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book Cost Management: A Strategic Emphasis 7th Edition by Edward Blocher,David Stout ,Paul Juras,Gary Cokins cover

Cost Management: A Strategic Emphasis 7th Edition by Edward Blocher,David Stout ,Paul Juras,Gary Cokins

Edition 7ISBN: 978-0077733773
book Cost Management: A Strategic Emphasis 7th Edition by Edward Blocher,David Stout ,Paul Juras,Gary Cokins cover

Cost Management: A Strategic Emphasis 7th Edition by Edward Blocher,David Stout ,Paul Juras,Gary Cokins

Edition 7ISBN: 978-0077733773
Exercise 3
Incentive Pay in the Hotel Industry Kristin Helmud is the general manager of Highland Inn, a local mid-priced hotel with 100 rooms. Her job objectives include providing resourceful and friendly service to the hotel's guests, maintaining an 80% occupancy rate, improving the average rate received per room to $88 from the current $85, achieving a savings of 5% on all hotel costs, and reducing energy use by 10% by carefully managing the use of heating and air conditioning in unused rooms and by carefully managing the onsite laundry facility, among other means. The hotel's owner, a partnership of seven people who own several hotels in the region, wants to structure Kristin's future compensation to objectively reward her for achieving these goals. In the past, she has been paid an annual salary of $72,000 with no incentive pay. The incentive plan the partners developed has each of the goals weighted as follows:
Incentive Pay in the Hotel Industry Kristin Helmud is the general manager of Highland Inn, a local mid-priced hotel with 100 rooms. Her job objectives include providing resourceful and friendly service to the hotel's guests, maintaining an 80% occupancy rate, improving the average rate received per room to $88 from the current $85, achieving a savings of 5% on all hotel costs, and reducing energy use by 10% by carefully managing the use of heating and air conditioning in unused rooms and by carefully managing the onsite laundry facility, among other means. The hotel's owner, a partnership of seven people who own several hotels in the region, wants to structure Kristin's future compensation to objectively reward her for achieving these goals. In the past, she has been paid an annual salary of $72,000 with no incentive pay. The incentive plan the partners developed has each of the goals weighted as follows:     If Kristin achieves all of these goals, the partners determine that her performance should merit a bonus of $30,000. The partners also agree that her salary will need to be reduced to $60,000 because of the addition of the bonus. The goal measures used to compensate Kristin are as follows:     Kristin's new compensation plan will thus pay her a $60,000 salary plus 20.55 cents per room-night sold plus $1,800 for each percentage point saved in the expense budget plus $30 for each cent increase in average room rate plus $600 for each percentage point saved in energy use. The minimum potential compensation would be $60,000 and the maximum potential compensation for Kristin would be $60,000 + $30,000 = $90,000. Required  1. Based on this plan, what will Kristin's total compensation be if her performance results are a. 30,000 room-nights, 5% saved, $3.00 rate increase, and 8% reduction in energy use  b. 25,000 room-nights, 3% saved, $1.15 rate increase, and 5% reduction in energy use  c. 28,000 room-nights, 0% saved, $1.00 rate increase, and 2% reduction in energy use  2. Comment on the expected effectiveness of this plan. In what way, if at all, would you change the compensation weights
If Kristin achieves all of these goals, the partners determine that her performance should merit a bonus of $30,000. The partners also agree that her salary will need to be reduced to $60,000 because of the addition of the bonus.
The goal measures used to compensate Kristin are as follows:
Incentive Pay in the Hotel Industry Kristin Helmud is the general manager of Highland Inn, a local mid-priced hotel with 100 rooms. Her job objectives include providing resourceful and friendly service to the hotel's guests, maintaining an 80% occupancy rate, improving the average rate received per room to $88 from the current $85, achieving a savings of 5% on all hotel costs, and reducing energy use by 10% by carefully managing the use of heating and air conditioning in unused rooms and by carefully managing the onsite laundry facility, among other means. The hotel's owner, a partnership of seven people who own several hotels in the region, wants to structure Kristin's future compensation to objectively reward her for achieving these goals. In the past, she has been paid an annual salary of $72,000 with no incentive pay. The incentive plan the partners developed has each of the goals weighted as follows:     If Kristin achieves all of these goals, the partners determine that her performance should merit a bonus of $30,000. The partners also agree that her salary will need to be reduced to $60,000 because of the addition of the bonus. The goal measures used to compensate Kristin are as follows:     Kristin's new compensation plan will thus pay her a $60,000 salary plus 20.55 cents per room-night sold plus $1,800 for each percentage point saved in the expense budget plus $30 for each cent increase in average room rate plus $600 for each percentage point saved in energy use. The minimum potential compensation would be $60,000 and the maximum potential compensation for Kristin would be $60,000 + $30,000 = $90,000. Required  1. Based on this plan, what will Kristin's total compensation be if her performance results are a. 30,000 room-nights, 5% saved, $3.00 rate increase, and 8% reduction in energy use  b. 25,000 room-nights, 3% saved, $1.15 rate increase, and 5% reduction in energy use  c. 28,000 room-nights, 0% saved, $1.00 rate increase, and 2% reduction in energy use  2. Comment on the expected effectiveness of this plan. In what way, if at all, would you change the compensation weights
Kristin's new compensation plan will thus pay her a $60,000 salary plus 20.55 cents per room-night sold plus $1,800 for each percentage point saved in the expense budget plus $30 for each cent increase in average room rate plus $600 for each percentage point saved in energy use. The minimum potential compensation would be $60,000 and the maximum potential compensation for Kristin would be $60,000 + $30,000 = $90,000.
Required
1. Based on this plan, what will Kristin's total compensation be if her performance results are
a. 30,000 room-nights, 5% saved, $3.00 rate increase, and 8% reduction in energy use
b. 25,000 room-nights, 3% saved, $1.15 rate increase, and 5% reduction in energy use
c. 28,000 room-nights, 0% saved, $1.00 rate increase, and 2% reduction in energy use
2. Comment on the expected effectiveness of this plan. In what way, if at all, would you change the compensation weights
Explanation
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Cost Management: A Strategic Emphasis 7th Edition by Edward Blocher,David Stout ,Paul Juras,Gary Cokins
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