Champions Fax Archive
People First Pays (and Besides,
It's Biblical) - Part
2
by Tom Tumblin
Volume 4, Number 11, May 30, 1999
The last ChampsFax outlined three of
the seven dimensions for putting people first in organizations. They
were foster employment security, practice selective hiring, and implement
self-managed teams and decentralization. Jeffrey Pfeffer's book The
Human Equation: Building Profits by Putting People First suggests all
of the seven elements are required to maximize effectiveness. This ChampsFax
will describe the remaining dimensions and offer possible applications
to the local church.
4. Pay well for performance. Compare
that principle with the common church staff testimony: "We could always
make more in business, but this is a church." When the worker is due
the wage because of exceptional faithfulness and effectiveness, compensation
must be just. Various church salary surveys are available now to help
test whether the package is competitive. Pfeffer reminds us that contingent
compensation options can help add reward for missional impact. These
include gain sharing, profit sharing, stock ownership, pay for skill
and individual and team incentives. Some churches provide a year-end
bonus for exceeding annual ministry targets. The reward for a successful
project might be a $300 weekend away at the church's expense. It might
be access to a rare training event. Since most of us are not called
to forfeit a livable income, market pressures point us back to the Biblical
principle of generosity. Higher compensation can also protect the congregation
from losing their pastor to another church willing to pay more.
5. Provide extravagant training. Flat,
flexible, high performance organizations are characterized by lavish
training because decision making is pushed to the frontline servant.
A recent study of automobile plants revealed that Japanese production
workers receive 700 percent more training than their American company
counterparts. The extensive training allows the worker to change quickly
because of a deeper understanding of the company culture and practices.
Motorola requires forty hours of training per employee at an estimated
cost of $170 million annually. What do you invest in your staff?
6. Remove status barriers. "This is accomplished
in two principal ways - symbolically, through the use of language and
labels, physical space, and dress, and substantively, in the reduction
of the organization's degree of wage inequality, particularly across
levels." In some churches, the leaders are the ones with the robes on
with all of the perks. In others, it would be difficult to pick the
leaders out of the crowd by dress or by paycheck. If Galatians 3 is
true, tear down the walls.
7. Knowledge is power - share it. Some
companies like Whole Foods Markets and AES Corporation share so much
information about financial performance, strategy and operational measures
that every one of their employees are considered "insiders" by the Securities
Exchange Commission for stock trading purposes. Whole Foods places a
book in every store that lists by name the previous year's salary and
bonus for all its 6500 employees, simply to build trust. Any staff person
willing to lay their life down for Christ's mission in the church has
earned the right to know.
The Human Equation (1998) is available
from Harvard Business School Press and can be found on Amazon.com.
- Tom Tumblin, former executive pastor
of Ginghamsburg Church, becomes associate professor of leadership and
associate director of the D.Min. program at Asbury Seminary in July.
You can contact him at TTumblin@juno.com.
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