like selling slow moving items |
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team or group incentive plan |
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Definition
a plan in which a production standard is set for a specific work group, and its members are paid incentives if the group exceeds the production standard |
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set individual work standards |
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Definition
set work standards for each team member and then calculate each members output members are paid no one of three formulas: - all members receive the same pay earned by the highest producer - all members receive the same pay earned by the lowest producer - all members receive same pay equal to the average pay earned by the group |
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use an engineered production standard based on the output of the group as a whole |
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Definition
all members receive the same pay based on the piece rate for the groups job |
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tie rewards to goals based on an overall standard of group performance |
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Definition
if the firm reaches its goal, the employees share in a percentage of the improvement (in labor costs saved) |
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Definition
employees receive cash shares of the firms profits at regular intervals |
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the lincoln incentive system |
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Definition
profits are distributed to employees based on their individual merit rating |
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deferred profit sharing plans |
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Definition
a predetermined portion of profits is placed in each employees account under a trustees supervision |
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employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) |
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Definition
- a corporation annualy contributes its own stock or cash ( with a limit of 15% of compensation) to be used to purchase the stock- to a trust established for the employees - the trust holds the stock in individual employee accounts and distributes it to employees upon seperation from the firm if the employee has worked long enough to earn ownership of the stock |
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Advantages to ESOP for employees |
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Definition
- esop's help employees develop a sense of ownership in and commitment to the firm and help build teamwork - no taxes on ESOP are due until employees receive a distribution from the trust, usually at retirement when their tax rate is lower |
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Advantages of ESOP for stockholders |
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Definition
helps diversify their assets by placing their shares of company stock into an ESOP trust and allowing them to purchase other marketable securities for themselves in their place |
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Advantages of ESOP for the company |
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Definition
- a tax deductible equal to the fair market value of the shares transferred to the trustee - an income tax deduction for dividends paid on ESOP owned stock - the employee retirement income security act allows a firm to borrow against employee stock held in trust and then repay the loan in pre-tax rather than after tax dollars - firms offering ESOP had higher shareholder returns than did those not offering ESOP's |
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Term
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Definition
-Philosophy of cooperation- no us and them attitudes that inhibit employees from developing a sense of ownership in the company - Identity- employees understand the businesses mission and how it operates in terms of customers, prices, costs - competence- the plan depends on a high level of competence from employees at all levels - sharing of benefits formula- employees share 75% of the savings |
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Term
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Definition
- an incentive plan that engages many or all employees in a common effort to achieve a company's productivity objectives - cost savings gain are shared among employees and the company |
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Implementing a Gainsharing Plan |
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Definition
1. establish general goals and objectives 2. choose specific performance measures 3. decide on a functioning formula 4. decide on a method for diving and distributing the employees share of the gains 5. choose the form of payment 6. decide how often to pay bonuses 7. develop the involvement system 8. implement the plan |
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at risk variable pay plans |
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Definition
put some portion of the employees weekly pay at risk - if employees meet or exceed their goals they earn incentives - if they fail to meet their goals they forgo some of the pay they would normally have earned |
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Definition
the right to purchase a specific number of a shares of company stock at a specific price during a specific period of time |
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plans whose payment or value is contingent on financial performance measured against objectives set at the start of a multi-year period |
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payments company's make to departing executives in connection with a change in ownership or control of a company |
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