The current ‘argy-bargy’ around wages policy makes the mistake of assuming it is a binary equation. Pay a dollar more/hour for labour and profit is reduced by the equivalent amount.

This assumes that people working for you are only doing so for the money, and money is directly proportional to output.

We all know this is crap.

While it is clear that many, mostly female dominated jobs, are underpaid compared to the costs of living, and simple value equivalence with other jobs. It is also true that people are not rational, they make decisions on many dimensions, of which price is only one.

Price. Key word.

Why don’t we consider the cost of labour as just the price of it, and consider our labour strategies in the same way we apply pricing strategy for our products to the marketplace?

When we do this properly, which too few do, price is only one factor in the equation. Depending on the context, it can often play only a minor part in the strategies we deploy.

Price is rarely a binary choice, just take it or leave it with no other options. It is also rarely considered how unfair it is to pay people whose performance is unequal, the same amount. We usually address this with piecework pay, which often has a detrimental impact on value delivery to customers. Just look at what is happening to Qantas currently in the handling of baggage for the evidence. It is a fine line between paying for customer value delivered, and piecework payment.

What would you rather have?

Better paid people who care about quality, DIFOT performance, productive time, and all the other things that lead to superior value delivery to a customer, leading to financial performance, or more lower paid people who do not care about any of those things?

Thinking in a binary manner will deliver the latter, never the former.

In these unusual times of inflation coupled with a flat economy, you need to find the most productive people you have, and model their behaviour to others, and compensate them appropriately. You may end up with less, but better paid and more productive people.

Trends in labour cost equations can be an extremely sensitive lead indicator of performance. Labour cost/dollar of revenue or gross margin can tell you a lot about future performance. By contrast, labour cost as an absolute can tell you nothing beyond how much you spend.

The question management needs to ask itself, is not how much labour costs, but how can we make labour a driver of performance.

Header cartoon credit: My thanks again to Hugh McLeod at gapingvoid.com for putting it so accurately