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8 - Compensation

The document discusses compensation management and establishing strategic pay plans. It explains that compensation includes all financial returns and benefits employees receive. The objectives of compensation include acquiring qualified employees, retaining current employees, ensuring equity, and controlling costs. It outlines methods for establishing pay rates, including conducting salary surveys, evaluating jobs, grouping similar jobs into pay grades, pricing pay grades using wage curves, and fine-tuning pay rates. The document also discusses using incentive plans and variable pay to tie compensation to performance and profitability.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
246 views28 pages

8 - Compensation

The document discusses compensation management and establishing strategic pay plans. It explains that compensation includes all financial returns and benefits employees receive. The objectives of compensation include acquiring qualified employees, retaining current employees, ensuring equity, and controlling costs. It outlines methods for establishing pay rates, including conducting salary surveys, evaluating jobs, grouping similar jobs into pay grades, pricing pay grades using wage curves, and fine-tuning pay rates. The document also discusses using incentive plans and variable pay to tie compensation to performance and profitability.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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COMPENSATION

MANAGEMENT
 WHY?

 Money important motivation for employees.


 To design the lowest – cost pay structure to
attract , motivate and retain competent
employees.
 Compensation is what employees receive in
exchange for their contribution to the
organisation.
 Poorly compensated jobs leads to absenteeism
and other forms of employee withdrawal.
 OBJECTIVES

 Acquire qualified personnel


 Retain present employees
 Ensure equity
 Reward desired behavior
 Control costs
 Administrative efficiency
 TOTAL RETURNS

Compensation refers to all forms of financial returns


and tangible services and benefits employees receive
as part of an employment relationship.
It has two main components :
 Direct financial payments( wages ,salaries, incentives

,commissions and bonuses).


 Indirect payments ( as financial benefits like

employer-paid insurance and vacations ).


Total returns

Relational returns

Recognition and status


Total compensation
Employment security
Learning
opportunities
Benefits
Cash compensation Challenging
work

Allowances
Long-term
Base Income
incentives Work/life
Merit protection
Short-term focus
incentives
 ESTABLISHING SRTATEGIC PAY PLANS

 LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS IN
COMPENSATION:

 Davis – Bacon Act (1931)


 Walsh – Healey Public Contract Act (1936)

 Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act

 Fair Labour Standards Act 1938

 Equal Pay Act 1963

 Employee Retirement Income Security Act 1974


 ESTABLISHING PAY RATES:

The process of establishing pay rates while ensuring


external and internal equity consists of five steps:
 Conduct a salary survey of what other employers are
paying for comparable jobs.
 Determine the worth of each job in your organization

through job evaluation ( to ensure internal equity).


 Group similar jobs into pay grades.

 Price each pay grade using wage curves.

 Fine – tune pay rates- pay ranges.


Contd…
Step 1. The Salary Survey

 Aims at determining prevailing wage rates.


 Provides specific wage rates for specific jobs.

 Formal written questionnaire surveys –most

comprehensive.
 Other sources of information- telephone surveys and

newspaper ads.
 Survey data to price benchmark jobs.

 Surveys also collect data on benefits like insurance ,

sick leave and vacation, providing basis for decisions


regarding employee benefits.
 Compensation information in questionnaires generally

includes – number of employees, overtime policies,


starting salaries and paid vacations.
Contd…
Many employers use surveys published by consulting
firms , professional associations , government agencies,
Department of labor and self conducted surveys.

Step 2. Job Evaluation

 A systematic comparison done in order to determine the


worth of one job relative to another.
 Results in a wage or salary hierarchy.

 Identifying compensable factors plays a central role.

 Compensable factors – skills, effort , responsibility,

and working conditions.


 These factors depend on the job and job evaluation

method.
Contd…
 It is mostly a judgmental process.
 Demands close cooperation among supervisors , HR

specialists, employees and union representatives.


 An evaluation committee is chosen.

 The committee consists of 5 members , most of whom

are employees .
 Evaluation committee usually identifies 10 or 15 key

benchmark jobs – to be evaluated first and serve as


benchmarks against which the relative importance of all
other jobs can be compared.
 Next selection of compensable factors by HR

department.
 Actual evaluating the worth of each job by any of the

following methods:-
Contd…
 Ranking
 Job classification
 Point method
 Factor Comparison
Job evaluation methods: Ranking
- The simplest method of job evaluation that involves
ranking each job relative to all other jobs , usually
based on overall difficulty. There are several steps in
the job ranking method:
1. Obtain job information
2. Select jobs
3. Select compensable factors
4. Rank jobs
5. Combine ratings
Contd…

Job Evaluation Methods: Job Classification ( or Job


Grading)
- A method for categorizing jobs into groups.
- The groups are called classes if they contain similar

jobs
- The groups are called grades if they contain jobs that

are different but are similar in difficulty.


- The usual procedure is to choose compensable factors

and then develop class or grade descriptions for each


class in terms of amount or level of compensable factor
in those jobs.
- Compensable factors – e.g. difficulty and variety of

work , supervision exercised , judgment exercised ,


responsibility , experience , knowledge required etc.
Contd…

- Based on compensable factors , raters write a grade


description/ definition.
- E.g.

Grade Nature of Level of


assignment responsibility
GS-7 Performs specialized duties in Work is assigned in
a defined functional area terms of objectives ,
involving a wide variety of priorities and
problems ; develops deadlines; the
information; identifies employee works
interrelationships… independently in
resolving
conflicts…
Contd…
Job Evaluation Methods: Point Method
- The point method is a more quantitative technique.
- It involves :
1. Identifying several compensable factors each having
several degrees , as well as
2. The degree to which each of these factors is present in
the job.
- Assign a different number of points to each degree of
each factor.
- Once the evaluation committee determines the degree to
which each compensable factor is present in the job , it
can calculate a total point value for the job by adding
up the corresponding points for each factor.
- It is the most widely used job evaluation method.
Contd…
Job Evaluation Method: Factor Comparison
- A widely used method of ranking jobs according to a
variety of skill and difficulty factors , and then adding
up these rankings to arrive at an overall numerical
rating for each given job.
- This method is a refinement of the ranking method.
- It involves five steps:
1. Determine the compensable factors
2. Determine key jobs
3. Apportion present wages for key jobs
4. Place key jobs on a factor comparison chart
5. Evaluate other jobs.
Step 3. Group similar jobs into pay grades
 A pay grade is comprised of jobs of equal difficulty.

 The committee groups jobs into pay grades after

determining the relative worth of each job.


Step 4. Price Each Pay Grade- Wage Curves
 Wage curve shows the relationship between the value of

the job and the average wage paid for this job.
 It involves assigning pay rates to the pay grades.

 The wage curve shows the pay rates currently paid for

jobs in each pay grade , relative to the points assigned to


each job by the job evaluation.
 Pay rates – vertical axis

 Pay grades (in terms of points ) – horizontal axis


Contd…
 If the current rates being paid for any of your jobs/
grades fall well above or below the wage line, raises or a
pay freeze for that job may be in order.

Step 5. Fine – Tune Pay Rates


 It involves developing pay ranges and correcting out of

line rates.
 Most employers do not pay just one rate for all jobs in a

particular pay grade .


 Pay ranges may appear as vertical boxes within each

grade, showing minimum, maximum and midpoint pay


rates for that grade- called as wage structure.
 Pay ranges are series of steps or levels within a pay

grade , usually based upon years of service.


Contd…

Advantage for using pay ranges for each pay grades :


-Easier to attract experienced employees into a pay grade
if the starting salary for the lowest step may be too low
to attract them.
 PAY FOR PERFORMANCE AND
FINANCIAL INCENTIVES

 TYPES OF INCENTIVE PLANS:


 Individual incentive plans - Income over and above base

salary.
 Group incentive program

 Profit sharing plans

Variable pay – same as incentive plans and defined as :


- Any plan that ties pay to productivity or profitability.

INCENTIVES FOR OPERATIONS EMPLOYEES :

 Piecework plans :
-A system of pay based on the number of items processed by each
individual worker in a unit of time , such as items per hour or items
per day
- It is the oldest incentive plan.
 Straight piecework:
- An incentive plan in which a person is paid a sum for each item he or
she makes or sells , with a strict proportionality
between results and rewards.
 Standard hour plan:
- A plan by which worker is paid a basic hourly rate but is paid an extra
percentage of his or her base rate for production exceeding the standard
per hour or per day.
 INCENTIVES FOR MANAGERS AND EXECUTIVES:

 Short term incentives: The annual bonus:


- Plans that are designed to motivate short- term
performance of managers and are tied to company
profitability.
- Formulas for determining executive bonus fund:
1. Ten percent of net income after deducting 5% of average
capital invested in business.
2. Twelve and one – half percent of the amount by which net
income exceeds 6% of stockholder’s equity
3. Twelve percent of net earnings after deducting 6 % of net
capital.
Contd…
 Long- term incentives:

- Stock options – The right to purchase a stated number of


shares of a company stock at today’s price at some time in
future.
- Mega- option grants –Large upfront grants in lieu of
annual grants.
 INCENTIVE FOR SALESPEOPLE:
 Salary Plan- fixed salaries

 Commission plans – pay salespeople for only results.

 Combination plans –salary and commissions.


- It can be in three ways:
- 80% base salary and 20% incentives
- 70 / 30
- 60 / 40
 BENEFITS
 Pay for time not worked
 Insurance Benefits
 Retirement Benefits
 Pay For Time Not Worked:
 Also called supplemental pay benefits.
 Unemployment insurance – Provides benefits if a person is
unable to work through some fault other than his or her
own.
 Vacations and Holidays
 Sick Leave – Provides pay to an employee when he or she
is out of work because of illness.
 Parental Leave – women taking leave during pregnancy.
 Severance pay – A one – time payment some employers
provide when terminating an employee.
 Insurance Benefits:
 Worker’s compensation – Provides income and medical

benefits to work – related accident victims or their


dependants regardless of fault.
 Hospitalization , Health and Disability Insurance.

 Life Insurance
 Retirement Benefits:

 Social Security – Federal program that provides three types


of benefits :
- Retirement income at the age of 62
- Death benefits payable to employee’s dependants
- Disability benefits payable to disabled employees

 Pension Plans - Plans that provide a fixed sum when


employees reach a predetermined retirement age or when
they can no longer work due to disability.

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