Title: Classification and Compensation System Simplification
1Classification and Compensation System
Simplification
- What is it? How is it done? Why is it needed?
- IPMA - HR Conference
- September 2003
2Agenda
- Why consolidate class and comp systems
- Different ways to consolidate
- Outcomes and Issues
- Lessons learned
- Discussion by The Government of the District of
Columbia - Discussion by the State of Washington
2
3Typical Symptoms
- You are receiving numerous requests for
reclassification - The requests are pay changes in disguise
- The distinctions between classes becomes
meaningless - Class change decisions are based on minor
(insignificant?) changes - Pay levels are below market by a significant
amount - Managing the system takes increasing resources to
maintain
3
4Why Class Consolidation?
- When the average number of employees per class
titles is in the single digits - Most organizations have expanded the number of
titles by an average of 10 per year - Jobs and technology have changed and will
continue to do so - Most employees want their own job title
- Individual job titles typically result in higher
pay
4
5Why Comp Consolidation?
- When the number of pay ranges is greater than 40
- When pay exceptions increase
- Add ons
- Special pay ranges
- Special skill pay
- When hiring near the midpoint is barely enough to
attract a new employee - When most employees pay is either below the 1st
quartile or at the maximum - When special skills needed for the job results in
a new classification because that is the only way
to pay them extra
5
6Different Ways to Consolidate
- By occupational focus
- Engineering
- Finance
- Human resources
- Etc.
- By department focus
- Public Works
- Purchasing
- By salary grade
6
7Four Levels of Work
- Entry
- Developmental
- Full Performance
- Master/Supervisory
- Basic skills, learns to do things our way
- Developing proficiency
- Fully competent to perform all aspects of job
- Recognized expert
7
8Example
Engineering
Occupation
Electrical
Civil
Environmental
Chemical
Nature of Work
IV Master - Recognized Expert
III Fully Performing - Supervisory
Level of Work
II Developmental- Senior/ Lead (in some cases)
I Entry - Qualified
8
9Resources
- Dictionary of Occupational Titles or ONET
- United States Office of Personnel Management
- Handbook of Occupational Groups and Families
- Standard Occupational Codes
- States of Florida, New Mexico, South Carolina,
Washington, Oklahoma, Virginia
9
10Compensation Consolidation
- By similarity of salary ranges
- Broadening the salary ranges
- By market analysis
- Assessment of market difference by occupational
group - Determination of salary range spreads and range
characteristics - Do you really need more than 40 grades?
10
11The Concept of Differences
- How much of a difference makes a difference?
- For classification issues
- When the classification changes by 25 or more
- Duties and responsibilities
- Skills needed
- Time distribution of responsibilities
11
12The Concept of Differences
- How much of a difference makes a difference?
- For compensation issues
- 3-4 is the minimal magic number for step
differences - 7-8 is minimal magic number between grades
- 10-15 is desired number for subordinate/superviso
r differences
12
13Outcomes-Positives
- 50 reduction of classifications or more
- More generic class descriptions
- Easier management of personnel
- Less administrative time spent on class reviews
- Fewer pay grades
- More flexible pay decisions
13
14Outcomes-Negative
- Employees dont see their position in the class
description - Employees treated more generically
- Potential higher payroll (combining current lower
level classes with current higher level classes) - Perceived pay compression of employees who used
to be in different pay ranges are now in the same - Requires strong management
- Requires simpler decision tools
14
15Key Points
- Not a panacea
- Make sure the organization understands the
implications and the strategic need to go through
the process - Be prepared to communicate with stakeholders
- It will take time to change the culture
- Not everyone will be happy
- Most organizations have found that benefits
justify the effort
15
16The Government of the District of Columbia
- Jo Ellen Gray
- Associate Personnel Director for Policy and
Program Development, DCOP - James Ivey
- President, AFSCME
16
17Historical Review
- A product of the negotiated Compensation Units
12 Agreement. Task Force met regularly since
10/25/2001 - Composed of Union Leaders, representatives from
DCOP, DC OLRCB, Budget, Payroll, DHS, DPW,
Library, DC Council - Part of joint commitment to invest in the rank
and file workforce - Focused on occupational approach to consolidation
17
18Prior System
- 21 Schedules covering almost 7400 employees and
almost 550 CBU/Service Code combinations - These pay schedules cover 6 pay plans (DS, SW,
LW, RW, PW, TG) - 13 White Collar pay schedules
- 8 Blue Collar pay schedules
- Similar jobs covered under multiple schedules
18
19Consolidation Process
- Developed new pay schedules based on occupational
groups - Determined employee placement on the new
schedules - Based on minimum guarantees in CBA, determined
amount of bonuses to be paid, if any - Calculated the overall cost of pay schedule
consolidation - Planning implementation 2nd quarter 2002
19
20Consolidation Process
- Public Roundtable (February 2002)
- Council Consideration (March 2002)
- Newsletters to employees (following Council
consideration) - Programming payroll system with new pay schedule
structure (ongoing through March 2002) - Individual letter to employees (early April)
- Paychecks to employees retro, bonus and new
rate (April 16 or 19, 2002)
20
21Timeline
- Presentation to City Council
- Employee newsletters
- Personalized letter to each employee
- Series of meetings with Human Resource Advisors,
Labor Liaison, budget office representatives - Telephone hotline
- DCOP web page
21
22Communication
- Consolidated 21 primary (with dozens of related
supplemental) pay schedules into 10 unique
schedules, based on 9 occupational groups - Clerical/Administrative
- Corrections and Others
- Health Care
- Information Technology
- Legal
- Maintenance/Trades/Labor
- Protection and Enforcement
- Science/Engineering
22
23Results
- As part of pay schedule consolidation, each
employee received a minimum of ½ percent in one
of three forms - Paid as a bonus, a base salary increase or a base
salary increase plus a bonus - No reductions in the maximum salary for any
schedule
23
24Reactions
- Pay Consolidation was very successful based on
the limited number of employee concerns that
needed to be addressed - Individual letters were extremely important and
alleviated employee questions - Selecting classification series for specific pay
schedules needed to have more upfront input from
classifiers - Massive data clean-up issues
24
25Thoughts Recommendations
- Labor-Management Task Force approach was a
critical component of the process - Establish guiding principles and goals upfront
- Change effort must be owned and controlled by
the key stakeholders - Get commitment and buy-in from union and
management leadership up front - Communicate frequently and in different forms
with employees and other stakeholders - Keep the process open
25
26Classification and Compensation Reform in
Washington State
- Christina Valadez
- HR 2005 Project Manager
- Washington State Department of Personnel
26
27Organization Facts
- Civil Service Reform law was passed by
Legislature in April 2002. - Contains 3 key components
- Full scale collective bargaining
- Competitive contracting
- New civil service system
- All components must be in place by July 2005.
- Will require dramatic modifications to central
personnel/payroll system.
27
28Organization Facts
- Washington has approx. 58,000 state employees in
general government - Approx. 16,800 classified higher education
employees - Approx. 60 currently covered by collective
bargaining - Higher education institutions may bargain on
their own or through state negotiation - Classification is a permissive topic for
bargaining
28
29Organization Facts
29
30Customer System Research
- Summer of 2002, the Department of Personnel
conducted extensive research of trends and best
practices among other employers, including - All 50 states
- Federal and local governments
- Other countries
- Selected universities and private sector
companies - HR organizations
- Dozens of reports, articles, books, and web sites
- Report available at http//hr.dop.wa.gov/hrreform
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31Customer System Research
- Did extensive surveying of state employees,
managers, and human resource staff to determine
needs and preferences - Developed concepts, and held focus groups and
other discussion forums with managers, HR
professionals, and employees.
31
32Research Findings
- Overall trend in other states is towards reducing
the number of job classifications (some now have
250-500). - A common approach is to use occupational
groupings. - About two-thirds of Washington State managers and
HR professionals favored some type of broader
classification system.
Somewhat Important
Not Important
Important
Very Important
32
33Research Findings
- Majority of Washington State survey participants
felt other factors need to be considered in
determining salary, instead of or in addition to
longevity.
33
34Current System
- Each position is placed into a narrowly defined
job classification. - There are currently 2,400 separate job classes
for general government and higher education. - Each job class is assigned to one of 83 narrow
salary ranges.
34
35Current System
- Each salary range is approx. 25-28 wide from
minimum to maximum salary. - Each salary range has 11 pre-defined steps (A-K)
that are approximately 2.5 apart. - Employees receive approx. 5 step increases
annually, based on longevity. - From step A, it takes 4 1/2 years to reach the
top step, after which employees receive only
legislative cost of living increases.
35
36Current System
- History of across-the-board raises from the
Legislature. - Variable tie to market rate
- average 15-16 behind market
- a few jobs are paid above market
- many jobs 25-30 and even up to 50 behind market
- partial survey implementations to bring jobs to
no less than 25 behind have not been
comprehensive or always funded - last salary survey implementation was in the
early 80s - no raises for a four year period
36
37Difficulties with Current System
- Customers have said the system is too complex,
cumbersome, and rigid. - System provides little flexibility to reorganize
or change job responsibilities based on changing
technologies, customer needs, etc. - System encourages proliferation of classes.
- Incentive to create new classes in order to
obtain salary increases - It does not facilitate employee mobility/career
paths.
37
38Difficulties with Current System
- Rigid compensation system is obstacle to
recruiting and retaining top performers or those
with special skills. - Longevity-based increases provide no recognition
for excellent performance. - It is de-motivating for good performers who are
paid same as poor performers in same job class. - Nearly two-thirds of classified employees are at
step K, with no room for salary growth unless
promoted or reallocated.
38
39Proposed New System
- Personnel Reform Act called for a new
classification system that would - Improve effectiveness and efficiency of service
delivery. - Substantially reduce the number of job
classifications. - Facilitate the most effective use of state
personnel resources. - Be responsive to changing technologies, economic
and social conditions, and needs of citizens. - Value workplace diversity.
- Facilitate reorganization and decentralization of
services. - Enhance mobility and career advancement.
39
40Proposed Classification Structure
- Consolidating 2,400 current job classes into
broad occupational categories. - Four levels within most occupational categories
- Level 1 Entry
- Level 2 Journey/Developmental
- Level 3 Senior/Fully Performing
- Level 4 Supervisory/Expert
- Goal was to yield approx.800-1,200 job classes.
- Currently at about 150 categories.
40
41Examples of New Structure
Audit Occupational Categories
Current General Govt Higher Ed Classes
Labor and Industries Auditor 1 Industrial
Insurance Underwriter Assist. Revenue Auditor
1 Audit Specialist 1 - Transportation Industrial
Insurance Underwriter 1 Assistant State Auditor
1 Labor and Industries Auditor 2 Political
Finance Specialist 1 Business and Professions
Auditor 1 Apprentice - LI Auditor 3
A. Entry
41
42Examples of New Structure
Old General Govt Classes
New General Govt Classes
Current GG Higher Ed Classes
Human Resources Occup Category
Affirmative Action Officer 1 Personnel
Assistant Human Resource Dev. Spec 1 Personnel
Officer 1 Personnel Analyst
Human Resource Consultant 1
Human Resource Consultant 2 Equal Opportunity
Compliance Investigator 2 Apprenticeship
Coordinator 1 Human Resource Represent. II
B. Journey/ Developmental
42
43Advantages Expected
- Substantially reduces number of job classes
- Minimizes process and administrative timeand
cost - Easily decentralized
- Enables users to respond to changes
- Enhances mobility and career growth opportunities
- Provides flexibility for new compensation tools
- Addresses customer concerns and preferences
43
44Consolidation Process
- Initial staff work based on existing job classes
- Refinement of occupational groupings, using
existing job classes and salary structure - Review of proposed changes by agencies, labor,
and employees - Refinement of occupational groupings and base
salary structure based on input - Formal public process for additional input
- Final classification and compensation structure
and rules
44
45Proposed New System
- 83 existing salary ranges will be replaced with
fewer, broader bands.
46Transition to New System
- Employees would transition at current salary.
- If not at top step of current range, would
continue to get longevity increases until
reaching salary equivalent to top step. - Subsequent adjustments based on factors such as
- Retention/market/geographic issues
- Sustained exceptional performance and/or
successful demonstration of valuable new skills - Incremental increases in duties and
responsibilities
46
47Proposed Compensation System
- After the transition, an employees salary spread
within the band could be based on analysis of
factors such as - Internal alignment and equity
- Special competencies, skills, and experience
brought to the job - Extraordinary position-specific circumstances
such as locality, recruitment/retention, etc. - Hiring incentives
- Will also have option for one-time lump sum
recognition award.
47
48Timeline
- June 02 - March 03 Research and concept
design options - April 03 - June 03 Validation of concepts and
selection of options - July 03 - Dec. 03 Development of new
structure and rules - Jan. 04 - Sept. 04 Contract negotiations
Formal input and adoption of new system - Oct. 04 - June 05 Preparation for full
implementation
48
49Challenges
- Short time frames
- A desire to track back to existing classes and
salaries and to limit future salary growth - Inherent conflict between creating a new
structure and maintaining cost neutrality - Fiscal concerns of today may affect pay options
for the future - Inability to fix compensation problems before
implementing the new system
49
50Thoughts Recommendations
- Need to get attention, support from states
executive management. - Central coordination/governance is critical for
multiple projects. - Need to establish statewide priorities and
strategies. - Extensive customer research and involvement means
more support and acceptance of proposed changes. - Employees and managers alike have expressed need
for extensive training, especially in performance
management. - Communications is critical. No matter how much
you do, its not enough.
50
51Communication
- Open communications and customer involvement have
been a priority from the beginning. - Publications are distributed in both print and
electronic media, to reach widest possible
audience. - Extensive use of listservs, e-mail, and
electronic newsletters to provide regular
updates. - In past year, DOP has held over 200 presentations
and information/feedback sessions throughout the
state. - You are invited to watch our progress by
monitoring our web site at http//hr.dop.wa.gov/hr
reform.
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Question and Answer Session
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