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70 (Give or
Take) Motivators, Incentives and Recognitions for Higher Collections Results!
By Vilis Ozols, MBA, CSP
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here for information about reprinting this article)
Getting collectors to want to put forth their maximum effort is a
constant goal of any collections call center. The really good call centers are
constantly running promotions, incentives and contests for their collectors to
make the goals, goal-setting and goal accomplishing fun and effective. In my
position I get to see a lot of agencies. This “fun and effective environment”
goal can be accomplished … I know … I am constantly watching for these and I’ve
seen this in many agencies. Conversely, there are also collections shops that
are struggling and they are likely not doing any of these things. They think
that these are “hokey” and, guess what; they are wondering why they’re not
collecting as well as their competition.
So here is a list of some of the incentives,
motivators, and recognitions that I have come across that you may want
to incorporate into your program … in the event that you aren’t doing
these already. You may also want to mix and match individual components
of these suggestion into something that you’re already doing.
One of the precepts of reward incentive, motivators and
recognitions is simply: “You get more of the behavior that you reward or
recognize.” So, as a collection floor manager, the first mandate is to identify
the specific behavior that you would like to see an increase in … and then
create an incentive, motivation or reward and recognition program around that
behavior. I have seen these sorts of programs work around increasing attendance,
for increasing the actual time that collectors are working at their
phones/desks, increasing promises received, specific payment types received,
overall collections, net fees collected, or commissions to name a few. You can
also create programs to increase the number of suggestions, ideas,
participation, positive reinforcement (“atta-girls”, or “atta-boys”) or
adherence to policies that you’d like to see improved.
Time Off:
Time off is a great incentive when used creatively. You can
give a day off for a month’s worth of perfect attendance (some agencies actually
found that this is too generous as they got too much perfect attendance and then
where giving too many days off). You can have any number of variations as well:
A day off for three months of perfect attendance. Or you can give half-days off
for a perfect attendance goal. Other variations are to have certificates that
are good for leaving an hour early or arriving an hour late (also labeled
“sleep-in” certificates). You may want to have policies about giving notice to
use these types of rewards and making sure that proper phone coverage is not
compromised.
You can also try negative incentives, where you set up
negative consequences for employees that don’t come to work. Some ways that this
can be done is to have a sliding-scale or decreases in commissions if you miss a
certain number of days per week or per month.
Certificates:
You can create or purchase any number of certificates and
for any value. Some ideas are giving discount certificates to local restaurants,
for ice cream, candy, groceries, bowling, sporting events, movies, personal
favors from managements (you can get creative here!), Starbucks or fast food
certificates are some ideas.
Money:
Instant cash rewards are always fun and get a good
response. Nice clean crisp dollar bills, or two dollars bills (yes, you can get
these) or even higher denominations. You can also set up monetary rewards that
get incorporated into the pay check: A bonus for perfect attendance for a month,
three months or a year or for hitting a specific collection goal on a new client
or a special portfolio. You can also set up drawings, where a given behavior,
say each check-by-phone payment booked, gets you a ticket into a drawing. Then
the drawing can be for any number of cool prizes that you choose to opt for,
such as electronic equipment (Ipod, video game consoles or games, music CD’s,
movie DVD’s, Gift cards (Starbucks, Itunes, Best Buy, etc), airline certificates
(maybe redeem frequent flier miles or reward miles for prizes).
Having “luck” or unknown components is also fun. Maybe a
“money tree” where every ten “phone-pays” lets a collector pick an envelope off
of the money tree (The envelopes can contains as little as a $1 bill or have a
really big denomination in one of the envelopes on the tree).
Food:
Food is a huge motivator … and you can get creative with
this. You can have it be very small. Maybe offer a free can of soda to the next
collector to get three payments. You might scoff at something like this, but
fights between collectors have broken out for much less than a can of soda!
There is pride and recognition at stake and you will be pleasantly surprised at
the spikes in productivity that you see. Breakfasts, donuts, snacks, pizza
parties, candy bars, restaurant trips, ordering in lunch, etc., from a favorite
local restaurant or promising a dinner-for-two certificate for a given goal are
all viable approaches.
Make the Collector a Hero
How do you do this? Give out incentives that the collector
can use to be a hero when they get home that they can use with their family or
friends. Buy a very nice bouquet of flowers and give it as a reward for a
certain number of payments and then the flowers go home with the collector that
night (or a bowl of candy, nice chocolates, bottle of wine or Champaign). Other
rewards that fall into this category are toys, hotel/travel rewards,
sporting/concert tickets or spa certificates, to name a few.
Pure Recognition Awards:
Many of the rewards listed so far do involve a cost. Your
job is to figure out what increased productivity is worth to you. If you get the
desired behavior, what are you willing to put our monetarily if that behavior is
achieved? However, there are also very powerful rewards that don’t cost
anything. Maybe you put up a “Brag Board” that employees can write anything
about themselves that they want. Or they can also put up nice things about
others that they experience or observe. Many agencies will have the day’s,
week’s or month’s top collector listed on a board or at the front of the call
center or in the break room. Many a collector has given their all to make it
onto that board. Also, you may want to have more than one person on the board
(maybe the top 3 or 5 or 10, depending on the size of your shop) to encourage
more people to top behavior.
Fun and Unique Rewards:
There are examples of collection agency owners dressing up
in a given costume and wearing it the entire day at the office if a certain team
goal is met. Imagine your agency principle riding a tricycle around the office
in a clown suit (and wearing a big smile because a huge collection goal was met
for him/her to do it!). Or you can have management do an employee car wash
(managers wash employees cars if a goal is met), or cook a pancake breakfast for
employees, or barbeque lunch for them. Another suggestion is to involve star
performing employees in external functions. You’ll be very surprised how many
collectors would love to earn the opportunity to sit in and participate in a
senior staff meeting. Collectors also love the opportunity to get to go to a
local conference, training seminar, or to accompany an owner or salesperson on a
trip to a client’s location. Here’s another fun incentive opportunity,
collectors love to have the opportunity to come along on a “repo” (repossession)
of a car or other item.
Cooperative rewards
Another powerful incentive approach is to set a weekly goal
that would put a smile on any senior executive's face if your collectors were to
hit it. Then set up an incentive that says that if your collectors can hit that
goal by 1PM on Friday, everyone can go home early with full pay. You will be
amazed at how creative, resourceful and industrious your team will be and how
they WILL hit that goal … maybe to your great surprise. Interestingly enough,
you can return to that well many times and repeat the incentive and get
repeatable results. Wouldn’t that be a nice … to hit a challenging goal and
have everyone (management and collectors) be happy that you did!
Involve Your Employees
I know, for every one of the examples listed, you can
probably give an instance that an employee would have hated that reward, or that
it wouldn’t make sense. That’s why it does make sense to involve your employees.
Maybe you set up an incentive committee that comes up with ideas. Also make sure
you leave yourself room to change the rewards and the parameters if they don’t
make sense for the employee or for the company.
Involve your Management
It does take a concerted effort by management to set up,
monitor and pay off these types of reward and recognition approaches. You may
have to pull some additional or unique data from your software system to do
this. However, most every agency manager who has taken the effort to do these
sorts of incentives invariably finds that the payoff is very positive. Not only
in increased productivity, greater income and collections, but also in a more
intangible area: Employee Motivation. You will find that job satisfaction
increases, employee retention will be stronger and employee morale will be
positively affected.
Vilis Ozols, MBA, CSP, (www.ozols.com) president of the
Ozols Business Group in Golden, CO, is a motivational business speaker and
leadership consultant. He is the author of 3 books, he's
a former pro beach volleyball player and he has spoken
to businesses in all 50 U.S. states. (800) 353-1030.
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Thank you for considering these
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Vilis Ozols
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