Business Studies, asked by hano842057, 1 month ago

3. You have been working for your organization for five years. After lots of hard work, you are promoted to sales manager. One of your first task is to develop goals for your sales team, then create a budget based on these goals. First, you look at the salaries of all the sales staff to find major pay discrepancies. Some salespeople, who perform equally well, are paid much lower than some sales staff whom you consider to be nonperformers. As you dig deeper, you see this is a problem throughout the sales team. You are worried this might affect motivation for your team if they find out what others are making. How would you handle this​

Answers

Answered by johnthomassaganty052
8

Explanation:

you can keep a budget declaration that who work more can get more salaries and can appoint a clerk to check it out!

other wise you can give equal number of salaries to everyone based on their promotion details and cheques

Answered by Kartikdhariwal12
0

Answer:

You have been working for your organization for five years. After lots of hard work, you are promoted to sales manager. One of your first task is to develop goals for your sales team, then create a budget based on these goals. First, you look at the salaries of all the sales staff to find major pay discrepancies. Some salespeople, who perform equally well, are paid much lower than some sales staff whom you consider to be nonperformers. As you dig deeper, you see this is a problem throughout the sales team. You are worried this might affect motivation for your team if they find out what others are making. How would you handle this

You have been working for your organization for five years. After lots of hard work, you are promoted to sales manager. One of your first task is to develop goals for your sales team, then create a budget based on these goals. First, you look at the salaries of all the sales staff to find major pay discrepancies. Some salespeople, who perform equally well, are paid much lower than some sales staff whom you consider to be nonperformers. As you dig deeper, you see this is a problem throughout the sales team. You are worried this might affect motivation for your team if they find out what others are making. How would you handle thisYou have been working for your organization for five years. After lots of hard work, you are promoted to sales manager. One of your first task is to develop goals for your sales team, then create a budget based on these goals. First, you look at the salaries of all the sales staff to find major pay discrepancies. Some salespeople, who perform equally well, are paid much lower than some sales staff whom you consider to be nonperformers. As you dig deeper, you see this is a problem throughout the sales team. You are worried this might affect motivation for your team if they find out what others are making. How would you handle this

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