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The Organizational Reward System

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Title: The Organizational Reward System


1
The Organizational Reward System
  • Chapter 12

2
Learning Objectives
  1. Define organizational rewards.
  2. Distinguish between intrinsic and extrinsic
    rewards.
  3. List several desirable preconditions for
    implementing a pay-for-performance program.
  4. Define job satisfaction and list its five major
    components.
  5. Summarize the satisfactionperformance
    relationship.

3
Learning Objectives (cont.)
  1. Define compensation, pay, incentives, and
    benefits.
  2. List several pieces of government legislation
    that have had a significant impact on
    organizational compensation.
  3. Explain the equity theory of motivation.
  4. Discuss internal, external, individual, and
    organizational equity.

4
Defining the System
  • Organizational reward system
  • Organizational system concerned with the
    selection of the types of rewards to be used by
    the organization.

5
Defining the System
  • Organizational rewards
  • Rewards that result from employment with the
    organization
  • includes all types of rewards, both intrinsic and
    extrinsic.

6
Selection of Rewards
  • Intrinsic rewards
  • Rewards internal to the individual and normally
    derived from involvement in certain activities or
    tasks.
  • Extrinsic rewards
  • Rewards that are controlled and distributed
    directly by the organization and are of a
    tangible nature.

7
Intrinsic versus ExtrinsicRewards
Table 12.1
8
Selection of Rewards
  • Management must recognize what employees perceive
    as meaningful rewards
  • Pay is usually the first, and sometimes the only,
    reward most people think about
  • May include office location, allocation of
    certain pieces of equipment, assignment of
    preferred work tasks, and informal recognition

9
Selection of Rewards
  • External factors that place limitations on an
    organizations reward system also exist
  • These factors (usually beyond the control of the
    organization) include such things as
  • Organizations size
  • Environmental conditions
  • Stage in product life cycle
  • Labor market

10
Relating Rewards to Performance
  • Primary organizational variable used to reward
    employees and reinforce performance is pay
  • Even though many U.S. companies have some type of
    pay-for-performance program, most do a poor job
    of relating the two

11
Relating Rewards to Performance
  • Surveys repeatedly show that employees do not
    have much confidence that a positive relationship
    exists between the two
  • Evidence shows that paying for performance is
    working at the highest levels in many companies

12
Preconditions for Implementing Pay-for-Performance
Program
  • Trust in management
  • Absence of performance constraints
  • Trained supervisors and managers
  • Good measurement systems
  • Ability to pay
  • Clear distinction among cost of living,
    seniority, and merit
  • Well-communicated total pay policy
  • Flexible reward schedule

13
Job Satisfaction and Rewards
  • Job satisfaction
  • An employees general attitude toward the job
  • Organizational morale
  • An employees feeling of being accepted by and
    belonging to a group of employees through common
    goals, confidence in the desirability of those
    goals, and the desire to progress toward the
    goals.

14
Five Major Components of Job Satisfaction
15
Other Components of Job Satisfaction
16
The SatisfactionPerformance Controversy
  • Two propositions concerning the
    satisfaction-performance theory exist
  • Satisfaction causes performance
  • Satisfaction is the effect rather than the cause
    of performance

17
The SatisfactionPerformance Controversy
  • Rewards constitute a more direct cause of
    satisfaction than does performance
  • Rewards based on current performance enhance
    subsequent performance

18
Determinants of Employee Satisfaction and
Dissatisfaction
Figure 12.1
19
Employee Compensation
  • Compensation
  • All the extrinsic rewards that employees receive
    in exchange for their work
  • base wage or salary, any incentives or bonuses,
    and any benefits.
  • Pay
  • Refers only to the actual dollars employees
    receive in exchange for their work.

20
Employee Compensation
  • Base wage or salary
  • Hourly, weekly, or monthly pay that employees
    receive for their work.
  • Incentives
  • Rewards offered in addition to the base wage or
    salary and usually directly related to
    performance.

21
Employee Compensation
  • Benefits
  • Rewards employees receive as a result of their
    employment and position with the organization.

22
Components of Employee Compensation
Table 12.2
23
Compensation Policies
  • Minimum and maximum levels of pay
  • taking into consideration the worth of the job to
    the organization
  • the organizations ability to pay
  • government regulations
  • union influences
  • market pressures

24
Compensation Policies
  • General relationships among levels of pay
  • between senior management and operating
    management, operative employees, and supervisors
  • The division of the total compensation dollar
  • what portion goes into base pay, incentive
    programs, and benefits

25
Compensation Policies
  • Organizations must also make decisions concerning
  • How much money will go into pay increases for the
    next year
  • Who will recommend them
  • How raises will generally be determined
  • Also whether pay information will be kept secret
    or made public

26
Pay Secrecy
  • Justification for pay secrecy
  • To avoid any discontent that might result from
    employees knowing what everybody else is being
    paid
  • Many employees feel very strongly that their pay
    is nobody elses business

27
Pay Secrecy
  • Drawbacks of pay secrecy
  • Difficult for employees to determine whether pay
    is related to performance and does not eliminate
    pay comparisons
  • May cause employees to overestimate pay of their
    peers and underestimate pay of their supervisors
  • Can create feelings of dissatisfaction
  • Employees may become suspicious

28
Pay Secrecy
  • A compromise on issue of pay secrecy is to
    disclose pay ranges for various job levels within
    the organization
  • Clearly communicates general ranges of pay for
    different jobs, but it does not disclose exactly
    what any particular employee is making

29
DavisBacon Act
  • DavisBeacon Act
  • Requires that contractors and subcontractors on
    federal construction contracts in excess of
    2,000 pay prevailing wage rates for locality of
    project
  • Prevailing wage rate is determined by secretary
    of labor
  • Overtime of time-and-a-half For more than 40
    hours per week

12-29
30
WalshHealey Public Contracts Act
  • WalshHealey Public Contracts Act
  • Requires that organizations manufacturing or
    furnishing materials, supplies, articles, or
    equipment in excess of 10,000 to the federal
    government pay at least the minimum wage for the
    industry as determined by the secretary of labor
  • Defense Authorization Act of 1986 stipulated
    overtime as being hours worked over 40 in a week

31
Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)
  • Fair Labor Standards Act
  • primary requirements are that individuals
    employed in interstate commerce or in
    organizations producing goods for interstate
    commerce must be paid a certain minimum wage and
    be paid time-and-a-half for hours over 40 worked
    in one week
  • places restrictions on the employment of
    individuals between ages 14 and 18

32
History of Minimum Wage Rates
33
Equal Pay Act
  • Equal Pay Act
  • Illegal to pay different wages to men and women
    for jobs that require equal skill, effort, and
    responsibility and are performed under similar
    conditions
  • Does not prohibit payment of wage differentials
    based on seniority systems, merit systems that
    measure earnings by quantity and quality of
    production, or systems based on any factor other
    than sex

34
Federal Wage Garnishment Law
  • Federal Wage Garnishment Law
  • Law limits amount of an employees disposable
    earnings that can be garnished in any one week
    and protects employee from discharge because of
    garnishment
  • Garnishment
  • A legal procedure by which an employer is
    empowered to withhold wages for payment of an
    employees debt to a creditor

35
Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009
  • Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009
  • addresses a Supreme Court ruling by eliminating
    any time limitations for pay discrimination
    claims

36
Union Contracts
  • If an organization is unionized, the wage
    structure is usually largely determined through
    collective bargaining process
  • Because wages are a primary concern of unions,
    current union contracts must be considered in
    formulating compensation policies

37
Impact of Comparable Worth
  • Theory holds that while true worth of jobs to
    employer may be similar, some jobs (especially
    those held by women) are often paid a lower rate
    than other jobs (often held by men)
  • Drawback
  • Determining worth of the jobs in question is
    difficult
  • How should job worth be established?
  • U.S. courts have generally rejected cases based
    on comparable worth claims

38
The Importance of Fair Pay
  • Inadequate pay can have a very negative impact on
    an organization
  • Pay dissatisfaction can influence employees
    feelings about their jobs in two ways
  • Can increase desire for more money
  • Can lower attractiveness of the job

39
The Importance of Fair Pay
  • An employee who desires more money is likely to
    engage in actions that can increase pay
  • These actions might include
  • Joining a union
  • Looking for another job
  • Performing better
  • Filing a grievance
  • Going on strike

40
Model of the Consequences of Pay Dissatisfaction
Figure 12.2
41
Pay Equity
  • Equity theory of motivation
  • Employees have a strong need to maintain a
    balance between what they perceive as their
    inputs to their jobs and what they receive from
    their jobs in the form of rewards
  • Employees who perceive inequities will take
    action to eliminate or reduce them
  • Pay equity concerns whether employees believe
    they are being fairly paid

42
Pay Equity
  • Internal equity
  • Addresses what an employee is being paid for
    doing a job compared to what other employees in
    the same organization are being paid to do their
    jobs.
  • External equity
  • Addresses what employees in an organization are
    being paid compared to employees in other
    organizations performing similar jobs.

43
Pay Equity
  • Individual equity
  • Addresses the rewarding of individual
    contributions is very closely related to the
    pay-for-performance question.
  • Organizational equity
  • Addresses how profits are divided up within the
    organizations.

44
Pay Satisfaction Model
  • Based on the idea that employees will be
    satisfied with their pay when their perception of
    what their pay is and of what they think it
    should be agree
  • Happens when employees feel good about internal
    and external equity of their pay

45
Pay Satisfaction Model
  • An employees perception of what pay should be
    depends on several factors
  • Job inputs
  • Includes all the experience, skills, and
    abilities an employee brings to the job in
    addition to the effort the employee puts into it

46
Pay Satisfaction Model
  • The perceived inputs and outcomes of friends and
    peers
  • Refer to the individuals perception of what
    friends and peers put into their jobs and what
    kind of pay they get in return
  • Nonmonetary outcomes
  • Refer to the fact that certain nonmonetary
    rewards can sometimes substitute for pay, at
    least up to a point

47
Model of the Determinants of Pay Satisfaction
Figure 12.3
48
The Role of the Human Resource Manager in the
Reward System
  • Role of human resource manager in overall
    organizational reward system is to assist in its
    design and to administer the system
  • Administering the system Carries responsibility
    of ensuring that system is fair to all employees
    and that it is clearly communicated to all
    employees
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