I've seen a company that had a very progressive way to do bonuses:
(1) employee was educated/trained on how to set their own goals. Goals reviewed/modified/agreed with supervisor. Goals went from peer-review of performance to achievement of activities with quantitative measures. I was pleasantly surprised to see a real effort to eliminate the "subjective" part of a performance review.
(2) goals adjusted throughout year as required or as projects were completed/killed off. I never did quite understand how this plus-minus activity was managed during the course of twelve months. But there was a minimum of a quarterly review and reset of goals for each employee.
(3) employee was allowed to be kept up to date on their status constantly through computerized system, so they knew their score
(4) part of performance goals was a "stretch" goal agreed to by employee/supervisor. Wasn't impossible to reach, but you really had to hustle hard to achieve it. I was told that about 25% were able to achieve their stretch goal.
(5) bonus money was serious, not some piddly $1000 or $4000, but $25000 to $40000.
(6) this company also was a team-based production environment and the employees were empowered to run their own teams. Part of the performance criteria was team performance. If a team member didn't hustle for the team, the team "voted him off the island".
The results that I saw were a very well run production company. Employees were highly motivated and actually running on the factory floor. The lesson I got from this observation: if you clearly define goals and empower the employee to set those goals, and empower them to actually direct their activities to achieve those goals, and keep them informed as to their status, then they will achieve. And they should be rewarded appropriately. For those production workers, the self-empowered chance to double their salary was a very powerful motivator to superior performance for the company.
TygerDawg
Blue Technik LLC
Advanced Robotics & Automation Engineering