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Autor principal: Rakhymzhan Yernazarov
Format: Recurso digital
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Publicat: Zenodo 2026
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Accés en línia:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20315016
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  • <p class="MsoNormal"><strong><em><span>These days, open and obvious bonus systems are extremely important for how companies, especially large and complicated ones, are run. Often, when how people are paid is out in the open, it creates a lack of trust, makes things happen more slowly, and makes employees less interested in their work. Lately, more and more attention has been given to how being open, being able to explain what happens, and having incentives that match goals affect how a company does and how employees act. Simply showing what pay is isn’t enough; having a transparent system of bonuses means carefully planning the way things work, what is measured, and how that information gets to everyone so things are fair, easy to understand, and the same at all levels of the business. This research looks at how big companies plan and put in place transparent bonus programs. It uses ideas from accounting, information systems, how people behave in organizations, and management in general. The article looks at the basic principles of openness and accountability, and how they help employees to trust the company and to be dedicated to it (Agyemang, 2024; Dillard and Vinnari, 2019).<span>  </span>It also considers how important the things we use to measure success are and how incentives must match aims; badly chosen measures can make people do the wrong things and ruin people’s faith in the system (Clark et al., 2021; Ba, Stallaert, and Whinston, 2001).<span>  </span>The paper lays out a way to design transparent bonus schemes, putting together things like aligning Key Performance Indicators, how people are paid, and digital tools to make things visible. It also deals with typical issues like the difficulty of large organizations, problems with the accuracy of data, and biases when assessing performance.<span>  </span>And by looking at the latest developments in digital openness and governance, the research stresses how technology can make compensation systems more visible and people more accountable (Matheus et al., t 2023; Larsson and Heintz, 2020). The results show that transparent bonuses really do improve trust within a company, commitment from employees, and overall results, if they are accompanied by good communication, strong measurements, and a regular stream of feedback (Hien and Tuan, 2023; Men, Qin, and Jin, 2022).<span>  </span>The article finishes with useful advice for organizations that want to create and implement bonus systems that are transparent, fair, and work well in increasingly complicated and ever-changing business environments.</span></em></strong></p>