Compensation. The Importance of Compensation Impacts an employer’s ability to attract and retain employees. Ensure optimal levels of employee performance.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1.
Advertisements

Introduction Organizations have a relatively large degree of discretion in deciding how to pay. Each employee’s pay is based upon individual performance,
Recognizing Employee Contributions with Pay
Contemporary Theories Application
Human Resource Management Lecture-28. Job Pricing.
Designing Compensation and Benefit Packages
10-1 Copyright ©2010 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall Managing Compensation Chapter 10.
MGTO 231 Human Resources Management Compensation I Dr. Kin Fai Ellick WONG.
October 10 Compensation: Determining the worth of individuals © 2001 by Prentice Hall 10-1.
CHAPTER 11 COMPENSATION PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved.
MBAO 6030 Human Resource Management Strategic Reward Systems II HR Management MBAO 6030.
Compensation Deborah Marsh November Total Rewards Total Rewards definition Total Rewards definition Why Total Rewards? Why Total Rewards? Elements.
COMPENSATION.
© 2014 by McGraw-Hill Education. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or distribution in any manner.
Motivating Employees through Compensation
Motivation Chapter Nine McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Chapter 8 Compensation Practices, Planning, and Challenges
Variable Pay: Incentives for Performance
Incentive Plans. Pay influences employees through u Reinforcement theory u Expectancy theory.
R OBERT L. M ATHIS J OHN H. J ACKSON PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook The University of West Alabama Copyright © 2005 Thomson Business & Professional.
Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 09 Motivation.
Compensation Management
The Nature of Motivation
PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT. 1.How can I best measure the performance of my employees? 2.What is the best way to give my employees developmental feedback to.
Cash, Bonuses, Insurance,
Compensation Team 9 Pia Virta Svetlana Velikanova.
1 Prof R K Singh AIMA Centre for Management Education New Delhi.
Total Strategic Compensation Human Resource Management.
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT MIHE Mashal Institute of Higher Education.
Recognizing Employee Contributions with Pay
IRWI N CHAPTER 16 Recognizing Individual Contributions with Pay ©a Times Mirror Higher Education Group, Inc., company, 1997.
Compensating Employees Definition Objective Bases Types Determining Reward Job Evaluation Compensation Structure.
Compensating Employees Definition Objective Bases Types Determining Reward Job Evaluation Compensation Structure.
IRWI N Pay for Individual Contributions ©a Times Mirror Higher Education Group, Inc., company, 1997 © Nancy Brown Johnson, 1999.
Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall Managing Compensation 10-1 Chapter 10.
Advances in Human Resource Development and Management Course code: MGT 712 Lecture 11.
Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall Managing Compensation 10-1 Chapter 10.
Human Resource Management Lecture 17 MGT 350. Last Lecture Pay Types of Reward Plans Intrinsic versus Extrinsic Rewards Intrinsic Financial versus Nonfinancial.
Strategy for Human Resource Management Lecture 23 HRM 765.
COMPENSATION © Nancy Brown Johnson, 2000 Why do we have follies? We like objective measures Visible behaviors Hypocrisy Emphasize morality or equity.
CHAPTER 11 COMPENSATION PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Copyright © 2002 South-Western. All rights reserved.
PowerPoint Presentation Design by Charlie Cook The University of West Alabama Prepared by Joseph B. Mosca, Monmouth University and Marla M. Kameny, Baton.
Compensation Management. Compensation Employee compensation – refers to extrinsic and intangible rewards. – refers to all forms of pay or rewards going.
1. Fundamentals of Public Administration MPA FACILITATOR Prof. Dr. Mohammad Majid Mahmood Lecture – 22.
Chapter 9 Managing Compensation
Compensation Need Assessment Group Members: Aamir Mohammad Syed Wasi Abbas Talha Ahmed Hoban Syed Haris Hussain Sumair Patel.
Lim Sei cK. Compensation Pay is a statement of an employee’s worth by an employer. Pay is a perception of worth by an employee.
Strategic Human resource Management compensation.
Motivation: From Concepts to Application
Copyright ©2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or.
PART FOUR Compensation Chapters Chapter 11 Pay and Incentive Systems McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Compensation and Benefits. Meaning of Compensation Compensation means what the employees receive in exchange for their work. It is the monetary plus non-
Performance Management and Compensation MANA 4328 Dr. Jeanne Michalski
Jayendra Rimal. Introduction: Compensation Compensation refers to all forms of financial returns and tangible benefits that employees receive as part.
Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Incentive Plans.
ESTABLISHING STRATEGIC PAY PLANS
Incentives and Compensation
9 6 Total Rewards C H A P T E R Training Employees
Compensation & Rewards
CHAPTER 11: COMPENSATION
Employee Contributions: Determining Individual Pay
Performance Management and Compensation
CHAPTER 11 COMPENSATION PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook
Performance Management and Compensation
Compensation.
Performance Management and Compensation
A Personnel Psychological Perspective
Managing Compensation
Presentation transcript:

Compensation

The Importance of Compensation Impacts an employer’s ability to attract and retain employees. Ensure optimal levels of employee performance in meeting the organization’s strategic objectives. Compensation’s components –Direct compensation in the form of wages or salary Base pay (hourly, weekly, and monthly) Incentives (sales bonuses and or commissions) –Indirect compensation in the form of benefits Legally required benefits (e.g., Social Security) Optional (e.g., group health benefits)

Theory Behind Compensation Equity Theory –Comparing inputs and outputs of a similar co-worker –Perceived inequity affects employee effort Expectancy Theory –People are motivated by intrinsic and extrinsic outcomes they desire. –People will only be motivated if outcome is possible. –People will only be motivated if outcome is contingent.

Equity Theory Internal equity –Comparison of my input / reward ratio with that of similar others. –Employees may seek to address imbalance by changing their inputs. –Fairness of pay differentials between different jobs in the organization can be established by job ranking, job classification, point systems and factor comparisons. External equity –Fairness of organizational compensation levels relative to similar jobs in other organizations.

“Monkeys Demand Equal Pay” A recent study shows brown capuchin monkeys refused to play along when they saw another monkey get a better payoff for performing the same work. The monkeys were trained to trade a granite token for a piece of cumber. When the reward was the same for both monkeys, they took the cucumber 95 percent of the time. But it was a different story when one monkey was given something better -- namely, a grape. Then, the other monkey often pitched a fit -- either throwing the token, refusing to eat the cucumber or giving it to the other monkey. Associated Press 2003

Equity Theory Fairness about pay differentials among individuals who hold the same job can be established by using: Seniority-based pay systems that reward longevity. Merit-based pay systems that reward employee performance. Incentive plans that allow employees to receive part of their compensation based on their job performance. Skills-based pay systems. Team-based pay plans that encourage cooperation and flexibility in employees.

Types of Base Pay Systems Job-based –Pay the job (not the person) –Market-based (external equity focus) –Point factor-based (internal equity focus) Skills / knowledge-based –Pay the person (not the job) –62% of F1000 firms used some type of skill based pay in 1999

Job Based Pay AttractionDepends on market pricing MotivationNo performance impact Skill DevelopmentLearn job-related and upward mobility skills CultureBureaucratic, hierarchical StructureHierarchical, individual jobs and differentiation CostGood control of individual pay

Individual Skill/Knowledge Based Pay AttractionAttracts learning-oriented individuals, high skills individuals MotivationLittle performance impact Skill DevelopmentMotivates needed skill development CultureLearning, self-managing StructureFlat or team-based CostHigher individual pay

When to Use a Job-based Pay Policy A job-based pay work best in situations where: –Job duties are stable. –Skills are generic. –Employees move up through the ranks over time. –Jobs are fairly standardized within the industry. Drawbacks of a job-based pay system –Discounts individual ability. –Discourages lateral movement. –Tends to be bureaucratic, mechanistic, and inflexible. –Employees’ perceptions of equity are more important than market or point data.

Individual-based Compensation Individual-based compensation works when: –The firm has a relatively educated workforce. –Employees often do different jobs –Technology changes frequently. –Employee participation and teamwork are encouraged. –Opportunities for upward mobility are limited. –Opportunities to learn new skills are present. –The costs of employee turnover and absenteeism in terms of lost production are high.

Pricing Jobs First conduct job analysis –Qualifications –KSA’s Non-quantitative methods –Job Ranking (create hierarchy of jobs) –Job Classification (create groups of similar jobs) Quantitative Methods –Point factor systems –Compare “compensable factors” Market pricing

Compensable Factors Hay Factors –Know-how –Problem solving –Accountability National Position Evaluation Plan (MAA) –Skill –Effort –Responsibility –Job Conditions Characteristics in the job that the organizational values and that help achieve its objectives.

Pricing Jobs

Variable Pay Incentives Linking performance to pay –Individual – Bonuses, piece-rates, stock options –Team – Bonuses and awards –Plant / Unit / Business – Gainsharing, profit sharing –Corporation – ESOP’s “Line of sight” is the perceived link between individual behavior and the reward.

Individual Merit AttractionGood for high performers MotivationGood line of sight Skill DevelopmentLearn skills that lead to rewarded performance CulturePerformance oriented, job focused StructureIndividual and independent jobs CostDepends on the size of the awards

Team Incentives AttractionGood if team performs well MotivationModerate line of sight Skill DevelopmentEncourages team skills CultureTeam focused StructureTeam-based and integrated CostHigh if significant awards given

Organizational Plans AttractionGood if organization performs well MotivationWeak line of sight Skill DevelopmentEncourages broad understanding of business CultureBusiness involvement StructureOrganization wide integration CostPossible self-funding if based on performance improvement

Pay for Performance Requires 1.Definition of performance –How are we going to measure and compare people? 2.Distribution of performance –Can we distinguish high and low performers? 3.Decide the increase for each level of performance. –How large a difference between high and low performers?

Key Strategic Issues in Compensation Determining compensation relative to the market. Striking a balance between fixed and variable compensation. Deciding whether or not to utilize team-based versus individual pay. Creating the appropriate mix of financial and non- financial compensation. Developing a cost-effective compensation program that results in high performance.

New Thinking for the New Millennium Strategic approaches to may compensation (pay) systems more responsive: –Pay the person for individual worth (knowledge, skills and competencies) rather than for the value of a job they perform. –Reward excellence through a pay for performance compensation that establishes a clear relationship between a significant amount of pay and attainment of organizational objectives. –Individualize the pay system to give employees choices in how they are rewarded and what reward they receive.