The Mindless Twits are at it again. No, wait, they are in charge.

Digby stays on top of things:

What mindless twit came upp with this gem:?
“The morning-after pill is a pedophile’s best friend,” Wendy Wright, senior policy director for Concerned Women of America, a public policy organization, said in a statement after learning of Galson’s decision. “Morning-after pill proponents treat women like sex machines.”

http://digbysblog.blogspot.com/2006_04_01_digbysblog_archive.html#114600008253976488

Keep Your Eye on the Goal

As many people realize, Public Radio fund drives break down the camnpaign into hourly or short-term goals. Better for morale to try a $1000 goal for the hour than the $200,000 goal of the campaign.

Anyway, our local station is into the spring fundraiser and I tuned into the drive at the half-hour mark. The spritely, energetic fundraiser was anouncing that their goal for the hour was 30 callers to contribute. As she said, “a half-hour left and only 27 callers to go!”

I don’t know that I am enough of an optimist to do this.

11 Companies Rewarding Failure: Financial News – Yahoo! Finance

11 Companies Rewarding Failure: Financial News – Yahoo! Finance

It is interesting to see these compensation articles. I think that too much of an executive’s reward structure is based on short-term goals and the executive has often disappeared when the company collapses in the long-term (5-years or more.)

Why not develop a long term incentive system along the line that sets up long-term and short-term goals for an exec, with commensurate rewards based on whatever metrics the board wants to use. But, the exec can not collect the short-term rewards unless the long-term goals are met.

So, if an exec gets a bonus for raising the stock price 20% one year, and has a 5-year goal of doubling customers, the exec doesn’t collect the 1 year bonus for at least 5 years and then only if the customer base has doubled.

There are a fair number of variation on this theme; the main point is to hold an exec’s feet to the fire to ensure the long-term success of a company and not to allow an exec to gut a company to promote short term success. (I wonder what would have happened to the dot-com bubble if no one got any rewards until the long-term goals were realized?)

Continue reading 11 Companies Rewarding Failure: Financial News – Yahoo! Finance