Page 139 - The Bible On Leadership
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Performance Management                                        125


                  Another example of rewarding people according to their labor was
                Gordon Bethune’s $65 bonus for on-time performance at Continental
                Airlines. Up until that time, such immediate rewards for desired per-
                formance had not been part of Continental’s reward arsenal. Not only
                was the effect immediate and positive, it set the stage for more exten-
                sive, ongoing rewards for positive performance in a number of other
                areas. The ‘‘domino’’ effect of these rewards helped Continental turn
                around to become the profitable, on-time airline it is today.
                  Rewards figure strongly in the Book of Esther, particularly rewards
                bestowed directly from the top of the organization. A great deal of
                thought is given to the question, ‘‘What is to be done for the man the
                king delights to honor?’’ In that story, Mordechai, the Jew whom the
                king’s minister Haman tried to have executed, is led through the streets
                by Haman himself, garbed in a magnificent robe and seated on a power-
                ful steed. Moreover, Haman is forced to shout, ‘‘This is what is done
                for the man the king delights to honor.’’
                  Modern ‘‘kings’’ have dispensed with robes and horses, but the wise
                executive knows that rewards given directly from the top can have a
                large effect on employee actions and productivity. At Custom Research,
                a marketing company with just over one hundred employees, owners
                Jeff and Judy Pope took a large chunk of their profits to reward the
                entire staff when the firm won the coveted Baldrige Award in 1996.
                Rather than award a robed ride on horseback, they took the entire staff
                on a five-day, all-expenses-paid trip to London.
                  An extravagance and an exercise in overkill for a small company?
                Not at all, says Jeff Pope. ‘‘It was money well spent. I’ll do it every
                time. If you share the pie, it gets bigger.’’
                  When Midwest Airlines went public in 1995, CEO Tim Hoeksema
                wanted to give a meaningful and lasting award to the employees who
                helped them get there. And so, over the objections of his investment
                bankers, he insisted that $1 million of stock be set aside for employees,
                even part-timers. This decision echoes King David’s decision to divide
                the spoils of war among all his men, including those who had ‘‘merely’’
                provided support behind the battle lines.
                  Hoeksema’s actions also mirror Joshua’s generosity toward his fol-
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