So lets keep talking this through, because it's something that has bugged me for almost two decades, and I have some creative ideas on how to fix it.
The fundamental problem goes back to trying to shoehorn a salary based compensation system into a lump sum contract. If all your guys are on salary, then you carve their efforts up into hours and budget them that way, which produces all the problems we've enumerated. But what if you didn't do salary at all? What if you did an engineering version of piece work, and completely changed your project accounting paradigm to match that?
Say I'm the boss/owner, and I get a $100k engineering job. I take 20% off the top for O&P, another 10% contingency, which leaves $70k left for engineering labor. I divide all the tasks up by ratio / difficulty, and then I offer shares in the project to my employees. They buy a share with their labor, and get paid when the project gets paid. So it's more like a team of 1099s than a typical project team. One employee takes four shares for the grading, another takes three for the erosion control, one takes two for the permitting activities, etc. Pay the shares out as you get paid on the project.
It's got some drawbacks in that your employee income is variable, not fixed, but it has some great benefits too. One benefit is you never have to worry about laying people off, since people only get paid for billable work. Another is "project ownership" - you don't get slackers who don't care about finishing a project up, because finishing the project up is how they get paid. And your project accounting is built from the ground up to reflect what you want it to reflect - the percent completion of the project - without having to translate things into hours and back out of hours, when that process of translation is so often gamed or tweaked or monkeyed with in the accounting. Another superb benefit is your employees make as much money as they want to make. Want more? Work more. Want to work less? Take fewer shares, earn a little less, and spend time with your kids.
Seems like a very sensible way to build a company to me, but some others I've posed the idea to seem to think it'd never work. Then again, older engineers like to manage by walking up and down the cube farm looking over shoulders, instead of checking out the cad files at the end of the day to see what got done.
Hydrology, Drainage Analysis, Flood Studies, and Complex Stormwater Litigation for Atlanta and the South East -