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Academy of Management Executive, 1995
Vol. 9 No. I
AN ACADEMY
CLASSIC
On the folly
of rewarding A, while hoping for B
Steven Kerr
Executive Overview
This article, updated for AME, needs no introduction
[1]. Even today, the original article
is still widely reprinted. Now part of the lexicon, it
truly qualifies as an Academy of
Management Classic. For almost twenty years, its title
has reminded executives and
scholars alike "it's the reward system,
stupid!" We hope you enjoy the update!
Whether dealing with monkeys, rats, or human beings,
it is hardly controversial to state
that most organisms seek information concerning what
activities are rewarded, and then
seek to do (or at least pretend to do) those things,
often to the virtual exclusion of
activities not rewarded. The extent to which this
occurs of course will depend on the
perceived attractiveness of the rewards offered, but
neither operant nor expectancy
theorists would quarrel with the essence of this
notion.
Nevertheless, numerous examples exist of reward
systems that are fouled up in that the
types of behavior rewarded are those which the
rewarder is trying to discourage, while the
behavior desired is not being rewarded at all.
Fouled Up Systems
In Politics
Official goals are "purposely vague and general
and do not indicate . . . the host of
decisions that must be made among alternative ways of
achieving official goals and the
priority of multiple goals ...[2] They usually may be
relied on to offend absolutely no
one, and in this sense can be considered high
acceptance, low quality goals. An example
might be "All Americans are entitled to health
care." Operative goals are higher
in quality but lower in acceptance, since they specify
where the money will come from, and
what alternative goals will be ignored.
The American citizenry supposedly wants its candidates
for public office to set forth
operative goals, making their proposed programs clear,
and specifying sources and uses of
funds. However, since operative goals are lower in
acceptance, and since aspirants to
public office need acceptance (from at least 50.1
percent of the people), most politicians
prefer to speak only of official goals, at least until
after the election. They of course
would agree to speak at the operative level if
"punished " for not doing so. The
electorate could do this by refusing to support
candidates who do not speak at the
operative level. Instead, however, the American voter
typically punishes (withholds
support from) candidates who frankly discuss where the
money will come from; rewards
politicians who speak only of official goals, but
hopes that candidates (despite the
reward system) will discuss the issues operatively.
In War
If some oversimplification may be permitted, let it be
assumed that the primary goal of
the organization (Pentagon, Luftwaffe, or whatever) is
to win. Let it be assumed further
that the primary goal of most individuals on the front
lines is to get home alive. Then
there appears to be an important conflict in goals --
personally rational behavior by
those at the bottom will endanger goal attainment by
those at the top.
But not necessarily! It depends on how the reward
system is set up. The Vietnam war was
indeed a study of disobedience and rebellion, with
terms such as fragging" (killing
one's own commanding officer) and "search and
evade" becoming part of the
military vocabulary. The difference in subordinates'
acceptance of authority between World
War II and Vietnam is reported to be considerable, and
veterans of the Second World War
were often quoted as being outraged at the mutinous
actions of many American soldiers in
Vietnam.
Consider, however, some critical differences in the
reward system in use during the two
conflicts. What did the GI in World War II want? To go
home. And when did he get to go
home? When the war was won! If he disobeyed the orders
to clean out the trenches and take
the hills, the war would not be won and he would not
go home. Furthermore, what were his
chances of attaining his goal (getting home alive) if
he obeyed the order s compared to
his chances if he did not? What is being suggested is
that the rational soldier in World
War II, whether patriotic or not, probably found it
expedient to obey.
Consider the reward system in use in Vietnam. What did
the soldier at the bottom want? To
go home. And when did he get to go home? When his tour
of duty was over! This was the case
whether or not the war was won. Furthermore,
concerning the relative chance of getting
home alive by obeying orders compared to the chance if
they were disobeyed, it is worth
noting that a mutineer in Vietnam was far more likely
to be assigned rest and
rehabilitation (on the assumption that fatigue was the
cause) than he was to suffer any
negative consequence.
In his description of the "zone of indifference,
" Barnard stated that "a
person can and will accept a communication as
authoritative only when . . . at the time of
his decision, he believes it to be compatible with his
personal interests as a whole"
[3]. In light of the reward system used in Vietnam,
wouldn't it have been personally
irrational for some orders to have been obeyed? Was
not the military implementing a system
which rewarded disobedience, while hoping that
soldiers (despite the reward system) would
obey orders?
In Medicine
Theoretically, physicians can make either of two types
of error, and intuitively one seems
as bad as the other. Doctors can pronounce patients
sick when they are actually well (a
type 1 error), thus causing them needless anxiety and
expense, curtailment of enjoyable
foods and activities, and even physical danger by
subjecting them to needless medication
and surgery. Alternately, a doctor can label a sick
person well (a type 2 error), and thus
avoid treating what may be a serious, even fatal
ailment. It might be natural to conclude
that physicians seek to minimize both types of error.
Such a conclusion would be wrong. It has been
estimated that numerous Americans have been
afflicted with iatrogenic (physician caused) illnesses
[4]. This occurs when the doctor is
approached by someone complaining of a few stray
symptoms. The doctor classifies and
organizes these symptoms, gives them a name, and
obligingly tells the patient what further
symptoms may be expected. This information often acts
as a self-fulfilling prophecy, with
the result that from that day on the patient for all
practical purposes is sick.
Why does this happen? Why are physicians so reluctant
to sustain a type 2 error
(pronouncing a sick person well) that they will
tolerate many type 1 errors? Again, a look
at the reward system is needed. The punishments for a
type 2 error are real: guilt,
embarrassment, and the threat of a malpractice suit.
On the other hand, a type 1 error
(labeling a well person sick) is a much safer and
conservative approach to medicine in
today's litigious society. Type 1 errors also are
likely to generate increased income and
a stream of steady customers who, being well in a
limited physiological sense, will not
embarrass the doctor by dying abruptly. Fellow
physicians and the general public there
fore are really rewarding type 1 errors while hoping
fervently that doctors will try not
to make them.
A current example of rewarding type 1 errors is
provided by Broward County, Florida, where
an elderly or disabled person facing a competency
hearing is evaluated by three
court-appointed experts who get paid much more for the
same examination if the person is
ruled to be incompetent. For example, psychiatrists
are paid $325 if they judge someone to
be incapacitated, but earn only $125 if the person is
judged competent. Court-appointed
attorneys in Broward also earn more $325 as opposed to
$175 if their clients lose than if
they win. Are you surprised to learn that, of 598
incapacity proceedings initiated and
completed in the county in 1993, 570 ended with a
verdict of incapacitation? [5]
In Universities
Society hopes that professors will not neglect their
teaching responsibilities but rewards
them almost entirely for research and publications.
This is most true at the large and
prestigious universities. Cliches such as "good
research and good teaching go
together" notwithstanding, professors often find
that they must choose between
teaching and research-oriented activities when
allocating their time. Rewards for good
teaching are usually limited to outstanding teacher
awards, which are given to only a
small percentage of good teachers and usually bestow
little money and fleeting prestige.
Punishments for poor teaching are also rare.
Rewards for research and publications, on the other
hand, and punishments for failure to
accomplish these, are common. Furthermore, publication-
oriented resumes usually will be
well-received at other universities, whereas teaching
credentials, harder to document and
quantify, are much less transferable. Consequently it
is rational for university
professors to concentrate on research, even to the
detriment of teaching and at the
expense of their students.
By the same token, it is rational for students to act
based upon the goal displacement [6]
which has occurred within universities concerning what
they are rewarded for. If it is
assumed that a primary goal of a university is to
transfer knowledge from teacher to
student, then grades become identifiable as a means
toward that goal, serving as
motivational, control, and feedback devices t o
expedite the knowledge transfer. Instead,
however, the grades themselves have become much more
important for entrance to graduate
school, successful employment, tuition refunds, and
parental respect, than the knowledge
or lack of knowledge they are supposed to signify.
It therefore should come as no surprise that we find
fraternity files for examinations,
term paper writing services, and plagiarism. Such
activities constitute a personally
rational response to a reward system which pays off
for grades rat her than knowledge.
These days, reward systems specifically, the growing
threat of lawsuits encourage teachers
to award students high grades, even if they aren't
earned. For example:
When Andy Hansen brought home a report card with a
disappointing C in math, his parents
... sued his teacher.... After a year and six
different appeals within the school
district, another year's worth of court proceedings,
$4000 in legal fees paid by the
Hansens, and another $8500 by the district . . . the C
stands. Now the student's father,
auto dealer Mike Hansen, says he plans to take the
case to the State Court of Appeals....
" We went in and tried to make a deal: They
wanted a C, we wanted an A, so why not
compromise on a B?" Mike Hansen said. "But
they dug in their heels, and here we
are " [7].
In Consulting
It is axiomatic that those who care about a firm's
well-being should insist that the
organization get fair value for its expenditures. Yet
it is commonly known that firms
seldom bother to evaluate a new TQM, employee
empowerment program, or whatever, to see if
the company is getting its money's worth. Why?
Certainly it is not because people have not
pointed out that this situation exists; numerous
practitioner-oriented articles are
written each year on just this point.
One major reason is that the individuals (in human
resources, or organization development)
who would normally be responsible for conducting such
evaluations are the same ones often
charged with introducing the change effort in the
first place. Having convinced top
management to spend money, say, on outside
consultants, they usually are quite animated
afterwards in collecting rigorous vignettes and
anecdotes about how successful the program
was. The last thing many desire is a formal, revealing
evaluation. Although members of top
management may actually hope for such systematic
evaluation, their reward systems continue
to reward ignorance in this area. And if the HR
department abdicates its responsibility,
who is to step into the breach? The consultants
themselves? Hardly! They are likely to be
too busy collecting anecdotal " evidence" of
their own, for use on their next
client.
In Sports
Most coaches disdain to discuss individual
accomplishments, preferring to speak of
teamwork, proper attitude, and one-for-all spirit.
Usually, however, rewards are
distributed according to individual performance. The
college basketball player who passes
the ball to teammates instead of shooting will not
compile impressive scoring statistics
and is less likely to be drafted by the pros. The
ballplayer who hits to right field to
advance the runners will win neither the batting nor
home run titles, and will be offered
smaller raises. It therefore is rational for players
to think of themselves first, and the
team second.
In Government
Consider the cost-plus contract or its next of kin,
the allocation of next year's budget
as a direct function of this year's expenditures a
clear-cut example of a fouled up reward
system. It probably is conceivable that those who
award such budgets and contracts really
hope for economy and prudence in spending. It is
obvious, however, that adopting the
proverb "to those who spend shall more be
given," rewards not economy, but
spending itself.
In Business
The past reward practices of a group health claims
division of a large eastern insurance
company provides another rich illustration. Attempting
to measure and reward accuracy in
paying surgical claims, the firm systematically kept
track of the number of returned
checks and letters of complaint received from
policyholders. However, underpayments were
likely to provoke cries of outrage from the insured,
while overpayments often were
accepted in courteous silence. Since it was often
impossible to tell from the physician's
statement which of two surgical procedures, with
different allowable benefits, was
performed, and since writing for clarifications would
have interfered with other standards
used by the firm concerning percentage of claims paid
within two days of receipt, the new
hire in more than one claims section was soon
acquainted with the informal norm:
"When in doubt, pay it out!"
This situation was made even worse by the firm's
reward system. The reward system called
for annual merit increases to be given to all
employees, in one of the following three
amounts:
1. If the worker was "outstanding" (a
select category, into which no more
than two employees per section could be placed): 5
percent
2. If the worker was "above average"
(normally all workers not
"outstanding" were so rated): 4 percent
3. If the worker committed gross acts of negligence
and irresponsibility for which he or
she might be discharged in many other companies: 3
percent.
Now, since the difference between the five percent
theoretically attainable through
hard work and the four percent attainable merely by
living until the review date is small,
many employees were rather indifferent to the
possibility of obtaining the extra one
percent reward. In addition, since the penalty for
error was a loss of only one percent,
employees tended to ignore the norm concerning
indiscriminant payments.
However, most employees were not indifferent to a rule
which stated that, should absences
or latenesses total three or more in any six-month
period, the entire four or five percent
due at the next merit review must be forfeited. In
this sense, the firm was hoping for
performance, while rewarding attendance. What it got,
of course, was attendance. (If the
absence/lateness rule appears to the reader to be
stringent, it really wasn't. The company
counted "times" rather than "days"
absent, and a ten-day absence
therefore counted the same as one lasting two days. A
worker in danger of accumulating a
third absence within six months merely had to remain
ill away from work during a second
absence until the first absence was more than six
months old. The limiting factor was that
at some point salary ceases, and sickness benefits
take over. This was usually sufficient
to get the younger workers to return, but for those
with 20 or more years' service, the
company provided sickness benefits of 90 percent of
normal salary, tax-free!
Therefore....).
Thanks to the U.S. government, even the reporting of
wrongdoing has been corrupted by an
incredibly incompetent reward system that calls for
whistleblowing employees to collect up
to thirty percent of the amount of a fraud without a
stated limit. Thus prospective
whistleblowers are encouraged to delay reporting a
fraud, even to actively participate in
its continuance, in order to run up the total and,
thus, their percentage of the take.
I'm quite sure that by now the reader has thought of
numerous examples in his or her own
experience which qualify as "folly."
However, just in case, Table 1 presents
some additional examples well worth pondering.
Table 1
Common Management Reward Follies |
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Causes
Extremely diverse instances of systems which reward
behavior A although the rewarder
apparently hopes for behavior B have been given. These
are useful to illustrate the
breadth and magnitude of the phenomenon, but the
diversity increases the difficulty of
determining commonalties and establishing causes.
However, the following four general
factors may be pertinent to an explanation of why
fouled-up reward systems seem to be so
prevalent.
1. Fascination with an "Objective"
Criterion
Many managers seek to establish simple, quantifiable
standards against which to measure
and reward performance. Such efforts may be successful
in highly predictable areas within
an organization, but are likely to cause goal
displacement when applied anywhere else.
2. Overemphasis on Highly Visible Behaviors
Difficulties often stem from the fact that some parts
of the task are highly visible while
other parts are not. For example, publications are
easier to demonstrate than teaching,
and scoring baskets and hitting home runs are more
readily observable than feeding
teammates and advancing base runners. Similarly, the
adverse consequences of pronouncing a
sick person well are more visible than those sustained
by labeling a well person sick.
Team building and creativity are other examples of
behaviors which may not be rewarded
simply because they are hard to observe.
3. Hypocrisy
In some of the instances described the rewarder may
have been getting the desired
behavior, notwithstanding claims that the behavior was
not desired. For example, in many
jurisdictions within the U.S., judges' campaigns are
funded largely by defense attorneys,
while prosecutors are legally barred from making
contributions. This doesn't do a whole
lot to help judges to be "tough on crime"
though, ironically, that's what their
campaigns inevitably promise.
4. Emphasis on Morality or Equity Rather than
Efficiency
Sometimes consideration of other factors prevents the
establishment of a system which
rewards behavior desired by the rewarder. The felt
obligation of many Americans to vote
for one candidate or another, for example, may impair
their ability to withhold support
from politicians who refuse to discuss the issues.
Similarly, the concern for spreading
the risks and costs of wartime military service may
outweigh the advantage to be obtained
by committing personnel to combat until the war is
over. The 1994 Clinton health plan, the
Americans with Disabilities Act, and many other
instances of proposed or recent
governmental intervention provide outstanding examples
of systems that reward
inefficiency, presumably in support of some higher
objective.
Altering the Reward System
Managers who complain about lack of motivation in
their workers might do well to consider
the possibility that the reward systems they have
installed are paying off for behavior
other than what they are seeking. This, in part, is
what happened in Vietnam, and this is
what regularly frustrates societal efforts to bring
about honest politicians and
civic-minded managers.
A first step for such managers might be to explore
what types of behavior are currently
being rewarded. Chances are excellent that these
managers will be surprised by what they
find that their firms are not rewarding what they
assume they are. In fact, such
undesirable behavior by organizational members as they
have observed may be explained
largely by the reward systems in use.
This is not to say that all organizational behavior is
determined by formal rewards and
punishments. Certainly it is true that in the absence
of formal reinforcement some
soldiers will be patriotic, some players will be team
oriented, and some employees will
care about doing their job well. The point, however,
is that in such cases the rewarder is
not causing the behavior desired but is only a
fortunate bystander. For an organization to
act upon its members, the formal reward system should
positively reinforce desired
behavior, not constitute an obstacle to be overcome.
Postscript
An irony about this article's being designated a
management classic is that numerous
people claim to have read and enjoyed it, but I wonder
whether there was much in it that
they didn't know. I believe that most readers already
knew, and act on in their non-work
lives, the principles that underlie this article. For
example, when we tell our daughter
(who is about to cut her birthday cake) that her
brother will select the first piece, or
inform our friends before a meal that separate
checks will be brought at the end,
or tell the neighbor's boy that he will be paid five
dollars for cutting the lawn after
we inspect the lawn, we are making use of
prospective rewards and punishments to cause
other people to care about our own objectives.
Organizational life may seem to be more
complex, but the principles are the same.
Another irony attached to this "classic" is
that it almost didn't see the light
of day. It was rejected for presentation at the
Eastern Academy of Management and was only
published in The Academy of Management Journal because
Jack Miner, its editor at the time,
broke a tie between two reviewers. Nobody denied the
relevance of the content, but
reviewers were quite disturbed by the tone of the
manuscript, and therefore its
appropriateness for an academic audience. A compromise
was reached whereby I added a bit
of the great academic cure-all, data (Table 1 in the
original article, condensed and
summarized in this update), and a copy editor
strangled some of the life from my writing
style. In this respect, I would like to acknowledge
the extremely competent editorial work
performed on this update by John Veiga and his
editorial staff. I am grateful to have had
the opportunity to revisit the article, and hope the
reader has enjoyed it also.
Endnotes
[1] Originally published in 1975. Academy of
Management Journal, 18, 769-783.
[2] Charles Perrow, "The Analysis of Goals
in Complex Organizations," in
A. Etzioni (ed.), Readings on Modern Organizations
(Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall,
1969). 66.
[3] Chester I. Barnard, The Functions of the
Executive (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 1964), 165.
[4] L.H. Garland, "Studies of the Accuracy
of Diagnostic Procedures,"
American Journal Roentgenological, Radium Therapy
Nuclear Medicine, Vol. 82, 1959, 25- 38:
and Thomas J. Scheff, "Decision Rules, Types of
Error, and Their Consequences in
Medical Diagnosis," in F. Massarik and P. Ratoosh
(eds.) Mathematical Explorations in
Behavioral Science (Homewood, IL: Irwin, 1965).
[5] Miami Herald, May 8, 1994. la. 10a.
[6] Goal displacement results when means become
ends in themselves and displace the
original goals. See Peter M. Blau and W. Richard
Scott, Formal Organizations (San
Francisco, CA: Chandler, 1962).
[7] San Francisco Examiner, reported in
Fortune, February 7, 1994, 161.
About the Author
Steven Kerr (Ph.D., City University of New York) is a
visiting professor of management in
the University of Michigan business school, and has
recently assumed the position of Vice
President, Corporate Management Development. for
General Electric Co. (managing
Crotonville). He has been on the faculties of Ohio
State University and the University of
Southern California (where he was Dean of the Faculty
from 1985-89), and was President of
the Academy of Management from 1989-90.
More on the
folly [1]
Periodically, we conduct an informal poll of our
Executive Advisory Panel for their views
on topics that appear in AME articles. In this issue,
we have published an updated version
of Steven Kerr's "On the Folly of Rewarding A,
While Hoping for B." Since t his
article was first published twenty years ago, we
wondered how much progress corporate
America has made in addressing Kerr's
"folly." Here's what our Panel members
told us. See if it rings true for you.
The Editors
Ninety percent of our respondents told us that Kerr's
folly is still prevalent in
corporate America today. Over half concluded that the
folly is widespread in their
companies. What was true two decades ago remains so
today managers still cling to
quantifiable standards when they reward others and as
their primary explanation for the
folly's perniciousness.
While the historical fundamentals of the folly are
still intact, some of the examples our
panel members provided are of recent vintage. Here are
what a few of them reported:
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