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Compensation and Rewards

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Title: Compensation and Rewards


1
Compensation and Rewards
  • Business 158
  • Spring Semester 2007
  • Tim Brown

Session 2
2
Agenda
  • This week in compensation
  • To this point in the course
  • Strategic perspectives
  • Break
  • Internal alignment

3
Strategic considerations
  • Philosophies
  • Entitlement orientation
  • Performance orientation
  • Design options
  • Culture
  • Market
  • Decisions
  • Person-based or Team-based
  • Short-term or Long-term
  • Product-based or Service-based
  • Incentive mix

4
Types of Employment Relationships
5
Key Objectives in Reward Systems
  • ATTRACT
  • RETAIN
  • MOTIVATE
  • EFFICIENT
  • FAIR
  • COMPLIANT

6
Learning Objectives (Chapter 2)
  • Explain the idea of strategic perspective to
    compensation
  • Identify five dimensions of a compensation
    strategy and how compensation strategy supports
    organization strategy
  • Discuss four steps in developing a total comp
    strategy
  • Describe three tests to determine if a pay
    strategy can be a source of competitive advantage
  • Present key arguments related to two approaches
    best-fit and best-practice

7
What is the strategic perspective?
The strategic perspective involves thinking about
how pay can assist in achieving organization
success, while not being fixated on pay techniques
8
Strategic Brain Teasers
  • Do you even need a strategy?
  • Why bother?
  • It worked fine for them
  • What works here may not work there
  • Is no strategy a strategy?
  • Example chess game
  • So what will this do for us?
  • Be able to defend your position

9
5 Dimensions of Strategy
  • Objectives
  • Internal alignment
  • External alignment/competitiveness
  • Employee contributions
  • Management

10
Strategic Perspectives Toward Total Compensation
Exhibit 2.1
Bristol - Myers Squibb
Firepond
Microsoft
  • Support business mission and goals
  • Develop global leaders at every level
  • Reinforce team-based culture
  • Reduce costs, increase productivity
  • Demonstrate respect for individual talent and
    the limitless potential of a highly motivated
    team
  • Encourage high standards, original thinking,
    passion for discovery and willingness to take
    risks
  • Reward fresh ideas, hard work and commitment to
    excellence
  • Value diverse perspectives as a key to discovery
  • Support the business objectives
  • Support recruiting, motivation, and retention of
    MS-caliber talent
  • Preserve MS core values

Objectives
  • Integral part of MS culture
  • Support MS performance driven culture
  • Business/technology-based organization design
    structure
  • Pay differences that foster a collegial
    atmosphere
  • Reinforce high expectations
  • Flexibility for development and growth
  • Reflect responsibilities, required competencies,
    and business impact

Internal Alignment
11
Strategic Perspectives Toward Total Compensation
Firepond
Microsoft
Bristol - Myers Squibb
  • Compare favorably to high-performing competitor
  • Cash between the 50th and 75th percentile
  • Lead in total comp
  • Lag in base pay
  • Lead in bonuses, stock
  • Demonstrate respect for individual talent and
    the limitless potential of a highly motivated team

External
  • Bonus pool based on Firepond financial
    performance. Individual share of pool based on
    individual performance.
  • Push stock ownership deep into company
  • Support high performance, leadership culture
  • Team-based increases
  • Options align employee and shareholder interest
  • Tailor to business and team results
  • Bonuses and options based on individual
    performance

Internal Alignment
  • Open, transparent communications
  • Centralized administration
  • Software supported
  • Performance and leadership
    feedback everyone is a leader
  • Administrative ease
  • Goal-focused
  • team-oriented
  • self-managed

Mgmt
12
Strategic Alignment
VISION/MISSION CORE BELIEFS OBJECTIVES BUSINESS
STRATEGY

COMPENSATIONSYSTEM
PERFORMANCE
13
Exhibit 2.2 Strategic Choices
14
Generic Business-level Strategies
  • Innovator
  • Cost Cutter
  • Customer Focused

15
Tailor the Compensation System to the Strategy
Business Response
HR Program Alignment
Compensation System
Strategy
  • Reward Innovation in Products and Processes
  • Market-Based Pay
  • Flexible Generic Job Descriptions

Innovator Increase Product Complexity and
Shorten Product Life Cycle
  • Product Leader
  • Shift to Mass Customization and Innovation
  • Cycle Time
  • Committed to Agile, Risk Taking, Innovative
    People
  • Focus on Labor Costs
  • Increase incentives
  • Productivity focus
  • System focus on control and work specifications
  • Do More With Less
  • Operational Excellence
  • Pursue Cost-effective Solutions

Cost Cutter Focus on Efficiency
  • Customer Satisfaction Incentives
  • Value of Job and Skills Based on Customer Contact

Customer Focused Increase Customer Expectations
  • Customer Intimacy
  • Deliver Solutions to Customers
  • Speed to Market
  • Delight Customer, Exceed Expectations

16
Example The Strategic Compensation Decisions
Facing Starbucks
  • Objectives How should compensation support
    business strategy and be adaptive to the cultural
    and regulatory environment?
  • Starbucks Objectives
  • Grow by making employees feel valued.
  • Recognize that every dollar earned passes through
    employees hands.
  • Use pay, benefits, and opportunities for personal
    development to help gain employee loyalty and
    become difficult to imitate.

17
Example The Strategic Compensation Decisions
Facing Starbucks (cont.)
  • Alignment How differently should the various
    types and levels of skills be paid within the
    organization?
  • Starbucks Approach
  • De-emphasize differences.
  • Use egalitarian pay structures, cross-train
    employees to handle many jobs, and call employees
    partners.

18
Example The Strategic Compensation Decisions
Facing Starbucks (cont.)
  • Competitiveness How should total compensation be
    positioned against our competitors? What forms of
    compensation should we use?
  • Starbucks Approach
  • Pay just slightly above other fast-food
    employers.
  • Provide health insurance and stock options for
    all employees (including part-timers).
  • Give everyone a free pound of coffee every week.

19
Example The Strategic Compensation Decisions
Facing Starbucks (cont.)
  • Contributions Should pay increases be based on
    individual and/or team performance, on experience
    and/or continuous learning, on improved skills,
    on changes in cost of living, on personal needs,
    and/or on each business units performance?
  • Starbucks Approach
  • Emphasize team performance and shareholder
    returns.
  • For new managers in Beijing and Prague, provide
    training opportunities in the U.S.

20
Example The Strategic Compensation Decisions
Facing Starbucks (cont.)
  • Management How open and transparent should pay
    decisions be to all employees? Who should be
    involved in designing and managing the system?
  • Starbucks Approach
  • As members of the Starbucks family, our
    employees realize what is best for them.
  • Partners can and do get involved.

21
4 Steps in Strategy Development
  • Assess
  • Strategic map
  • Implement
  • Reassess

Whats valuable in strategy development works for
projects, too
  • Discover
  • Develop
  • Deploy
  • Debrief

22
Key Steps to Formulating Compensation Strategy
Exhibit 2.5
  • 1. Assess Total Compensation Implications
  • Competitive Dynamics
  • Core Culture / Values
  • Social and Political Context
  • Employee / Union Needs
  • Other HR Systems

2. Fit Policy Decisions to Strategy Objectives
Contributions Alignment
Administration Competitiveness
  • 4. Reassess the Fit
  • Realign as Conditions Change
  • Realign as Strategy Changes
  • 3. Implement Strategy
  • Design System to Translate Strategy
  • into Action
  • Choose Techniques to Fit Strategy

23
Step 1 Assess Implications
  • Before any new compensation program is
    designed, there must be a clear understanding of
    the implications
  • Competitive dynamics
  • Culture/values
  • Social and political context
  • Employee needs
  • Customization and flexibility

24
Step 1 Assess Total Compensation Implications
(cont.)
  • Competitive dynamics
  • Customer needs
  • Competitors actions
  • Labor market conditions
  • Regulations
  • Global environment
  • Culture/values
  • A pay system reflects values guiding an
    employers behaviors and treatment of employees

25
Step 1 Assess Total Compensation Implications
(cont.)
  • Social and political context
  • Legal and regulatory requirements
  • Cultural differences
  • Changing work force demographics
  • Employee values and expectations

26
Step 1 Assess Total Compensation Implications
(cont.)
  • Employee needs
  • Contemporary pay systems
  • Flexible compensation systems
  • Nature of employee-mgmt relationship
  • Informal opinion leaders
  • Union representations

27
Step 1 Assess Total Compensation Implications
(cont.)
  • Role of pay in overall HR strategy
  • Supporting player
  • Agent of change

28
3 Tests for Strategic Advantage
  • Is it aligned?
  • Does it differentiate?
  • Does it add value?

29
2 Approaches Contrasted
  • Best fit
  • Do what works in a specific situation
  • Best practice
  • Do what works best in other places

30
Best Fit vs. Best Practices
  • Best Fit
  • Reflects companys strategy and values
  • Responsive to employees needs
  • Globally competitive
  • Provides company some competitive advantage
  • Best Practices
  • Assumes a set of best-pay practices exists
  • Practices can be applied universally across all
    situations

31
Best-Practices Options
  • The New Pay
  • External market-sensitive-based pay, not internal
    alignment
  • Variable performance-based pay, not annual
    increases
  • Risk-sharing partnership, not entitlement
  • Flexible opportunities to contribute, not jobs
  • Lateral promotions, not career path
  • Employability, not job security
  • Teams, not individual contributors
  • Exhibit 2.11

32
Best-Practices Options
  • High Commitment
  • High wages
  • get what you pay for
  • Employment security
  • Apply incentives
  • share gains, not risks
  • Employee ownership
  • Participation/Empowerment
  • Stress team over individual
  • Reduce pay differences
  • Promote from within
  • Selective recruiting
  • Enterprise-wide info sharing
  • Training, cross-training, and skill development
  • Egalitarianism adds value
  • Stress Long-term perspective
  • Emphasize measurement
  • Exhibit 2.11

33
So What Matters More -Best Practices or Best Fit?
  • Some research supports the best practices
    approach
  • Some research supports the best fit approach

34
BREAK
  • 15 minute break

35
Exhibit 1.5 THE PAY MODEL
  • EFFICIENCY
  • Performance
  • Quality
  • Customers
  • Stockholders
  • Costs
  • FAIRNESS
  • COMPLIANCE

36
Learning Objectives (Chapter 3)
  • Explain why internal alignment is an important
    policy issue and how to evaluate internal
    alignment
  • Discuss three key factors that define internal
    pay structures
  • Describe how external and organization factors
    shape the design of pay structures
  • Discuss the pros and cons of egalitarian and
    hierarchical structures and how they relate to an
    organizations strategy
  • Describe the key effects associated with an
    internally aligned pay structure

37
Topics
  • Internal Alignment
  • How Structures Vary Among Organizations
  • Internal Structures and Work Environment
  • Strategic Choices in Designing Internal
    Structures
  • Contributions from Structures

38
Key Issues
  • Two basic questions lie at the core of
    compensation management . . .
  • How is pay determined for the wide variety of
    work performed in organizations?
  • Does how much an organization pay for different
    work make a difference?

39
What Is Internal Alignment?
40
Internal Alignment Matters
  • The relationships formed in a pay structure
    should
  • support the organization strategy,
  • support the workflow,
  • be fair to employees, and
  • motivate behavior
  • toward organization objectives.

41
What Is Pay Structure?
Refers to the array of pay rates for different
work or skills within a single organization. The
number of levels, differentials in pay between
the levels, and the criteria used to determine
those differences create the structure.
42
Internal Alignment
  • Fairness Issues
  • Procedural justice
  • Process by which a decision is reached
  • Distributive justice
  • Results/outcomes of the process
  • Pay procedures more likely to be viewed as fair
    if . . .
  • They are consistently applied to all employees
  • Employee participation/representation is allowed
  • An appeals procedure is available
  • Data used are accurate

43
Structures Vary
  • An internal pay structure is defined by
  • Number of levels of work
  • Pay differentials between levels
  • Criteria used to determine levels and
    differentials
  • Content - Work performed in a job and how it gets
    done
  • Value - Worth of the work its relative
    contribution to objectives
  • Job- and person-based structures

44
Structures Vary Examples
  • Number of levels of work
  • Exhibit 3.1 Engineering Structure at Lockheed
  • Exhibit 3.2 Managerial/Professional Levels at
    General Electric Plastics (GEP)
  • Pay differentials between levels
  • Exhibit 3.3 Engineering Pay Structure at
    Lockheed Martin
  • Criteria
  • Job-based - Exhibit 3.1
  • Person-based - Exhibit 3.2

45
Exhibit 3.2 Managerial/Professional Levels at
General Electric Plastics
46
Exhibit 3.3 Engineering Pay Structureat
Lockheed Martin
47
Exhibit 3.4 What Shapes Internal Structures?
EXTERNAL FACTORS Economic pressures Government
policies, laws, regulations Stakeholders Cultures
and customs
48
Exhibit 3.5 Illustration of anInternal Labor
Market
Consultant Engineer
Dual Career Ladders
Hire
Advisor Engineer
Lead Engineer
Systems Engineer
Senior Engineer
Hire
Engineer
Hire
49
Strategic Choices in DesigningInternal Structures
50
Exhibit 3.6 Strategic ChoiceHierarchical
versus Egalitarian
51
Exhibit 3.7 Structural Impact on Performance
and Fairness
  • Structure B
  • De-layered
  • Chief Engineer
  • Consulting Engineer
  • Associate Engineer
  • Structure A
  • Layered
  • Chief Engineer
  • Engineering Manager
  • Consulting Engineer
  • Senior Lead Engineer
  • Lead Engineer
  • Senior Engineer
  • Engineer
  • Engineer Trainee

52
Perceived Equity of a Pay Structure
MY PAY My qualifications My work performed My
product value
OTHERS PAY Their qualifications Their work
performed Their product value
53
Exhibit 3.8 Some Consequences of anInternally
Aligned Structure
Undertake training Increase experience Reduce
turnover Facilitate career progression Facilitate
performance Reduce pay-related grievances Reduce
pay-related work stoppages
Pay structure
54
Which Structure Fits Best?
  • More hierarchical structures are related to
    greater performance when the work flow depends
    more on individual contributors
  • More egalitarian structures are related to
    greater performance when collaboration and
    sharing of knowledge are required
  • Structures not aligned with the work flow appear
    to be related to greater turnover

55
Consequences of Structures
Efficiency Competitive Advantage
Fairness
Compliance
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