Title: COMPENSATION Part I
1COMPENSATIONPart I
2Chapter Objectives
- Describe the various forms of compensation.
- Explain the concept of equity in financial
compensation. - Identify the determinants of financial
compensation. - Discuss compensation legislations
- Describe factors that should be considered when
the labor market is a determinant of financial
compensation.
3Compensation An Overview
- Compensation - Total of all rewards provided
employees in return for services - Direct financial compensation - Pay received in
the form of wages, salaries, bonuses, and
commissions - Indirect financial compensation - All financial
rewards not included in direct compensation - Nonfinancial compensation - Satisfaction a person
receives from job itself or from work environment
4Components of a Total Compensation Program
External EnvironmentInternal Environment
Compensation
Financial
Non-Financial
Direct Wages Salaries Commissions
Bonuses
Indirect (Benefits) Legally Required Benefits
Social Security
Unemployment Compensation Workers
Compensation Family Medical
Leave Voluntary Benefits
Payment for Time Not Worked Health Care
Life
Insurance Retirement
Plans Employee Stock Option
Plans Supplemental Unemployment Benefits
Employee Services Premium Pay
Unique
Benefits
The Job Skill Variety Task Identify Task
Significance Autonomy Feedback
Job Environment Sound Policies
Competent Employees Congenial Coworkers
Suitable Status Symbols Working
Conditions Workplace Flexibility Flextime
Compressed Work Week Job Sharing
Flexible Compensation
Telecommuting Part-time Work
Modified Retirement
5 Equity in Financial Compensation
- Equity - Fair pay treatment for employees
- External equity - Employees are paid comparably
to workers who perform similar jobs in other
firms - Internal equity - Employees are paid according to
relative value of their jobs within same
organization
6Equity in Financial Compensation (Continued)
- Employee equity - Paid according to factors
unique to employee, such as performance level or
seniority - Team equity Reward based on teams productivity
7Primary Determinants of Individual Financial
Compensation
The Organization Compensation Policies
Organizational Politics Ability to Pay
The Employee Job Performance Merit
Pay Variable Pay Competency-Based Pay
Seniority Experience
Organization Membership Potential
Political Influence Luck
The Labor Market Compensation Surveys
Expediency Cost of Living
Labor Unions Society
The Economy Legislation
Job Pricing
Individual Financial Compensation
The Job Job Analysis
Job Descriptions Job Evaluation
Collective Bargaining
8Compensation Policies
- Pay leaders pay higher wages and salaries
- Market rate, or going rate pay what most
employers pay for same job - Pay followers pay below market rate because
poor financial condition or believe they do not
require highly capable employees
9The Labor Market as a Determinant of Financial
Compensation
- Compensation surveys
- Expediency
- Cost of living
- Labor unions
- Society
- Economy
- Legislation
10Compensation Surveys
- What are other firms paying?
- Geographic area of survey
- Specific firms to contact
- Jobs to include
11Expediency
- There are times when compensation survey data is
ignored - High tech environment
- In some labor markets where managers must at
times be left to their own devices
12Cost of Living
- When prices rise over a period of time and pay
does not, real pay is actually lowered - Some firms index pay increases to the inflation
rate
13Labor Unions
- Mandatory collective bargaining between
management and unions as wages, hours, and other
terms and conditions of employment. - Cost-of-living allowance
- Unions may attempt to create, preserve, or even
destroy pay differentials.
14Society
- Compensation often affects firms pricing of it
goods and/or services - Consumers may be interested in compensation
decisions
15The Economy
- Affects financial compensation decisions
- Depressed economy generally increases the labor
supply - Cost of living often rises as the economy expands
16Compensation Legislation
- Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as Amended
- Equal Pay Act of 1963
17Davis-Bacon Act of 1931
- First national law to deal with minimum wages
- Federal construction contractors with projects
over 2000 to pay at least prevailing wages in
area
18Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as Amended
- Most significant law affecting compensation
- Establishes minimum wage
- Requires overtime pay and record keeping
- Provides standards for child labor
19Equal Pay Act of 1963
- Prohibits employer from paying employee of one
gender less than employee of opposite gender - Both employees must do work that is the same or
substantially the same
20The Job as a Determinant of Financial Compensation
- Job itself continues to be a factor, especially
in those firms that have internal pay equity as a
primary consideration - Organizations pay for value they attach to
certain duties, responsibilities, and other
job-related factors such as working conditions
21Job Evaluation
- Firm determines the relative value of one job in
relation to another - Ranking
- Classification
- Factor comparison
22Ranking Method
- Simplest method
- Raters examine description of each job
- Jobs arranged in order according to value
23Classification Method
- Define number of classes or grades to describe
group of jobs - Compare job description with class description
- Class description that most closely agrees with
job description determines job classification
24Factor Comparison Method
- Mental requirements
- Skills
- Physical requirements
- Responsibilities
- Working conditions
25Job Pricing
- Placing a dollar value on worth of a job
- Pay grades - Grouping of similar jobs to simplify
pricing jobs - Pay ranges - Minimum and maximum pay rate with
enough variance between the two to allow for a
significant pay difference - Broadbanding Collapses many pay grades into a
few wide bands or improve effectiveness - Adjusting pay rates - Overpaid and underpaid jobs
26Scatter Diagram of Evaluated Jobs Illustrating
the Wage Curve, Pay Grades, and Pay Ranges
Average Pay per Hour (Current Rates or Market
Rates)
19.80
5
18.50
4
17.20
3
15.90
Wage Curve
Pay Ranges for Pay Grades
2
14.60
14.00
1
13.30
12.90
12.00
100
200
300
400
500
Evaluated Points
1
2
3
4
5
Pay Grades
Summary
Evaluated Points Pay Grade
Minimum
Midpoint Maximum
0- 99 1 12.00 13.30 14.60
100-199 2 13.30 14.60 15.90
200-299 3 14.60 15.90 17.20
300-399 4 15.90 17.20 18.50
400-500 5 17.20 18.50 19.80
27Broadbanding
- Technique that collapses many pay grades (salary
grades) into a few wide bands to improve
organizational effectiveness - Lateral employee development
- Develop employee skills and encourage team focus
- Employee attention directed away from vertical
promotional opportunities
28Broadbanding and Its Relationship to Traditional
Pay Grades and Ranges
Grade 5
Grade 4
Grade 3
Average Pay Per Hour
Grade 2
Band B
Grade 1
Band A
Low
High
Job Worth
29 Employee as a Determinant of Financial
Compensation
- Performance-based Pay
- Skilled-based Pay
- Competency-based Pay
- Seniority
- Experience
- Potential
- Political Influence
- Luck
30Skill-Based Pay
- Compensates on basis of job-related skills and
knowledge - Employees and departments benefit when employees
obtain additional skills - Appropriate where work tends to be routine and
less varied - Must provide adequate training opportunities or
system becomes a demotivator
31Performance-Based Pay
- Merit pay - Pay increase given to employees based
on their level of performance as indicated in the
appraisal - Variable pay - Compensation based on performance
(bonus) - Piecework Employees paid for each unit they
produce
32Skill-Based Pay
- Compensates on basis of job-related skills and
- knowledge
- Employees and departments benefit when employees
obtain additional skills - Appropriate where work tends to be routine and
less varied - Must provide adequate training opportunities or
system becomes a demotivator
33Competency-Based Pay
- Compensates on basis of demonstrated expertise
34Seniority
- Length of time an employee has been associated
with the company, division, department, or job - Labor unions tend to favor seniority
35Experience
- Regardless of nature of job, very few factors
have a more significant impact on performance
than experience
36Potential
- Organizations do pay some individuals based on
their potential - Many young employees are paid well because of
their potential
37Political Influence
- Should not be used to determine financial
compensation - To deny its existence would be unrealistic
- A person's pull or political influence may sway
pay and promotion decisions
38Luck
- It certainly helps to be in the right place at
the right time.