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LE Logo LINCOLN ELECTRIC

I recommend on
Frank Koller. 2010. Spark: How Old Fashion Values Drive a Twenty-First-Century Corporation. New York: PublicAffairs.

Arthur D. Sharplin. The Lincoln Electric Company. 1985 & 1996.

Don Hastings. Lincoln Electric's Harsh Lessons from International Expansion. Harvard Business Review, May-June 1999: 163-178.
 

QUESTIONS

Which system - Command & Control/Scientific Management vs. TQM/High Performance

How to choose?

Must we choose between two systems?

The Congruence Model

What are the building blocks of a HR system with a guranteed employment?  Why is it so rare in North America?  Interestingly, guranteed employment is available only to the US workers.  By 2009, LE had manufacturing facilities in 20 countries, distribution and sales partnersdhips in more than 160 nations, and a global workforce of more than 9,000 employees with roughly 3,300 of them being in the US and 250 in Canada (Koller, 2010: 84).





 
 

THE GENESIS OF THE LE HRM SYSTEM

1895 - John Lincoln founds LE

1914 - James Lincoln becomes president

1914 - Employee Advisory Committee is created to advise James Lincoln.  The president can veto its decisions

1915 - Paid-up life insurance policy is given to every employee

1915 - Piece-rate system of compensation is instituted. Rates change following techological changes

1919 - The Lincoln Electric Employees' Association is formed to provide health benefits and organize social activities

1925 - Employee Stock Ownership Program: Each employee with more than one year of service may purchase stock in LE.  Stock must be offered back to LE upon termination of employment.

1929 - The board of directors votes to start a suggestion system; new suggestions are rewarded by additional points which affect year-end bonuses

1934 - The famous merit bonus plan is accepted on a trial basis

1942 - The House of Representatives Naval Committee argues that LE has devised a scam to avoid taxes and grab extra profits from the war through its profit sharing program

1944 - Employees enjoy a pension plan, a policy of promotion from within, and continuous employment

1958 - The policy of lifetime employment is formalized -- every worker with over two years' longevity is guaranteed at least 30 hours per week, 49 weeks per year.  The requirement was changed to three years in the recession of 1982.  No employee has ever lost a job due to economic downturn since 1958.  Note, the idea was originally suggested to James Lincoln by the worker representatives on the Advisory Board (Koller, 2010: 59).

1995 - LE goes public


 

CURRENT HRM PRACTICES

Intensive employee involvement

Advisory committee
Employees' Association
Suggestions plan

Job security (for deatils, see Koller, 2010: 60)

After a 2 (3 since 1982)-year probation period
The early 1980's were a time of hardship, with Lincoln's sales dropping 40 percent in response to the combined effects of inflation, sharply higher energy costs, and a national recession. Although guaranteed continuous employment received a severe test, not one Lincoln employee was laid off for lack of work.
Last layoff was in 1948, but the exact circumstances are not clear (Koller, 2010: 97).

Compensation is based on Base Salary, Merit Rating, Profit Sharing

Merit rating is done twice a year for each employee - output, quality, dependability, and acooperation.
Average of 100 points for each group (average of 20 points on a scale).  Typically, merit points range from 80 to 110.  Ratings above 110 points require approval from higher management.  Note, an employee can be awarded more than 20 points on a particular scale for superior performance, but only if somene else in the same work group being evaluated by the same supervisor receives less.  A consistent pattern of poor performance will lead to a lower merit rating, which will significantly reduce the bonus at the end of the year and, in extreme cases of substandard work, lead to disciplinary procedures including dismissal.
Bonus is % of profits (e.g., 60%) times total rating points (e.g., 80) times wages (e.g., .6 x .8 = 48% of salary).  Since 1955 it has averaged 77% of base pay (Koller, 2010: 45).

Note the tension between the spirit of cooepration (profit sharing) and the spirit of competition (individual bonuses are zero sum).

Note the tension between guaranteed employment and the element of quality in the merit rating system.

No paid sick days or vacations.  The company shuts down for 4 weeks a year (2 weeks in the Christmas season and 2 weeks in August) but does not pay for vacation days.
(
Ohio workplace vacation laws say vacations are fringe benefit of a job and not a right. State law leaves the decision of whether or not to grant vacation up to the discretion of the employer.)

No paid training (OJT only)

LE does not pay for medical insurance yet requires every person to show proof that s/he is covered by a comprehensive hospital and medical insurance plan from the moment they first begin to work (Koller, 2010: 139).

Strong management control







GUARANTEED CONTINUOUS EMPLOYMENT
(Koller, 2010: 60)

The plan covers permanent employees in Cleveland (95% of the US workforce) who have completed three years of service.

Employees are guaranteed at least 30 hours of work per week, 49 weeks per year.

Employees are required to work overtime whenever scheduled.

Workers are not guaranteed a particular job or rate of pay.

Every employee must be willing to accept transfer from one job to another.

The plan only covers employees who uphold LE's well-defined performance standards.

If the company's survial is threatened by conditions beyond its control - from recessions to natural disasters - the guarantee does not hold.






HRM SYSTEM/ORGANIZATION CULTURE

JOB SECURITY

OPEN COMMUNICATION

MUTUAL RESPECT

LABOR-MANAGEMENT COOPERATION

SENSE OF OWNERSHIP

PAY FOR -- INDIVIDUAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL -- PERFORMANCE

EMPLOYEE INVOLVEMENT

STRONG MANAGEMENT CONTROL





PHILOSOPHY

Customer needs are the raison d'être of the company

The customer's interests, not the stockholder's, come first

Stockholders are given last priority

The earnings of each employee should be in accordance with the employee's accomplishment

Labor and management are parts of one organization in which they must cooperate fully

There must be complete honesty and understanding between the hourly workers and management if high efficiency is to be obtained

Management must have complete power

Each person should participate only in those decisions s/he is most knowledgeable about

Ratio of salary between CEO/Average hourly worker is 14; in America it is around 100 (20 in Japan)





JAMES F. LINCOLN'S QUOTES

(Arthur D. Sharplin. The Licoln Electric Company, 1985.)

The Christian ethic should control our acts.  [Lincoln turned this vision into a focused effort to improve continuously product quality while continuously reducing unit costs of production and distribution and passing the cost savings on to the customer.]  If it did control our acts, the savings in cost of distribution would be tremendous.  Advertising would be a contact of the expert consultant with the customer, in order to give the customer the best product available when all of the customer's needs are considered.  Competition then would be improving the quality of products and increasing efficiency in producing and distributing them; not in deception, as is now too customary.  Pricing would reflect efficiency of production; it would not be a selling dodge that the customer may well be sorry he accepted.  It would be proper for all concerned and rewarding for the ability used in producing the product.

The greatest fear of the worker, which is the same as the greatest fear of the industrialist in operating a company, is the lack of income. ... The industrial manager is very conscious of the company's need of uninterrupted income.  He is completely oblivious, evidently, of the fact that the worker has the same need.

He is just as eager as any manager to be part of a team that is properly organized and working for the advancement of our economy. ... He has no desire to make profits for those who do not hold up their end in the production, as is true of absentee stockholders and inactive people in the comapny.

If money is to be used as an incentive, the program must provide that what is paid to the worker is what he has earned.  The earnings of each must be in accordance with accomplishments.

Status is of great importance in all human relatioships.  The greatest incentive that money has, usually, is that it is a symbol of success. ... The resulting status is the real incentive. ... Money alone can be an incentive to the miser only.

There must be complete honesty and understanding between the hourly worker and management if high efficiency is to be obtained.

When you use "participation," put quotes around it.  Because we believe that each person should participate only in decisions he is most knowledgeable about.  I don't think production employees should control the decisions of Bill Irrgang (then-president of Lincoln Electric, 1965-1986).  They don't know as much as he does about the decisions he is involved in (a director of public relations).







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