incentivisation

IPA/ɪnˌsen.tɪ.vaɪˈzeɪ.ʃən/
IPA/ɪnˌsen.t̬ə.vɪˈzeɪ.ʃən/

incentivisation — 名詞

  • incentivisationsingular
  • incentivisationsplural

1. a system or practice in which people receive money, gifts, or other benefits to

1.名詞C1
釋義

獎勵機制

用獎勵鼓勵特定行為的制度

a system or practice in which people receive money, gifts, or other benefits to make them act in a way that an organisation or government wants — for example, giving staff a bonus for meeting sales targets, or offering tax reductions to people who buy electric cars.

例句

The company introduced a bonus scheme as part of its staff incentivisation programme.

這間公司推出獎金制度,作為員工獎勵機制的一部分。

collocation: staff incentivisation / incentivisation programme

Valentina argued that incentivisation works better than punishment for improving customer service.

Valentina 認為,獎勵機制比懲罰更能有效改善客服品質。

同義詞
  • motivation

    broader and less formal; can refer to internal drive, not just external rewards

  • reward system

    more concrete; focuses specifically on the rewards given rather than the overall process

  • inducement

    slightly more formal and often carries a manipulative or transactional tone

反義詞
  • disincentivisation

    the opposite process of removing or discouraging rewards

  • punishment

    contrasting approach based on penalties rather than rewards

文法句型

incentivisation + of + [target / behaviour]

用法筆記

Commonly paired with a following 'of' phrase specifying the target group or behaviour (e.g. 'the incentivisation of employees'). Although typically uncountable, countable uses ('different incentivisation schemes') appear in business and policy writing.

常見錯誤

The bonus is a good incentivisation.
The bonus is a good incentive.
💡'Incentivisation' is the system of offering rewards; the reward itself is an 'incentive'.
We need incentivisation for our team.
We need a clear incentivisation scheme for our team.
💡The noun almost always pairs with a supporting word such as 'scheme', 'programme', or 'system'.