Incentives and Innovation: A Multi-Tasking Approach

54 Pages Posted: 16 Nov 2008 Last revised: 2 Jul 2014

See all articles by Thomas F. Hellmann

Thomas F. Hellmann

University of Oxford - Said Business School; University of Oxford - Said Business School; European Corporate Governance Initiative

Veikko Thiele

Queen's University - Smith School of Business

Date Written: November 12, 2008

Abstract

This paper examines how employees trade off planned activities versus unplanned innovation, and how firms can choose incentives to affect these choices. It develops a multi-task model where employees makes choices between their assigned standard tasks, for which the firm has a performance measure and provides incentives, and privately observed innovation opportunities that fall outside of the performance metrics, and require ex-post bargaining. The model shows how firms adapt incentive compensations in the presence of such unplanned innovation. If innovation are highly firm-specific, firms provide lower-powered incentives for standard tasks to encourage more innovation, yet in equilibrium employees undertake too few innovation. The opposite occurs if innovation are less firm-specific. We also investigate the effectiveness of several possibilities to encourage innovation, such as tolerance for failure, investing in employee innovation, stock-based compensation, and the allocation of intellectual property rights.

Keywords: Innovation, multi-tasking, incentives

JEL Classification: D82, D86, M52

Suggested Citation

Hellmann, Thomas F. and Thiele, Veikko, Incentives and Innovation: A Multi-Tasking Approach (November 12, 2008). Queen's School of Business Research Paper, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1301712 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1301712

Thomas F. Hellmann

University of Oxford - Said Business School ( email )

Park End Street
Oxford, OX1 1HP
Great Britain
+44 (0)1865 288937 (Phone)

HOME PAGE: http://www.sbs.ox.ac.uk/community/people/thomas-hellmann

University of Oxford - Said Business School ( email )

Park End Street
Oxford, OX1 1HP
Great Britain
+44 (0)1865 288937 (Phone)

HOME PAGE: http://www.sbs.ox.ac.uk/community/people/thomas-hellmann

European Corporate Governance Initiative ( email )

c/o the Royal Academies of Belgium
Rue Ducale 1 Hertogsstraat
1000 Brussels
Belgium

Veikko Thiele (Contact Author)

Queen's University - Smith School of Business ( email )

Goodes Hall
143 Union Street
Kingston, ON K7L 3N6
Canada
+1 613 533-2783 (Phone)
+1 613-533-6589 (Fax)

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
282
Abstract Views
2,196
Rank
198,883
PlumX Metrics