One Size Does NOT Fit All: Personalized Incentives in Military Compensation

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Authors
Coughlan, Peter J.
Gates, William R.
Myung, Noah
Subjects
Advisors
Date of Issue
2013-03-25
Date
March 2013
Publisher
Monterey, California : Naval Postgraduate School
Language
en_US
Abstract
A critical element in implementing a compensation scheme including non-monetary incentives (NMIs) is recognizing that preferences vary widely across service members. There are at least three sources of variability: variability across population classes (e.g., preferences vary across Services, professional communities, rank/pay grade, etc.)
variability across individuals within a population class (e.g., preferences vary across people in similar circumstances)
and variability across NMI packages for a particular individual (e.g., values for an individual NMI may depend on the package of NMIs offered). Surveys across different military communities, ranks, and years of service, show the difficulty of identifying any NMI that has significant value for even 50% of the active duty force. At the same time, approximately 80% of the surveyed service members expressed a significant positive value for at least one NMI. As a result, one-size-fits-all incentive packages will not be nearly as effective as more individually tailored incentive packages. This paper discusses variability in service member NMI preferences and outlines an approach to implementing personalized NMI packages in military compensation through a sealed-bid reverse auction, where service members select individual NMIs from a “cafeteria-style” menu of options.
Type
Technical Report
Description
Series/Report No
Department
Identifiers
NPS Report Number
NPS-GSBPP-13-002
Sponsors
Funder
Department of the Navy, Research, Modeling, and Analysis Division
Format
Citation
Distribution Statement
Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited.
Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited.
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