Hello,
I'm an HR Generalist in a call center and i was tasked to create our company's compensation manual. I'm quite new with the Compensation role. I would like to ask what should be the content of the compensation manual. I woud appreaciate also if someone could provide / send a sample of it.
Thanks.
From United States, Englewood
I'm an HR Generalist in a call center and i was tasked to create our company's compensation manual. I'm quite new with the Compensation role. I would like to ask what should be the content of the compensation manual. I woud appreaciate also if someone could provide / send a sample of it.
Thanks.
From United States, Englewood
Hi Larry,
Sometime ago i presented the paper on this topic...its a long one..
Article Source http://www.salarysource.com
Introduction
All organizations have a compensation plan, written or unwritten, formal or informal. For some organizations, the purpose of that plan may be merely to meet compliance requirements. For other organizations, the goal of the compensation plan may be to attract qualified employees, to retain those employees, and to motivate employees to direct their efforts towards achieving the goals of the organization. Regardless of the goal, size and complexity of a compensation plan, there are generally many easily-identified elements to any compensation plan. This commentary reviews these elements, poses questions management can use to determine the stance it would like to take regarding compensation, and offers some advice and recommendations on implementing these ideas. The topics that will be covered are development of a compensation philosophy, objectives of a base pay program, developing rates of pay for jobs, pay rates and increases, performance appraisal, maintaining and auditing a compensation plan.
Development of a Compensation Philosophy
Before an organization actually develops a compensation plan, there are several questions that need to be answered. Taking the time to consider and answer these questions will make the both the process of developing and administering a compensation plan much easier and will result in the development of a compensation plan that more closely matches the organization's goals and objectives.
What is the goal of the organization's compensation system? In addition to attracting and retaining qualified employees, is there an intent to reward employees for good performance, motivate good performance, and/or create or reinforce a particular type of organizational climate?
What is the communication policy? How is the organization going to communicate the compensation plan to employees once it has been developed? Is the organization prepared to evaluate the effectiveness of any such communication? If so, how?
How will decisions regarding pay be made? Who will be involved in these decisions? What decision guidelines will need to be developed?
What is the organization's desired market position relative to pay? Will the organization choose to pay market rates, above market or below market? How does the desired market position fit with other strategic goals? Are there any competitive factors involved that will determine the pay strategy?
What is the desired mix between benefits and cash? Since benefits are an important form of compensation, how does an organization use them to maximize the effectiveness of the compensation plan?
What does the organization pay for? Does it pay for performance or seniority or some combination of the two?
What is the role of performance appraisal in the organization? How important is performance appraisal and why?
How will the organization manage change to the compensation plan once it has been developed? What systems need to be in place to implement any changes including deciding when change is necessary and who will make these decisions?
How does the compensation philosophy and plan fit with the rest of the organization? How can the compensation practices reinforce other overall management philosophies and objectives?
Objectives of a Base Pay Program
Before delving into the details of how actually to pay people, there are many factors that impact a base pay program that an organization must consider. In general, every organization's base pay program has certain objectives. The principal ones are as follows:
* internal equity.
* external equity (or competitiveness),
* individual equity,
* process equity,
* performance or productivity incentives,
* maximum use of financial resources,
* compliance with laws and regulations, and
* administrative efficiency.
As will be shown in the following, all of these objectives must be balanced in the development of a sound base pay program. As these points are being reviewed, management should ask the following questions:
Is this point important to this organization? If so, how important?
What are the implications of this point to the current or desired practices?
Internal Equity - Internal equity deals with the perceived worth of a job relative to other jobs in the organization. All employees compare their jobs to other jobs within the organization. Generally, they consider skill, effort, responsibility and working conditions in this comparison in order to determine the value of their jobs relative to other jobs. Likewise, management must often determine the "worth" or "value" of one job in relation other jobs for the purpose of pay programs. Maintaining appropriate pay relative to value or worth is achieving internal equity.
External Equity - External equity deals with the issue of market rates for jobs. An employer's goal should be to pay what is necessary to attract, retain and motivate a sufficient number of qualified employees. This requires a base pay program that pays competitively. Among others, internal data such as turnover rates and exit interviews can be helpful in determining the competitiveness of pay rates.
Employees also compare their jobs and pay to the jobs and pay in other organizations. Generally, employees consider much more than base pay in determining external equity. Depending on the individual employee, serious consideration may be given to employee benefits, job security, physical work environment, commuting distance, opportunity for advancement and the employee relations practices of the employer in determining external equity issues. In the Pacific Northwest, a frequent consideration is also lifestyle and quality of life.
An important issue to employees in determining external equity is the transferability of their skills. If an employee's skills are valued more highly in a different type of job or industry in the area, the employee may believe that s/he is being treated inequitably.
Note: An organization may choose to place the primary emphasis of its base pay program on internal equity, external equity or a blend of the two. There are important ramifications to this decision that should "fit" with other organizational structure issues and overall management objectives.
Individual Equity - Individual equity deals with how individuals perceive how they are being paid relative to other individuals within the organization and perhaps within the same position. This focus of individual equity is on the merits of the person filling a job, as opposed to the job itself. In simple terms, employees want to feel that the rewards they receive for how they do their work are comparable to the rewards received by others for the same amount of effort or output, all other factors being equal. How merit rewards or increases are given strongly impacts perceptions of individual equity.
Process Equity - How employees perceive the fairness or equity in the administration of the compensation system is process equity. Process equity, in the perceptions of employees, is strongly influenced by the openness of the system, communication of the system to employees, participation in design or administration of the system and a grievance appeal procedure.
Performance Incentives - A significant element of a base pay program is to encourage higher or increased levels of employee performance. Pay systems need to be designed to improve organizational performance.
Maximum Use of Financial Resources - Since an organization does not have unlimited financial resources, the base pay program needs to be designed to maximize the value to the organization with minimum use of these limited resources. In order to accomplish this, pay programs have a variety of tools such as pay range maximums, pay increase budgets, authorization procedures, compensation committees or various internal auditing procedures available to help accomplish this objective.
Compliance with Laws and Regulations - While not the primary objective of a pay program, one of the objectives of a pay program needs to be to keep the organization in compliance with various state and federal laws and regulations.
Administrative Efficiency - Due to the limited financial resources in an organization, one of the objectives of a pay program should be to have a pay program that is easy to administer, flexible, and cost-effective. Developing Rates of Pay for Jobs
The basis for most pay programs is a pay structure - a hierarchy of jobs with pay ranges and/or rates assigned. Pay structures are designed so that the greater the worth of a job (as determined by internal or external equity), the higher the pay grade and range. Developing a pay structure is a process with a series of steps:
* job analysis,
* job documentation,
* development of a job worth hierarchy,
* labor market data collection and analysis, and
* establishment of pay rates and/or ranges.
Job Analysis - This involves collecting and evaluating relevant information about jobs. Any data collected should clarify the nature of the work being performed (principal or essential tasks, duties and responsibilities), the level of the work being performed, the extent and types of knowledge, skill, mental and physical effort and requirements, and responsibility required for the work being performed. There are five primary sources of data for collection of job information: questionnaires, interviews, logs or diaries, direct observation and work plans. All of these methods have advantages and disadvantages and the organization must choose the method that will provide comprehensive data with administrative efficiency and cost-effectiveness.
Job Documentation - There needs to be a formalized way to document job content. In most organizations, a job description is the means used to accomplish this. Job documentation is used to evaluate job content, provide objective criteria for making pay comparisons, ensure that jobs are classified according to content as opposed to individual personalities, effectively communicate the job duties to both supervisors and employees, and help the organization defend itself against charges of discrimination. Who should write job descriptions? That will depend on the resources available to the organization, but they should always be reviewed by line management.
Development of a Job Worth Hierarchy - A job worth hierarchy is the result of job evaluation, the overall process of comparing jobs. There are 6 major methods of comparing jobs in order to develop the job worth hierarchy. The first three methods are "whole-job" evaluations and are non-quantitative in nature. These include ranking, classification and slotting. The second three are "factor" evaluation and are quantitative in nature. These include point factor, factor comparison, and scored questionnaires.
Labor Market Data Collection and Analysis - Before an organization begins the process of collecting labor market data, it must first define its relevant labor market. This may include similar organizations in the same labor market, all employers in the local market, similar organizations in the regional or national market, and/or all employers in the regional or national market. The goal of labor market data collection is to find data from employers with whom the organization competes for employees. For clerical employees, this may be all employers in the local labor market. For high level management positions or certain specialized positions, this may be all employers in the national market. Once the data has been collected, it must be analyzed. The simplest analysis involves comparing the going market rate and approximating this rate within the organization's own pay structure. Other methods involve using advanced statistics to study relationships among certain items in a specific job or market group. An organization may find pay range information, as well as weighted average of actual pay, very helpful.
Establishment of Pay Ranges and/or Rates - In order to actually establish a pay structure, an organization needs to set rates of pay for the jobs in the job hierarchy. Before doing this, an organization needs to ask, and answer, the following questions:
How should the organization's pay level relate to the external market? Should the organization be a pay leader, match the market or pay less than market?
What is the organization willing to pay for: job content, seniority, performance, skills, cost of labor, or some combination of all of these?
How does the organization pay its employees: based on a single rate structure (all employees in the same job receive the same pay), based on seniority, based on merit, based on productivity (piece work), based on new skills (skill-based pay), or based on some combination of these factors? Are short term or long term incentives provided?
What steps does the organization need to take to ensure that pay is administered in a manner free of bias and discrimination?
If an organization decides to use pay ranges (or grades), it will have to determine how many ranges to have. This will depend on the number of different levels of relative job value that are recognized by the organization and the difference in pay between the highest and lowest paid jobs in the pay structure. The focal point of a pay range is the mid-point as this is generally the "going" rate for jobs assigned to that range. From the mid-point, an organization can determine the range minimum and maximum. The range minimum is the usually the lowest pay rate for any job in that range and is usually the pay rate given to people hired in that range who meet minimal qualifications only. Occasionally an organization will pay a "training" rate that is below that minimum. The maximum of a range is the highest rate an employer is willing to pay for jobs in that pay range. Other important range issues include the range width and the degree of overlap between ranges.
The end result of all of the above is a pay structure that should accomplish the organization's objectives with regards to a pay program, and should reflect the organization's philosophy on how it wishes to relate its pay program to the market. Also, this pay structure should demonstrate the internal job values of positions, and how the organization wishes to mix base pay, benefits and incentives.
Pay Rates and Pay Increases
Creating a pay structure is not the final step in the creation of a compensation plan. An organization must also decide how to administer this compensation plan. This means deciding how to pay new employees, how and when to give employees increases, including how to move existing employees from the minimum to the maximum of their assigned pay grades, how to determine the pay increase for an employee being promoted from one job to another and what influence, if any, cost of labor increases will have on the determination of pay increases for employees. In addition, an organization must develop policies and procedures that will implement the results of these decisions in a consistent manner.
Starting Pay for New Employees - In order to avoid paying new employees the same as more experienced employees, most employers choose to start new employees closer to the minimum of the pay range. In general, an employee with minimum qualifications should be paid the minimum of the range. This general rule is not true when a new hire has skills which are in great demand or has skills or other expertise substantially above the minimum.
Employee Increases - There are several different types of base pay increases: general (across-the-board) increases, cost-of-living/labor increases, promotion increases, step increases (based on longevity), and merit increases.
General increases are diminishing in popularity because they are not consistent with the idea of pay for performance. With a general increase, employees in a certain group based on established requirements are eligible for a certain monetary or percent increase to their base pay.
A cost-of-living increase is a type of general increase given to all eligible employees. This type of increase may happen as a result of union contract negotiation. Some companies choose to track benchmark positions over a period of time and modify other positions based on changes in the ranges of benchmark positions.
Promotion increases are given when an employee is moved from one job to another with a higher pay grade and range. The size of the increase will be influenced by the difference between the old and new pay ranges, and the pay of the newly promoted person's peers, superiors and subordinates, if any.
Step increases can be based solely on longevity or some combination of longevity and performance. Step increases alone are inconsistent with pay for performance.
Merit increases are also known as pay for performance. To be successful, an organization must be able to measure differences in job performance and these differences must be significant enough to merit the time and effort required to measure them and pay accordingly. Merit increases also affect other components of the compensation plan in that the pay range must be wide enough to allow for significant differences based on performance, supervisors and managers require training in performance planning and appraisal, and control mechanisms must be in place to successfully administer a merit increase program.
Performance Appraisal
If an organization chooses to pay for performance, the compensation plan must include a well-designed and properly administered performance appraisal system in order to be complete. Following are some questions that will help determine if an organization's current performance appraisal system meets this criteria.
Is performance appraised on the direct measurement of an employee's output or results? Does the performance appraisal system consider only job-related behavior rather than personality traits?
Are supervisors and managers trained in the performance appraisal process?
Are the criteria used to measure performance as objective and quantitative as possible? Or are the criteria open to subjective interpretation?
Have objective job standards been developed? Have the employees had input into the development of these standards? Are they communicated to the employees at the beginning of the appraisal period? Are job standards reviewed regularly to ensure relevance and importance to the department and organization?
Is the employee actively involved in the performance appraisal process? Or is a performance appraisal something that is "done" to the employee?
Maintaining and Auditing a Compensation Plan
Changes in the external market or internally within the organization can cause one or more parts of a compensation plan to become outdated. Part of the challenge in creating a compensation plan is to build in mechanisms that facilitate change when necessary, yet maintain control on a regular basis. Some actions an organization can take to maintain an updated compensation plan include regular review of job descriptions, monitoring of compensation levels versus companies with which there is competition for employees, and regular review of the pay structure including pay ranges and pay increase budgets.
An audit is an excellent means to ensure that a compensation plan is being properly administered and maintained. When planning to audit a compensation plan, an organization needs to consider the following:
Process measures - Are procedures and practices in place to ensure the compensation plan is being administered smoothly and efficiently?
Policy compliance - Are there procedures or other mechanisms in place to ensure that the compensation plan is being administered in accordance with policy?
Documentation adequacy - Is there adequate documentation in place to ensure that the administration of the compensation plan and compliance issues can be audited?
Overall results - Are there measures that can assess how well the compensation plan is achieving its goals and objectives?
After reviewing audit results, management can make recommendations on any improvements that may be necessary, allocate the necessary resources and follow-up to make sure the work is completed.
Summary
Success of a compensation plan includes an overall pay philosophy as well as the policies and procedures that govern operation of the compensation plan.
Because organizations have limited resources, excessive time and money should not be expended in pay program administration. The costs of administration should be balanced against achieving the other objectives of the pay plan.
An organization must decide how it will move employees through the pay range once a pay-range structure has been developed. An organization may utilize the following:
* Individual performance as a basis for movement
* Automatic or step progression based on employee tenure
* Cost of living increases
If an organization chooses to implement a performance-based pay program, then compensation professionals must ensure that their merit-pay programs measure performance objectively and management must carefully evaluate performance to make judgments regarding pay differentials.
Organizations find that an audit of the compensation plan is a useful tool for educating management, thus increasing their understanding and support of the pay program. It is recommended to conduct a comprehensive audit at least every two years in order to identify problem areas and resolve them as soon as possible.
Explaining what the terms like "rewards," "base pay" and "perks" mean in a pay system.
Compensation Philosophy:
Identifies target market position for competitive pay levels and articulates the company s commitment to motivating, and rewarding employee contribution and performance through the various elements of the company s total pay system.
Base Pay:
Pays for standard job duties, skills and results. Should be designed to reflect competitive rates for comparable jobs within identified marketplace.
Performance Based Variable Pay:
Designed to reward achievement of specific company and/or individual performance objectives. Payouts vary based on company and/or individual achievement.
Types of variable pay plans include:•
*Skill pay
*Incentive pay/bonus plans
*Commission
*Gain sharing/results sharing
Long Term Incentive Compensation:
Designed to reward long term company performance. Individual job level/performance may impact eligibility to participate. Can be an effective retention tool.
Benefits
Broad range of practices including health insurance, vacation, leave policies, and retirement and savings plans. Designed to address health and welfare needs of employees. Can send strong messages about company culture and values.
Perks & Non-Cash Rewards
Used to recognize exceptional contribution, performance, commitment to culture and values. Variety of methods including additional time off, tickets to events, trips, dinners, public recognition, etc.
Intrinsic Rewards•
*Performance Feedback Management •
*Development Opportunities •
*Work Environment
Processes used to communicate and align employee behaviors with business priorities and company values to achieve desired results. Play a significant role in successfully engaging full scope of skills and abilities within the in retaining key talent.
401 K plan
There are two main types of employer-sponsored retirement plans: defined benefit and defined contribution. A defined benefit plan, such as a traditional pension plan, sets the amount that the employer will pay to workers upon their retirement. In defined contribution plans, the plan sets the amount of the contributions that an employer makes, not the benefit it will pay at retirement. In 1978, section 401(k)of the Internal Revenue Code authorized a new kind of defined contribution plan that allows the employee to make pre-tax contributions to the plan.
In a 401(k) plan, the employer sets up a special savings and investment account with an investment company, a bank trust dept, or an insurance company. The employee agrees to put part of his or her salary into the plan through automatic deductions each pay period. This money is deducted before the employee’s paycheck is taxed, so that it remains untaxed until it is taken out of the plan, often years or even decades later.
Employers frequently match employee contributions up to a certain level, sometimes by as much as 100 percent, but are not required to do so. The money in the plan is invested into one or more funds provided in the plan according to choices made by the employee. The plans usually are intended to earn money over a very long period of time, which is much less risky than short-term investing..
Employees like 401(k) plans for several reasons. The tax deferral an obvious plus. Others popular features include the increased portability of this plan from one employer to another, the matching contributions, and the sense of control due to the ability to choose one’s own investments.
Determine your organization's salary philosophy. Do you believe in raising the level of base salaries in your organization or do you appreciate the flexibility of variable pay?
A growing, entrepreneurial company, with variable sales and income, may be better off controlling the levels of base salaries. When times are good, the company can tie bonus dollars to goals achieved.
In lean times, when money is limited, the company is not obligated to high base salaries. A longer-term company, with fairly stable sales and earnings, may put more money in base salary.
Find Comparison Factors for Salary
While I believe every organization can benefit from industry comparison studies, if conducted by reputable organizations, the bigger question is whether you are competitive within your local market for most of your positions. Research the salary range for similar positions and job descriptions. The job description is particularly important for comparisons but usually harder to find for comparison.
Determine whether you are competitive with similar positions with organizations of similar size, sales, and markets. If you can find companies in the same industry, especially in your area or region, that is another good comparison source.
What Goals Must Salary Help You Achieve?
Pay must relate to the accomplishment of goals, the company mission and vision. Any system that offers an employee the "average" increase for their industry or length of service (usually 1-4 percent) is counter-productive to goal accomplishment. Even an above-average increase that differentiates one staff person from another can demotivate. One manager at a GM plant offered his star staff person a seven percent increase because she had accomplished all of her goals and "walked on water." Motivating? Should have been, however it was not when the staff person knew others in the organization were receiving ten percent increases and more.
Additionally, your pay system must help you create the work culture you desire. Paying an individual for his performance accomplishments alone, will not help you develop the team environment you want. Thus, you must carefully define the work culture you want to create, and aim your best salary increases at those contributing to the success of that culture. If you want your organization to change, define the change, and pay employees commensurate with their support of and contribution to the change.
Finally, your salary strategy must align with your human resources goals and strategies. If the HR function is charged with developing a highly skilled, outstanding workforce, you must pay above industry or regional averages to attract the quality employees you seek. Paying less than comparable firms will bring you mediocre employees and fail to fulfill the desire to create an outstanding workforce. If, on the other hand, the HR strategy is to get cheap labor in the door quickly with little regard for turnover, you can pay people less salary.
Assess the Competition and Labor Markets
We’re currently experiencing a period of high unemployment. Many skilled people are available because of job loss, the economic downturn, the demise of many dot com companies, and other reasons. Consequently, the economic reality is that you may be able to hire good people for less money than in the past.
This may be short-term thinking, however. Don’t get too far out of line with what you would have paid that employee during better times. You risk losing her when the economy improves. She may never feel valued by your organization if her pay is out-of-line with her experience and contribution. She may never really stop her job search, using your company as a resting place until the right offer arrives.
You will also want to consider percentages of increase in salary in similar jobs in your local area.
Ask yourself if this is an employee you really want to keep? If so, pay the employee a salary that makes you the employer of choice.
Create Salary Ranges Within Your Organization
People always talk about salary and pay issues. No matter how many times you ask them not to discuss their salary and other personnel issues at work, they do. Thus, grouping similar positions with similar responsibility and authority into pay ranges, usually makes sense. Nothing impacts morale as much as individuals who feel they are underpaid in comparison with others based on their contribution and that of other similar jobs.
Recognize Your Benefit Package Role in Salary Satisfaction
An organization that offers better than average benefits may pay less salary and still have motivated, contributing employees. If your health plan fees go up and you continue to pay the cost, this is the same as pay in your employees’ pockets.
The range of benefits you offer, and their cost to the employer, is a critical component of any salary approach. The biggest mistake organizations make is failure to communicate the value of the benefits offered.
Determine Bonus Philosophy and Potential
You may pay a bonus that is determined individually based on the value of the goals accomplished and the person to your organization. You may give all employees the same bonus, based on group goal attainment, across the board. You may use profit sharing in which a portion of company profits is paid out equally to every person who was employed during the time period.
Ways to address bonus, as part of your overall pay system, are limited only by your imagination. I recommend bonus structures that are fair, consistent, understandable, communicated up front, and tied to measurable, achievable goals. The better the shared picture of what constitutes eligibility for a bonus, by the organization and the employee, the more likely the bonus will result in employee motivation and success.
Communicate Your Salary Philosophy and Approach.
In many organizations, who gets what and why is a cause for consternation, gossip, demotivation, and unhappiness. The more transparent you make your pay and salary philosophy and determinations; the more likely you are to achieve positive employee morale and motivation. Don’t keep your salary philosophy a secret. Yes, individual compensation is confidential, but your methods for determining pay must be clear and understandable.
Conclusion
If you take these tips to heart and apply them within your organization, you increase the likelihood that you’ll have happy, motivated employees. The alternative is to use your salary system to create disgruntled, grumbling, unhappy people. Which group do you think will do a better job of serving your customers? Increasing your profitability? Making you the employer of choice? Increasing your positive visibility in your community? Is there any question in your mind?
Am attaching the sample for your reference..you have to fine tune it as per your country's laws & regulations.
Hope this helps..
Cheers,
Rajat
From India, Pune
Sometime ago i presented the paper on this topic...its a long one..
Article Source http://www.salarysource.com
Introduction
All organizations have a compensation plan, written or unwritten, formal or informal. For some organizations, the purpose of that plan may be merely to meet compliance requirements. For other organizations, the goal of the compensation plan may be to attract qualified employees, to retain those employees, and to motivate employees to direct their efforts towards achieving the goals of the organization. Regardless of the goal, size and complexity of a compensation plan, there are generally many easily-identified elements to any compensation plan. This commentary reviews these elements, poses questions management can use to determine the stance it would like to take regarding compensation, and offers some advice and recommendations on implementing these ideas. The topics that will be covered are development of a compensation philosophy, objectives of a base pay program, developing rates of pay for jobs, pay rates and increases, performance appraisal, maintaining and auditing a compensation plan.
Development of a Compensation Philosophy
Before an organization actually develops a compensation plan, there are several questions that need to be answered. Taking the time to consider and answer these questions will make the both the process of developing and administering a compensation plan much easier and will result in the development of a compensation plan that more closely matches the organization's goals and objectives.
What is the goal of the organization's compensation system? In addition to attracting and retaining qualified employees, is there an intent to reward employees for good performance, motivate good performance, and/or create or reinforce a particular type of organizational climate?
What is the communication policy? How is the organization going to communicate the compensation plan to employees once it has been developed? Is the organization prepared to evaluate the effectiveness of any such communication? If so, how?
How will decisions regarding pay be made? Who will be involved in these decisions? What decision guidelines will need to be developed?
What is the organization's desired market position relative to pay? Will the organization choose to pay market rates, above market or below market? How does the desired market position fit with other strategic goals? Are there any competitive factors involved that will determine the pay strategy?
What is the desired mix between benefits and cash? Since benefits are an important form of compensation, how does an organization use them to maximize the effectiveness of the compensation plan?
What does the organization pay for? Does it pay for performance or seniority or some combination of the two?
What is the role of performance appraisal in the organization? How important is performance appraisal and why?
How will the organization manage change to the compensation plan once it has been developed? What systems need to be in place to implement any changes including deciding when change is necessary and who will make these decisions?
How does the compensation philosophy and plan fit with the rest of the organization? How can the compensation practices reinforce other overall management philosophies and objectives?
Objectives of a Base Pay Program
Before delving into the details of how actually to pay people, there are many factors that impact a base pay program that an organization must consider. In general, every organization's base pay program has certain objectives. The principal ones are as follows:
* internal equity.
* external equity (or competitiveness),
* individual equity,
* process equity,
* performance or productivity incentives,
* maximum use of financial resources,
* compliance with laws and regulations, and
* administrative efficiency.
As will be shown in the following, all of these objectives must be balanced in the development of a sound base pay program. As these points are being reviewed, management should ask the following questions:
Is this point important to this organization? If so, how important?
What are the implications of this point to the current or desired practices?
Internal Equity - Internal equity deals with the perceived worth of a job relative to other jobs in the organization. All employees compare their jobs to other jobs within the organization. Generally, they consider skill, effort, responsibility and working conditions in this comparison in order to determine the value of their jobs relative to other jobs. Likewise, management must often determine the "worth" or "value" of one job in relation other jobs for the purpose of pay programs. Maintaining appropriate pay relative to value or worth is achieving internal equity.
External Equity - External equity deals with the issue of market rates for jobs. An employer's goal should be to pay what is necessary to attract, retain and motivate a sufficient number of qualified employees. This requires a base pay program that pays competitively. Among others, internal data such as turnover rates and exit interviews can be helpful in determining the competitiveness of pay rates.
Employees also compare their jobs and pay to the jobs and pay in other organizations. Generally, employees consider much more than base pay in determining external equity. Depending on the individual employee, serious consideration may be given to employee benefits, job security, physical work environment, commuting distance, opportunity for advancement and the employee relations practices of the employer in determining external equity issues. In the Pacific Northwest, a frequent consideration is also lifestyle and quality of life.
An important issue to employees in determining external equity is the transferability of their skills. If an employee's skills are valued more highly in a different type of job or industry in the area, the employee may believe that s/he is being treated inequitably.
Note: An organization may choose to place the primary emphasis of its base pay program on internal equity, external equity or a blend of the two. There are important ramifications to this decision that should "fit" with other organizational structure issues and overall management objectives.
Individual Equity - Individual equity deals with how individuals perceive how they are being paid relative to other individuals within the organization and perhaps within the same position. This focus of individual equity is on the merits of the person filling a job, as opposed to the job itself. In simple terms, employees want to feel that the rewards they receive for how they do their work are comparable to the rewards received by others for the same amount of effort or output, all other factors being equal. How merit rewards or increases are given strongly impacts perceptions of individual equity.
Process Equity - How employees perceive the fairness or equity in the administration of the compensation system is process equity. Process equity, in the perceptions of employees, is strongly influenced by the openness of the system, communication of the system to employees, participation in design or administration of the system and a grievance appeal procedure.
Performance Incentives - A significant element of a base pay program is to encourage higher or increased levels of employee performance. Pay systems need to be designed to improve organizational performance.
Maximum Use of Financial Resources - Since an organization does not have unlimited financial resources, the base pay program needs to be designed to maximize the value to the organization with minimum use of these limited resources. In order to accomplish this, pay programs have a variety of tools such as pay range maximums, pay increase budgets, authorization procedures, compensation committees or various internal auditing procedures available to help accomplish this objective.
Compliance with Laws and Regulations - While not the primary objective of a pay program, one of the objectives of a pay program needs to be to keep the organization in compliance with various state and federal laws and regulations.
Administrative Efficiency - Due to the limited financial resources in an organization, one of the objectives of a pay program should be to have a pay program that is easy to administer, flexible, and cost-effective. Developing Rates of Pay for Jobs
The basis for most pay programs is a pay structure - a hierarchy of jobs with pay ranges and/or rates assigned. Pay structures are designed so that the greater the worth of a job (as determined by internal or external equity), the higher the pay grade and range. Developing a pay structure is a process with a series of steps:
* job analysis,
* job documentation,
* development of a job worth hierarchy,
* labor market data collection and analysis, and
* establishment of pay rates and/or ranges.
Job Analysis - This involves collecting and evaluating relevant information about jobs. Any data collected should clarify the nature of the work being performed (principal or essential tasks, duties and responsibilities), the level of the work being performed, the extent and types of knowledge, skill, mental and physical effort and requirements, and responsibility required for the work being performed. There are five primary sources of data for collection of job information: questionnaires, interviews, logs or diaries, direct observation and work plans. All of these methods have advantages and disadvantages and the organization must choose the method that will provide comprehensive data with administrative efficiency and cost-effectiveness.
Job Documentation - There needs to be a formalized way to document job content. In most organizations, a job description is the means used to accomplish this. Job documentation is used to evaluate job content, provide objective criteria for making pay comparisons, ensure that jobs are classified according to content as opposed to individual personalities, effectively communicate the job duties to both supervisors and employees, and help the organization defend itself against charges of discrimination. Who should write job descriptions? That will depend on the resources available to the organization, but they should always be reviewed by line management.
Development of a Job Worth Hierarchy - A job worth hierarchy is the result of job evaluation, the overall process of comparing jobs. There are 6 major methods of comparing jobs in order to develop the job worth hierarchy. The first three methods are "whole-job" evaluations and are non-quantitative in nature. These include ranking, classification and slotting. The second three are "factor" evaluation and are quantitative in nature. These include point factor, factor comparison, and scored questionnaires.
Labor Market Data Collection and Analysis - Before an organization begins the process of collecting labor market data, it must first define its relevant labor market. This may include similar organizations in the same labor market, all employers in the local market, similar organizations in the regional or national market, and/or all employers in the regional or national market. The goal of labor market data collection is to find data from employers with whom the organization competes for employees. For clerical employees, this may be all employers in the local labor market. For high level management positions or certain specialized positions, this may be all employers in the national market. Once the data has been collected, it must be analyzed. The simplest analysis involves comparing the going market rate and approximating this rate within the organization's own pay structure. Other methods involve using advanced statistics to study relationships among certain items in a specific job or market group. An organization may find pay range information, as well as weighted average of actual pay, very helpful.
Establishment of Pay Ranges and/or Rates - In order to actually establish a pay structure, an organization needs to set rates of pay for the jobs in the job hierarchy. Before doing this, an organization needs to ask, and answer, the following questions:
How should the organization's pay level relate to the external market? Should the organization be a pay leader, match the market or pay less than market?
What is the organization willing to pay for: job content, seniority, performance, skills, cost of labor, or some combination of all of these?
How does the organization pay its employees: based on a single rate structure (all employees in the same job receive the same pay), based on seniority, based on merit, based on productivity (piece work), based on new skills (skill-based pay), or based on some combination of these factors? Are short term or long term incentives provided?
What steps does the organization need to take to ensure that pay is administered in a manner free of bias and discrimination?
If an organization decides to use pay ranges (or grades), it will have to determine how many ranges to have. This will depend on the number of different levels of relative job value that are recognized by the organization and the difference in pay between the highest and lowest paid jobs in the pay structure. The focal point of a pay range is the mid-point as this is generally the "going" rate for jobs assigned to that range. From the mid-point, an organization can determine the range minimum and maximum. The range minimum is the usually the lowest pay rate for any job in that range and is usually the pay rate given to people hired in that range who meet minimal qualifications only. Occasionally an organization will pay a "training" rate that is below that minimum. The maximum of a range is the highest rate an employer is willing to pay for jobs in that pay range. Other important range issues include the range width and the degree of overlap between ranges.
The end result of all of the above is a pay structure that should accomplish the organization's objectives with regards to a pay program, and should reflect the organization's philosophy on how it wishes to relate its pay program to the market. Also, this pay structure should demonstrate the internal job values of positions, and how the organization wishes to mix base pay, benefits and incentives.
Pay Rates and Pay Increases
Creating a pay structure is not the final step in the creation of a compensation plan. An organization must also decide how to administer this compensation plan. This means deciding how to pay new employees, how and when to give employees increases, including how to move existing employees from the minimum to the maximum of their assigned pay grades, how to determine the pay increase for an employee being promoted from one job to another and what influence, if any, cost of labor increases will have on the determination of pay increases for employees. In addition, an organization must develop policies and procedures that will implement the results of these decisions in a consistent manner.
Starting Pay for New Employees - In order to avoid paying new employees the same as more experienced employees, most employers choose to start new employees closer to the minimum of the pay range. In general, an employee with minimum qualifications should be paid the minimum of the range. This general rule is not true when a new hire has skills which are in great demand or has skills or other expertise substantially above the minimum.
Employee Increases - There are several different types of base pay increases: general (across-the-board) increases, cost-of-living/labor increases, promotion increases, step increases (based on longevity), and merit increases.
General increases are diminishing in popularity because they are not consistent with the idea of pay for performance. With a general increase, employees in a certain group based on established requirements are eligible for a certain monetary or percent increase to their base pay.
A cost-of-living increase is a type of general increase given to all eligible employees. This type of increase may happen as a result of union contract negotiation. Some companies choose to track benchmark positions over a period of time and modify other positions based on changes in the ranges of benchmark positions.
Promotion increases are given when an employee is moved from one job to another with a higher pay grade and range. The size of the increase will be influenced by the difference between the old and new pay ranges, and the pay of the newly promoted person's peers, superiors and subordinates, if any.
Step increases can be based solely on longevity or some combination of longevity and performance. Step increases alone are inconsistent with pay for performance.
Merit increases are also known as pay for performance. To be successful, an organization must be able to measure differences in job performance and these differences must be significant enough to merit the time and effort required to measure them and pay accordingly. Merit increases also affect other components of the compensation plan in that the pay range must be wide enough to allow for significant differences based on performance, supervisors and managers require training in performance planning and appraisal, and control mechanisms must be in place to successfully administer a merit increase program.
Performance Appraisal
If an organization chooses to pay for performance, the compensation plan must include a well-designed and properly administered performance appraisal system in order to be complete. Following are some questions that will help determine if an organization's current performance appraisal system meets this criteria.
Is performance appraised on the direct measurement of an employee's output or results? Does the performance appraisal system consider only job-related behavior rather than personality traits?
Are supervisors and managers trained in the performance appraisal process?
Are the criteria used to measure performance as objective and quantitative as possible? Or are the criteria open to subjective interpretation?
Have objective job standards been developed? Have the employees had input into the development of these standards? Are they communicated to the employees at the beginning of the appraisal period? Are job standards reviewed regularly to ensure relevance and importance to the department and organization?
Is the employee actively involved in the performance appraisal process? Or is a performance appraisal something that is "done" to the employee?
Maintaining and Auditing a Compensation Plan
Changes in the external market or internally within the organization can cause one or more parts of a compensation plan to become outdated. Part of the challenge in creating a compensation plan is to build in mechanisms that facilitate change when necessary, yet maintain control on a regular basis. Some actions an organization can take to maintain an updated compensation plan include regular review of job descriptions, monitoring of compensation levels versus companies with which there is competition for employees, and regular review of the pay structure including pay ranges and pay increase budgets.
An audit is an excellent means to ensure that a compensation plan is being properly administered and maintained. When planning to audit a compensation plan, an organization needs to consider the following:
Process measures - Are procedures and practices in place to ensure the compensation plan is being administered smoothly and efficiently?
Policy compliance - Are there procedures or other mechanisms in place to ensure that the compensation plan is being administered in accordance with policy?
Documentation adequacy - Is there adequate documentation in place to ensure that the administration of the compensation plan and compliance issues can be audited?
Overall results - Are there measures that can assess how well the compensation plan is achieving its goals and objectives?
After reviewing audit results, management can make recommendations on any improvements that may be necessary, allocate the necessary resources and follow-up to make sure the work is completed.
Summary
Success of a compensation plan includes an overall pay philosophy as well as the policies and procedures that govern operation of the compensation plan.
Because organizations have limited resources, excessive time and money should not be expended in pay program administration. The costs of administration should be balanced against achieving the other objectives of the pay plan.
An organization must decide how it will move employees through the pay range once a pay-range structure has been developed. An organization may utilize the following:
* Individual performance as a basis for movement
* Automatic or step progression based on employee tenure
* Cost of living increases
If an organization chooses to implement a performance-based pay program, then compensation professionals must ensure that their merit-pay programs measure performance objectively and management must carefully evaluate performance to make judgments regarding pay differentials.
Organizations find that an audit of the compensation plan is a useful tool for educating management, thus increasing their understanding and support of the pay program. It is recommended to conduct a comprehensive audit at least every two years in order to identify problem areas and resolve them as soon as possible.
Explaining what the terms like "rewards," "base pay" and "perks" mean in a pay system.
Compensation Philosophy:
Identifies target market position for competitive pay levels and articulates the company s commitment to motivating, and rewarding employee contribution and performance through the various elements of the company s total pay system.
Base Pay:
Pays for standard job duties, skills and results. Should be designed to reflect competitive rates for comparable jobs within identified marketplace.
Performance Based Variable Pay:
Designed to reward achievement of specific company and/or individual performance objectives. Payouts vary based on company and/or individual achievement.
Types of variable pay plans include:•
*Skill pay
*Incentive pay/bonus plans
*Commission
*Gain sharing/results sharing
Long Term Incentive Compensation:
Designed to reward long term company performance. Individual job level/performance may impact eligibility to participate. Can be an effective retention tool.
Benefits
Broad range of practices including health insurance, vacation, leave policies, and retirement and savings plans. Designed to address health and welfare needs of employees. Can send strong messages about company culture and values.
Perks & Non-Cash Rewards
Used to recognize exceptional contribution, performance, commitment to culture and values. Variety of methods including additional time off, tickets to events, trips, dinners, public recognition, etc.
Intrinsic Rewards•
*Performance Feedback Management •
*Development Opportunities •
*Work Environment
Processes used to communicate and align employee behaviors with business priorities and company values to achieve desired results. Play a significant role in successfully engaging full scope of skills and abilities within the in retaining key talent.
401 K plan
There are two main types of employer-sponsored retirement plans: defined benefit and defined contribution. A defined benefit plan, such as a traditional pension plan, sets the amount that the employer will pay to workers upon their retirement. In defined contribution plans, the plan sets the amount of the contributions that an employer makes, not the benefit it will pay at retirement. In 1978, section 401(k)of the Internal Revenue Code authorized a new kind of defined contribution plan that allows the employee to make pre-tax contributions to the plan.
In a 401(k) plan, the employer sets up a special savings and investment account with an investment company, a bank trust dept, or an insurance company. The employee agrees to put part of his or her salary into the plan through automatic deductions each pay period. This money is deducted before the employee’s paycheck is taxed, so that it remains untaxed until it is taken out of the plan, often years or even decades later.
Employers frequently match employee contributions up to a certain level, sometimes by as much as 100 percent, but are not required to do so. The money in the plan is invested into one or more funds provided in the plan according to choices made by the employee. The plans usually are intended to earn money over a very long period of time, which is much less risky than short-term investing..
Employees like 401(k) plans for several reasons. The tax deferral an obvious plus. Others popular features include the increased portability of this plan from one employer to another, the matching contributions, and the sense of control due to the ability to choose one’s own investments.
Determine your organization's salary philosophy. Do you believe in raising the level of base salaries in your organization or do you appreciate the flexibility of variable pay?
A growing, entrepreneurial company, with variable sales and income, may be better off controlling the levels of base salaries. When times are good, the company can tie bonus dollars to goals achieved.
In lean times, when money is limited, the company is not obligated to high base salaries. A longer-term company, with fairly stable sales and earnings, may put more money in base salary.
Find Comparison Factors for Salary
While I believe every organization can benefit from industry comparison studies, if conducted by reputable organizations, the bigger question is whether you are competitive within your local market for most of your positions. Research the salary range for similar positions and job descriptions. The job description is particularly important for comparisons but usually harder to find for comparison.
Determine whether you are competitive with similar positions with organizations of similar size, sales, and markets. If you can find companies in the same industry, especially in your area or region, that is another good comparison source.
What Goals Must Salary Help You Achieve?
Pay must relate to the accomplishment of goals, the company mission and vision. Any system that offers an employee the "average" increase for their industry or length of service (usually 1-4 percent) is counter-productive to goal accomplishment. Even an above-average increase that differentiates one staff person from another can demotivate. One manager at a GM plant offered his star staff person a seven percent increase because she had accomplished all of her goals and "walked on water." Motivating? Should have been, however it was not when the staff person knew others in the organization were receiving ten percent increases and more.
Additionally, your pay system must help you create the work culture you desire. Paying an individual for his performance accomplishments alone, will not help you develop the team environment you want. Thus, you must carefully define the work culture you want to create, and aim your best salary increases at those contributing to the success of that culture. If you want your organization to change, define the change, and pay employees commensurate with their support of and contribution to the change.
Finally, your salary strategy must align with your human resources goals and strategies. If the HR function is charged with developing a highly skilled, outstanding workforce, you must pay above industry or regional averages to attract the quality employees you seek. Paying less than comparable firms will bring you mediocre employees and fail to fulfill the desire to create an outstanding workforce. If, on the other hand, the HR strategy is to get cheap labor in the door quickly with little regard for turnover, you can pay people less salary.
Assess the Competition and Labor Markets
We’re currently experiencing a period of high unemployment. Many skilled people are available because of job loss, the economic downturn, the demise of many dot com companies, and other reasons. Consequently, the economic reality is that you may be able to hire good people for less money than in the past.
This may be short-term thinking, however. Don’t get too far out of line with what you would have paid that employee during better times. You risk losing her when the economy improves. She may never feel valued by your organization if her pay is out-of-line with her experience and contribution. She may never really stop her job search, using your company as a resting place until the right offer arrives.
You will also want to consider percentages of increase in salary in similar jobs in your local area.
Ask yourself if this is an employee you really want to keep? If so, pay the employee a salary that makes you the employer of choice.
Create Salary Ranges Within Your Organization
People always talk about salary and pay issues. No matter how many times you ask them not to discuss their salary and other personnel issues at work, they do. Thus, grouping similar positions with similar responsibility and authority into pay ranges, usually makes sense. Nothing impacts morale as much as individuals who feel they are underpaid in comparison with others based on their contribution and that of other similar jobs.
Recognize Your Benefit Package Role in Salary Satisfaction
An organization that offers better than average benefits may pay less salary and still have motivated, contributing employees. If your health plan fees go up and you continue to pay the cost, this is the same as pay in your employees’ pockets.
The range of benefits you offer, and their cost to the employer, is a critical component of any salary approach. The biggest mistake organizations make is failure to communicate the value of the benefits offered.
Determine Bonus Philosophy and Potential
You may pay a bonus that is determined individually based on the value of the goals accomplished and the person to your organization. You may give all employees the same bonus, based on group goal attainment, across the board. You may use profit sharing in which a portion of company profits is paid out equally to every person who was employed during the time period.
Ways to address bonus, as part of your overall pay system, are limited only by your imagination. I recommend bonus structures that are fair, consistent, understandable, communicated up front, and tied to measurable, achievable goals. The better the shared picture of what constitutes eligibility for a bonus, by the organization and the employee, the more likely the bonus will result in employee motivation and success.
Communicate Your Salary Philosophy and Approach.
In many organizations, who gets what and why is a cause for consternation, gossip, demotivation, and unhappiness. The more transparent you make your pay and salary philosophy and determinations; the more likely you are to achieve positive employee morale and motivation. Don’t keep your salary philosophy a secret. Yes, individual compensation is confidential, but your methods for determining pay must be clear and understandable.
Conclusion
If you take these tips to heart and apply them within your organization, you increase the likelihood that you’ll have happy, motivated employees. The alternative is to use your salary system to create disgruntled, grumbling, unhappy people. Which group do you think will do a better job of serving your customers? Increasing your profitability? Making you the employer of choice? Increasing your positive visibility in your community? Is there any question in your mind?
Am attaching the sample for your reference..you have to fine tune it as per your country's laws & regulations.
Hope this helps..
Cheers,
Rajat
From India, Pune
Detailed article on compensation as are always confusing and sensitive subject as i find in HR incentive comparitive analysis. Thanks for posting. Thanks, O. Koan
Hi Rajat,
Thank you very much for responding to my inquiry, I reaaly appreciate it :)
I'll read and study the info you've provided. I'll post my question if ever i have one.
Thanks again and God Bless!!
From United States, Englewood
Thank you very much for responding to my inquiry, I reaaly appreciate it :)
I'll read and study the info you've provided. I'll post my question if ever i have one.
Thanks again and God Bless!!
From United States, Englewood
Looking for guidelines to devlop a competency manual ( for IT company) addressing the competency analysis and development process area.
A document similar to the compensation manual may be help ful.
The compenstions manual posted was good.
thanks
Ramu
From United States, Stamford
A document similar to the compensation manual may be help ful.
The compenstions manual posted was good.
thanks
Ramu
From United States, Stamford
Hi,
hope u have got the content of compensation mannual.
If no then U can follow this.
Introduction
The over all Structure
Compensation n Benefit Structure
The Structure at a glance
Your Payslip
Basic Salary
HRA
Conveyance Allowance
Special Allowance
Reimbursement
Professional Development Assistance
Telephone Expenditure Reimbursement
Fuel ebpenses on self-owned car
Company leased car policy
Fuel n maintanance Reimbursement
LTA
Medical Reimbursement
Meal Coupons
Regards,
Anupama
quote="Larry"]Hello,
I'm an HR Generalist in a call center and i was tasked to create our company's compensation manual. I'm quite new with the Compensation role. I would like to ask what should be the content of the compensation manual. I woud appreaciate also if someone could provide / send a sample of it.
Thanks.[/quote]
From India, Madras
hope u have got the content of compensation mannual.
If no then U can follow this.
Introduction
The over all Structure
Compensation n Benefit Structure
The Structure at a glance
Your Payslip
Basic Salary
HRA
Conveyance Allowance
Special Allowance
Reimbursement
Professional Development Assistance
Telephone Expenditure Reimbursement
Fuel ebpenses on self-owned car
Company leased car policy
Fuel n maintanance Reimbursement
LTA
Medical Reimbursement
Meal Coupons
Regards,
Anupama
quote="Larry"]Hello,
I'm an HR Generalist in a call center and i was tasked to create our company's compensation manual. I'm quite new with the Compensation role. I would like to ask what should be the content of the compensation manual. I woud appreaciate also if someone could provide / send a sample of it.
Thanks.[/quote]
From India, Madras
You will have to do the Job analysis & Job evaluation excercise for making the manual. In short you will have to classify the job and fix the grades and compensation for each grade Dr.Thomaskutty
Hello, Could anybody tell me what all components to be included in salary fixation.or what bifurcation to be done if a package is being given to us.
From India, Mumbai
From India, Mumbai
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