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The OLC of Human Capital
is circular based on the 6 rotational needs of humans, which mean as
an employer or manager of human capital you cannot fix any of the
human capital issues if you do not comprehend how human capital is
"wired". Just as an organization can either be managed with an
opportunistic or objective attitude, so can a Human Capital Life
Cycle. To treat the variable components of organizational OLC as
objects would undermine the entire CTM philosophy; which is why
understanding how the human capital of how business is "wired" is so
important.
You can measure anything you want, any way
you want, but measuring output and discovering where problems exist,
is only half the problem. But why solve a problem if you are not
going to get credit for it? A common feeling among employees is,
"It's not my job."
Digging deeper into human psychology
provides some basic answers for comprehending the opportunities
associated with understanding the needs of your employees.
The fixed interval schedule (salaried
employees) uses a timing device of some sort. If the employee shows
up to work every day on time and leaves on time, at the end of every
two weeks they get their reward (paycheck). If they fail to do so,
they do not receive a paycheck. But even if they stay late or come
in early every night, they still get the same amount on their
paycheck. One strange thing that happens is that
the people eventually tend to “pace” themselve. They start to
figure out that the only way they can increase their income per hour
is if they spend less time at work actually working. Human
psychology sets in to the point where they begin justifying these
claims with exclamations that they are underpaid, or do not receive
the recognition they deserve, etc. "Why should I try as hard as Joe
does, he is here less than I am and he makes more money...my manager
just likes Joe more than me."
The variable
interval schedule. Variable ratio means you change the
timing of the opportunity when you are rewarded. For example, some
days you may complete 20 sales and the next day 0, but the point is
you never know when the next sale will be. With the variable
interval schedule, people no longer “pace” themselves, because they
no can no longer establish a “rhythm” between behavior and reward.
Most importantly, these schedules are very resistant to extinction.
(WHICH IS THE KEY TO CTM.) An OLC is an OLC regardless of whether it
is measuring human capital or an entire organization; and because it
is based on a biological paradigm, it values variable data as an
opportunity to evolve.
The difference between fixed and
variable interval schedules makes sense, if you think about it. If
you have not gotten a sale for a while, well, it could just be that
you are at a particularly “bad” ratio or interval! Just one more
phone call, maybe this will be the one!
Managerial and employee relations are usually adversarial.
Since neither understands the power of working together for
the benefit of the corporation, both fail to earn
their potential, and thus actually compound the problems of reaching
profitability, rather than solve them.
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