The Perversity of Incentives

The Perversity of Incentives

How do you make sure you aren't creating adversaries out of your stakeholders with bad policies? This newsletter first appeared on the DuhaOne substack .

Leadership Moment: Tipping Over The Edge

A summer camp that hires mostly young adults (high school/college) as its camp counselors has what is probably a standard policy: its counselors do not accept tips (while an understandable choice, not one supported by an argument that the counselors are well-compensated, but that’s a conversation for a different day). A multi-year counselor is, on the last day of camp, handed a sizable gratuity–but not by the parent, who the counselors don’t interact with, also by policy, but by the young camper.

The counselor turns the gratuity in to the camp office (as specified by policy), expecting it to fund the counselor end-of-summer party. To their surprise, they’re informed it will go into the camp’s scholarship fund for next year. To a friend, the counselor confides, “That’s the last time I turn in a tip.”

With a handful of policies, the camp creates an environment that teaches future leaders to be adversarial with their employers (maybe that was their point, but I doubt it), rather than thinking through how their policies incentivize the wrong sort of behavior.

Appearances

Recent

Sep 10: Aphinia vcast: Life after CISO

Sep 10: CISO Series Podcast: Our Cybersecurity Journey Starts With a Single Overworked Staffer

Upcoming

Sep 24: HOU.SEC.CON (Houston). Slides .

Oct 9: ASPM Nation (virtual)

One Minute Pro Tip: People and Systems Aren’t Static

“Unexpectedly.” It’s one of the more expected words to hear from a policymaker, when they are surprised by a policy change not having the desired outcome. This ranges from family units to small organizations to nation states, and represents a failure of imagination. Of course when a policy change happens, people affected by the policy might make different choices–whether it’s to leave your jurisdiction (by quitting when you mandate 5 days a week in the office, perhaps), or to change their behavior.

When you’re going to change a policy, take a few minutes to ask what behavior you’re hoping to not see after the policy change, and then ask yourself how someone might still engage in that anyway. This should probably be on top of asking what behavior you want to see, and modeling how someone might not do that.

Leadership Q&A: Don’t Give An Easy Out

Leader P reaches out with the following problem: I own a small medspa business. In addition to myself and a few employees, I also have another individual who rents one of my rooms on the weekend, using my equipment, in exchange for a percentage of their income. Their income is small in proportion to the time the room is used, but I believe that is due to their discounted pricing. One recent weekend, however, the usage on the equipment was well above normal (about double the amount the equipment gets used in an entire week by everyone else combined). They did notice, and paid me a bit extra, but this doesn’t feel right–at that usage rate, they should be bringing in far more than they are, and my percentage would be much higher. More importantly, though, the equipment isn’t decided to be used at that high of a rate. How should I structure a penalty for going over some limit on the equipment?

Well, P, this is ... This newsletter continues on the DuhaOne substack .

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Andy Ellis的更多文章

  • An Inclusion Armistice

    An Inclusion Armistice

    How do we celebrate diverse perspectives without needing to denigrate one? This newsletter first appeared on the…

    3 条评论
  • Electing to Practice the Future

    Electing to Practice the Future

    It's easy to just respond in the moment — but think about how your choices might affect the future. This post first…

    3 条评论
  • Speak First, Even If You Carry A Big Stick

    Speak First, Even If You Carry A Big Stick

    The earlier your words come into play, the more you can shape the encounter. This post first appeared in the Duha One…

    2 条评论
  • Managing the End of The Year

    Managing the End of The Year

    The end of the year feels like a crisis, with too much happening in constrained time. Don't add micromanagement hassles…

    3 条评论
  • Including

    Including

    We always need to include even those that we've dismissed as not needing it. This newsletter first appeared on the Duha…

    5 条评论
  • Get out of your team's way

    Get out of your team's way

    Great leaders put their team in place to succeed ..

    3 条评论
  • Names are models

    Names are models

    How you name something can change the mental model of your listener. This newsletter first appeared on the Duha One…

    3 条评论
  • Bad Representation is worse than Under Representation

    Bad Representation is worse than Under Representation

    You can't throw women under the bus of under-representation just to improve your stats. This newsletter first appeared…

    7 条评论
  • Fetching Rocks

    Fetching Rocks

    It's hard to succeed when the goalposts keep moving. This newsletter first appeared on the DuhaOne substack.

  • A New Champion Emerges

    A New Champion Emerges

    It's the end of an era in women's football ..

    3 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了