Incentives


The Incentive Federation believes lawmakers in Congress should realize the dramatic reduction in workplace accidents, injuries, and deaths alone would be well worth any small reduction in tax revenues resulting from 274(j).

Hands Off 274(j)!

Encouraging companies to better engage with their employees leads directly to a positive ROI for those companies and Uncle Sam, as well.

When it comes to engagement, every company has just three kinds of workers: Non-Compliant, Compliant, and Committed.

Employee Engagement: Chocolate, Vanilla, or Strawberry?

How do you get people to become committed to safety, to do the right thing in the moment of choice? Is it by increasing the number of safety cops?

Stop Making It Difficult to Be Excellent in Safety

Often the best thing a leader can do is stop making it difficult for employees to be involved.

Working Long Hours Doubles Depression Risk, Study Says

Researchers at the Finnish Institute of Occupational Health and at University College in London followed 2,123 middle-aged government workers in Britain for six years and found a link between working overtime and major depressive episodes.

IGCC Launches Ace Awards Competition

One of the categories is social responsibility, asking how the gift card program assisted the IGCC member or its client in achieving their environmental, philanthropic, and corporate citizen goals.

Flexible Work Schedules Promote Better Health, Study Says

Researchers based their findings on data from surveys of more than 600 employees and company records from Best Buy before and after the implementation of a “Results Only Work Environment” (ROWE) workplace initiative.

Zero Injuries Is Not Your Goal

Accidents are simply another kind of defect -- a deviation from the standard of perfection. And, like quality, these defects must be detected and eliminated at the moment they first appear.

Economy Impacting Incentive Rewards, Study Says

“Respondents indicated they are less optimistic than they were in the spring about their ability to plan and implement incentive travel programs and consider the economy as having a relatively negative impact on their ability to execute the programs they would like,” said IRF President Melissa Van Dyke.



Red Cross: Many Plan to Give to Charity this Season Despite Slow Economy

A telephone survey of 1,020 adults conducted earlier this fall found that even though 67 percent of Americans didn’t think the economic downturn would last this long, they still want to give to charities.

Social Media Plays Role in Employee Engagement, Study Says

The paper describes the appeal and use of electronic gamification: a technology-based approach that uses elements of social game design for solving business problems, inspiring new product sales, and improving customer service.

Exercising to Reduce Stress May Not Increase Productivity: ACOEM

This study provides new insights into how stress affects productivity, particularly in combination with exercise and other lifestyle factors.

Engage to Go from Good to Great

You already have many of the tools in place to achieve lofty corporate safety goals; what is needed is the spark.

The Pennsylvania Convention Center in downtown Philadelphia is the host site for the 2011 National Safety Congress & Expo. (Paul Loftland photo)

All Aboard for Safety

Historic Reading Railroad Terminal is the site of the National Safety Congress & Expo’s long-awaited return to Philadelphia.

Doing the Right Thing: Optimizing Safety Incentive Programs Under OSHA's New Initiatives

The conflict between employers' love affair with effective safety incentive programs and OSHA’s concern that those same programs may encourage under-reporting has gone on virtually since the OSH Act became law in April 1971.

Study Confirms Cash Not the Best Employee Motivator

"When used properly, non-cash awards, like merchandise and travel, have indeed proven to be more effective and therefore more efficient than traditional forms of compensation when used properly in a total-rewards mix," said IRF President Melissa Van Dyke.

Smartphones Could Play Key Role in Future U.S. Elections, Researchers Say

“Mobile voting carries the potential to increase voter participation, reduce election administration costs, and allow voters to interact with familiar technology," the authors wrote.

The Narrow-Minded CEO and the Smoking Gun of Injury Hiding

Behavioral science has proven countless times that both positive and punishing consequences affect our behavior.

Fall Conference Season in Full Swing

The calendar is full of big meetings from early September to mid-December, including VPPPA, NSC, A+A, the IFMA World Workplace 2011, and NFPA's Fire & Life Safety Conference.

Study: Wellness Programs Decrease Health Care Costs

The paper examines existing research and case studies to assess the state of workplace wellness incentives and their supporting ROI data, and makes recommendations for determining what rewards are most effectively used in wellness programs.

OHS New Product of the Year Award Winners Announced

Take a look at the entire list of winners of the 2011 New Product of the Year awards.

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