1 / 11

2017 ServiStar Users Group Orlando, FL

Explore the impact of incentives in the post-Wells Fargo era, the significance of company culture, and the role of leadership in managing behaviors. Learn from studies, real examples, and valuable takeaways for fostering a positive workplace environment.

milesclark
Télécharger la présentation

2017 ServiStar Users Group Orlando, FL

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2017 ServiStar Users GroupOrlando, FL

  2. Updates • Jen Kuhn has officially rejoined the MNA Team as VP of Training and Development • She has 7 months left at the “Thank You” Rate! • Added OnBoardAbility to ServiStar • We released our first Audio Podcast Series http://michaelneill.com// • Introduced Vertex Live! • CUES School of Member Experience, September 18-19 Orlando • CUES Quarterly Webinars will now be a Video Cast! • Celebrated our 19th Anniversary!

  3. 2017 ServiStar Users GroupOrlando, FLIncentives In a Post Wells Fargo Era

  4. Incentives in the Post-Wells Fargo EraWhere Wells Fargo’s culture went rogue • The former Wells Fargo CEO wanted everyone who did business with the bank to have eight different products. • Stated values should act as beacons in a company’s culture, guiding daily decision-making, helping employees navigate trade-offs, and aligning everyone on a single trajectory. • Studies have repeatedly validated that workplace environment has the largest influence on employee behavior—more so than individual personality or values. In fact, managers account for at least 70 percent of the variance in employee engagement scores across business units, according to a Gallup estimate.

  5. Incentives in the Post-Wells Fargo Era The L.A. Times reported, “Regional bosses required hourly conferences on her Florida branch’s progress toward daily quotas for opening accounts and selling customers extras such as overdraft protection. Employees who lagged behind had to stay late and work weekends to meet goals, and anyone falling short after two months would be fired.

  6. Incentives in the Post-Wells Fargo Era • Wells Fargo has removed sales incentives, but this alone will not solve the culture problem. • Leadership must invest in culture management. • Culture measurement and management is key to mitigating the risks that negative behaviors can cause within an organization.

  7. Incentives in the Post-Wells Fargo Era • Wells Fargo has removed sales incentives, but this alone will not solve the culture problem. • Culture management provides visibility and early warning for behaviors that are sitting dormant and might cause high risk at any moment. At Wells Fargo, leaders could have identified and altered language from leadership that was inspiring risky behaviors at the manager and employee levels.

  8. Incentives in the Post-Wells Fargo Era • Wells Fargo is not the only bank that has a high-risk culture. CNN recently reported that dozens of employees from other large banks such as Bank of America, Citizens Bank, PNC, and SunTrust have similar sales tactics. • For this reason, financial regulators such as FINRA, the Federal Reserve, the IMF, and the SEC have spoken to the importance of culture measurement and management at financial services companies.

  9. The Book, “Payoff” by Ariely studies, cash incentive, non-cash reward, recognition Results 1-A. Non-Cash 1- B. Recognition Cash Incentive Later Results No Difference in performance between any of the three and even those in a control group that received nothing. “Different types of motivations don’t add up in a simple way,” Ariely states. “In particular, adding money to the equation can backfire and make people less driven. Incentives Work!It’s Just a Shame That They Do!

  10. Core Values Are Important Leading to Core Values Most Important If your organization leads to numbers rather than values, watch out! An organization will get what it is going after. Middle Managers Control Employee Understanding of Core Values via What they value and Their language. Take Aways

  11. Core Values Are Important Incentives Work But So Do Reward and Recognition None of Them Change Behavior Over Time The ServiStar Reward and Recognition Program is Designed to Meet All the Above Criteria Hire for Culture Fit Lead and Coach to Values Take Aways

More Related