Why symbolic awards for Employee of the Month may backfire

Far from keeping up the good work, recipients of internal symbolic awards such as employee of the month or merit certificates perform worse after receiving the accolades, according to a recent international study.

It’s not always that awardees lose the drive to perform after proving their worth, says co-author Runjing Lu, a finance professor at the University of Alberta’s Alberta School of Business. In many cases, co-workers will subsequently undermine the winners’ success.

Runjing Lu

Runjing Lu

symbolic awards Employee of the Month

Photo by Sander Sammy

More advice on running your business
Business management


Read our series on

Closing the Deal


“There have been a handful of papers published on the negative effects of symbolic awards, but they all focus on how the awards affect the participants’ own behaviour and motivation,” notes Lu.

“We found it’s not just the awardees themselves who are affected; there could also be a kind of social sabotage going on.”

Lu defines a symbolic award as “a special type of non-monetary incentive whose value resides primarily in the public recognition of recipients.”

Monetary rewards have long been regarded as problematic, she says, because they can provoke jealousy, resentment and other “corrosive” effects among employees. Symbolic awards had been considered a promising alternative.

But the findings point to a darker side of human nature. Especially in competitive workplaces with limited resources, internal symbolic award winners tend to become targets of subversion, she says.

In surveys of symbolic award recipients in this study, many said social undermining tends to be more passive; co-workers simply withdraw offers of help. But in some cases, co-workers will go further, even poaching customers from award recipients involved in sales.

Previous research has shown that symbolic awards hamper performance mainly because recipients feel they’ve reached the required bar and no longer need to expend the same effort says Lu.

One study, for example, revealed that students recognized for perfect attendance were subsequently absent more often from school. Another showed that winners of the Fields Medal – one of the world’s highest honours for mathematicians – published fewer academic papers after receiving the prize. And firms whose CEOs received awards had worse stock and operating performance in their wake.

What the new study reveals, however, are the interpersonal factors that can aggravate a decline in performance.

“It’s not that symbolic awards are always bad,” says Lu. “They can work well in situations where the competition is not that intense – where your success doesn’t depend on my failure.

“But in organizations where resources are limited, singling you out as a top performer signals to co-workers to compete for your resources. They have strong incentives to push you down.”

Cultural context also matters, she says. The study examined a large branch of a leading insurance firm in China and found that social undermining of award recipients was more pronounced than typically documented in the West, potentially due to an emphasis on group harmony in Asian culture as opposed to individual achievement.

“Participants from Asian collectivist cultures exhibited a higher preference for high achievers to fail than those from individualistic cultures,” says Lu. “In a collective culture, you don’t want to stand out.”

Her advice for companies that want to recognize individual achievement?

“Think first – is it a competitive or non-competitive environment? In competitive environments, you might not want to single out a person too much because you’re setting up a target for others to attack.”

Lu adds that company managers could also monitor co-workers’ behaviour and punish those who engage in sabotage – a less-than-ideal approach that can produce its own backlash, she admits.

Another solution is to increase the base-level salary for everyone on a given team, Lu suggests.

“Then, if somebody gets an award, you’re already well rewarded. You don’t have the same incentive to sabotage others.”

| By Geoff McMaster

This article was submitted by the University of Alberta’s Folio online magazine, a Troy Media Editorial Content Provider Partner.


The opinions expressed by our columnists and contributors are theirs alone and do not inherently or expressly reflect the views of our publication.

© Troy Media
Troy Media is an editorial content provider to media outlets and its own hosted community news outlets across Canada.