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Human
Resource Management
(MGT501)
VU
Lesson
28
COMPENSATION
SYSTEM
After
studying this chapter, students should be
able to understand the
following:
A.
Job
Pricing & Developing a Base
Pay System
B.
Compensation system
LESSON
OVERVIEW
We
begin this chapter with an overview of
compensation and an explanation of
compensation equity.
Next,
we
discuss determinants of individual
financial compensation and the organization as a
determinant of
financial
compensation. This is followed by a
discussion of the labor market, the
job, and the employee,
as
determinants
of financial compensation. Finally, job
pricing and executive
compensation are
presented.
To
understand the basic concepts of
compensation first of all we
will define the pay
Pay:
Pay
is a statement of an employee's worth by
an employer.
Or
Pay
is a perception of worth by an
employee
HR
Management Strategy
Model:
Human
resource department uses
different
strategies
to mange the workforce so that
the
HR
Management Strategy
Model
desired
results can be attained.
These desired
result
as stated in earlier chapters as well,
can be
attained
if organization is able to attract,
select,
develop
and retain workforce in
successful
Attract
Select
manner
in short, the effective hiring and
retaining
workforce can be helpful in
achieving
HR
organizational
goals. This purpose can
be
Desired
Rewards
Strategy
attained
through fair and effective
rewards
Results
systems
in the organization. Rewards are used
as
Retain
Engage
basic
motivational tools in the organization so
that
performance of the employees can
be
Develop
influenced
in desirable way. So to be
more
successful
organizations need attractive and
fair
compensation
and reward systems to be paid
to
the
workforce.
A.
Job Pricing
Job
pricing means placing a
dollar value on the worth of a
job.
I.
Pay
Grades--The
grouping of similar jobs together to
simplify the job pricing
process. Plotting
jobs
on a scatter diagram is often
useful in determining the appropriate number of pay
grades.
II.
Wage
Curve--The
fitting of plotted points in
order to create a smooth progression
between pay
grades.
III.
Pay
Ranges--Includes
a minimum and maximum pay
rate with enough variance
between the
two
to allow some significant pay
difference.
IV.
Broad
Banding--A technique
that collapses many pay
grades (salary grades) into
a few wide
bands
in order to improve organizational
effectiveness.
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Human
Resource Management
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V.
Single-Rate
System--Pay
ranges are not appropriate
for some workplace conditions.
When
single
rates are used, everyone in
the same job receives the
same base pay, regardless of
seniority
or
productivity. This rate may
correspond to the midpoint of a range
determined by a
compensation
survey.
VI.
Adjusting
Pay Rates--when
pay ranges have been
determined and jobs assigned to
pay grades,
it
may become obvious that
some jobs are overpaid
and others underpaid. Underpaid
jobs
normally
are brought to the minimum of the
pay range as soon as
possible.
B.
Compensation: An Overview
i.
Compensation--The
total of all rewards
provided employees in return
for their services.
ii.
Direct
Financial Compensation--Consists
of the pay that a person
receives in the form of
wages,
salaries, bonuses, and
commissions.
iii.
Indirect
Financial Compensation--All financial
rewards that are not
included in direct
compensation.
iv.
Non-financial
Compensation--Consists
of the satisfaction that a person
receives from the job
itself
or from the psychological and/or
physical environment in which the
person works. All
such
rewards
comprise a total compensation
program.
I.
Equity in financial compensation
:
Organizations
must attract, motivate, and retain
competent employees. Because achievement
of these goals
is
largely accomplished through a
firm's compensation system,
organizations must strive for
compensation
equity.
a.
Equity--Workers'
perceptions that they are being
treated fairly. Compensation
must be
fair
to all parties concerned and
be perceived as fair.
b.
External
Equity--Exists
when a firm's employees are paid
comparably to workers
who
perform
similar jobs in other
firms.
c.
Internal
Equity--Exists
when employees are paid
according to the relative value of
their
jobs
within an organization.
d.
Employee
Equity--Exists
when individuals performing similar
jobs for the same firm
are
paid
according to factors unique to the
employee, such as performance level or
seniority.
e.
Team
Equity--Achieved
when more productive teams
are rewarded more than
less-
productive
teams.
II.
Determinants of individual financial
compensation:
Compensation
theory has never been
able to provide a completely satisfactory
answer to what an individual
is
worth for performing
jobs.
·
The
Organization,
·
The
Labor Market,
·
The
Job, and
·
The
Employee
These
all have an impact on job
pricing and the ultimate determination of
an individual's financial
compensation.
a.
The
Organization as a Determinant of
Financial Compensation:
·
Compensation
Policies--An organization
often establishes--formally or
informally--
compensation
policies that determine whether it
will be a pay leader, a pay
follower, or
strive
for an average position in the
labor market.
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Human
Resource Management
(MGT501)
VU
1.
Pay
Leaders:
Those organizations that pay
higher wages and salaries
than competing firms.
2.
Market
Rate or Going Rate: The
average pay that most
employers provide for the
same job in a
particular
area or industry.
3.
Pay
Followers:
Companies that choose to pay
below the market rate
because of poor financial
condition
or a belief that they simply do not
require highly capable
employees.
·
Organizational
Politics--Political
considerations may also
enter into the equation. A
sound,
objective compensation system can be
destroyed by organizational politics.
Managers
should become aware of this possibility
and take appropriate action.
·
Ability
to Pay--An organization's
assessment of its ability to
pay is also an
important
factor
in determining pay levels. Financially
successful firms tend to provide
higher-than-
average
compensation. However, an organization's
financial strength establishes
only the
upper
limit of what it will
pay.
b.
The
labor market as a determinant of
financial compensation:
Potential
employees located within the
geographical area from which
employees are recruited comprise
the
labor
market.
·
Compensation
Surveys--Large
organizations routinely conduct
compensation surveys to
determine
prevailing pay rates within
labor markets.
1.
Compensation surveys: Provide
information for establishing
both direct and indirect
compensation.
2.
Benchmark job: A job that is
well known in the company
and industry, one that
represents the
entire
job structure, and one in
which a large percentage of the
workforce is employed.
·
Cost
of Living--A
pay increase must be roughly
the equivalent to the cost of
living
increase
if a person is to maintain a previous level of real
wages.
·
Labor
Unions--When
a union uses comparable pay
as a standard for making
compensation
demands, the employer must obtain
accurate labor market data.
When a
union
emphasizes cost of living,
management may be pressured to include a
cost-of-living
allowance
(COLA). This is an escalator clause in
the labor agreement that
automatically
increases
wages as the U.S Bureau of
Labor Statistics' cost-of-living
index rises.
·
Society--Compensation
paid to employees often affects a
firm's pricing of its
goods
and/or
services. Consumers may also
be interested in compensation
decisions.
·
Economy--In
most cases, the cost of
living will rise in an expanding
economy. Thus, the
economy's
health exerts a major impact on pay
decisions.
·
Legislation--The
amount of compensation a person receives
can also be affected
by
certain
federal and state
legislation.
c.
The
job as a determinant of financial
compensation:
Organizations
pay for the value they
attach to certain duties,
responsibilities, and other job-related
factors.
Techniques
used to determine a job's relative worth
include job analysis, job
descriptions, and job
evaluation.
·
Job
Analysis and Job Descriptions--Before
an organization can determine the relative
difficulty or
value
of its jobs, it must first
define their content, which it normally
does by analyzing jobs. Job
analysis
is
the systematic process of determining the
skills and knowledge required for
performing jobs. The
job
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Human
Resource Management
(MGT501)
VU
description
is the primary by-product of job
analysis, consisting of a written
document that describes
job
duties and responsibilities.
Job descriptions are used
for many different purposes,
including job
evaluation.
·
Job
Evaluation--That
part of a compensation system in
which a firm determines the relative
value of
one
job compared with that of
another.
d.
The
employee as a determinant of financial
compensation:
In
addition to the organization, the labor
market, and the job, factors
related to the employee are
also
essential
in determining pay and employee
equity.
I.
Performance Based Pay--PA
data provide the input for
such approaches as merit
pay, variable
pay,
skill-based pay, and
competency-based pay.
1.
Merit
Pay: A
pay increase given to employees
based on their level of performance as
indicated in
the
appraisal.
2.
Bonus: The
most common type of variable pay for
performance and is a one-time award
that is
not
added to employees' base
pay.
3.
Skill-based
Pay: A
system that compensates
employees on the basis of job-related
skills and
knowledge
they possess, not for their
job titles.
4.
Competency-Based
Pay: A
compensation plan that
rewards employees for their
demonstrated
expertise.
II.
Seniority--The
length of time an employee has
been associated with the
company, division,
department,
or job is referred to as seniority.
III.
Experience--Regardless
of the nature of the task, very few
factors has a more significant
impact
on
performance than experience.
IV.
Membership in the Organization--Some
components of individual financial
compensation
are
given to employees without regard to the
particular job they perform or their
level of
productivity.
V.
Potential--Organizations
do pay some individuals
based on their
potential.
e.
Political
Influence--Political
influence is a factor that obviously
should not be used as a
determinant
of
financial compensation. However, to deny
that it exists would be
unrealistic.
f.
Luck--The
expression has often been
stated, "It certainly helps to be in the
right place at the
right
time."
There is more than a little
truth in this statement as it relates to
the determination of a person's
compensation.
g.
Special
Employee Classes--These
include pay for executives,
which are discussed in a later
section,
and
pay for professionals and
sales employees.
III.
Executive Compensation:
Executive
skill largely determines whether a
firm will prosper, survive, or
fail. Therefore, providing
adequate
compensation
for these managers is vital.
A critical factor in attracting and retaining the
best managers is a
company's
program for compensating
executives.
a)
Determining Executive Compensation--In determining
executive compensation, firms
typically
prefer to relate salary
growth for the highest-level
managers to overall corporate
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Human
Resource Management
(MGT501)
VU
performance.
In general, the higher the managerial
position, the greater the
flexibility
managers
have in designing their
jobs.
b)
Types of Executive Compensation--Executive
compensation often has five
basic
elements:
(1) Base Salary, (2)
Short-Term Incentives or Bonuses, (3)
Long-Term Incentives
and
Capital Appreciation Plans, (4) Executive
Benefits, and (5)
Perquisites. The way
an
executive
compensation package is designed is
partially dependent on the
ever-changing
tax
legislation.
·
Base
Salary: Salary
is obviously important. It is a factor in
determining standard
of
living. Salary also provides the
basis for other forms of
compensation.
·
Short-Term
Incentives or bonuses: Payment
of bonuses reflects a
managerial
belief
in their incentive value. Today,
virtually all top executives
receive bonuses
that
are tied to base
salary.
·
Long-Term
Incentives and Capital Appreciation:
The
stock option is a
long-term
incentive designed to integrate further
the interests of management
with
those of the organization. The typical
stock
option plan gives
the manager the
option
to buy a specified amount of stock in the
future at or below the current
market
price.
·
Executive
Benefits: Executive benefits
are generally more generous
than those
received
by other employees because the benefits
are tied to their higher
salaries.
However,
current legislation (ERISA) does restrict
the value of executive
benefits
to a certain level above those of
other workers.
·
Perquisites
(Perks): Any
special benefits provided by a firm to a
small group
of
key executives that are
designed to give the executives something
extra. A
"golden
parachute" contract is a
perquisite that protects executives in
the event that
their
firm is acquired by another.
IV.
Compensation for
professionals:
People
in professional jobs are
initially compensated primarily
for the knowledge they bring to
the
organization.
Because of this, the administration of compensation
programs for professionals is
somewhat
different
than for managers. Many
professional employees eventually become
managers. For those who
do
not
desire this form of career
progression, some organizations
have created a dual track of
compensation.
The
dual track provides a separate pay
structure for professionals,
which may overlap a portion of
the
managerial
pay structure.
V.
Sales Compensation:
Designing
compensation programs for
sales employees involves unique
considerations. For example,
job
content,
relative job worth, and job
market value should be determined.
The straight salary approach is
at
one
extreme in sales compensation. In this
method, salespersons receive a fixed
salary regardless of
their
sales
levels. At the other extreme, the
person whose pay is totally
determined as a percentage of sales is
on
straight
commission. Between these
extremes, there are endless
part salarypart commission
combinations.
The
possibilities increase when various
types of bonuses are added
to the basic compensation package.
In
addition
to salary, commissions, and
bonuses, salespersons often
receive other forms of compensation
that
are
intended to serve as added
incentives.
Role
of Line managers and HRM Department in
Compensation:
Line
managers perform the function of
job evaluation that is base
for the compensation systems,
according
to
the worth of the job negotiation
regarding the salaries and
other benefits is negotiated with
potential
employees
through line mangers. Basic
compensation packages are mostly
recommended by the line
managers
in the organizations. All these
information is communicated to the
employees by HRM
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Human
Resource Management
(MGT501)
VU
department
beside communicating this information HRM department
also facilitates the departments
in
establishing
rates of pay, monitoring in
job evaluation process, and Conducting
salary surveys in order
to
establish
procedures for administering pay
plans, and to ensure
compliance with antidiscrimination
laws.
Key
Terms
Merit
Pay: A pay
increase given to employees based on
their level of performance as indicated in
the
appraisal.
Equity:
Workers'
perceptions that they are being
treated fairly. Compensation
must be fair to all
parties
concerned
and be perceived as
fair
External
Equity: Exists
when a firm's employees are paid
comparably to workers who
perform similar
jobs
in other firms.
Internal
Equity: Exists
when employees are paid
according to the relative value of their
jobs within an
organization.
Compensation: The
total of all rewards
provided employees in return
for their services.
Job
Pricing: Job
pricing means placing a
dollar value on the worth of a
job.
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