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Compensation.

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Presentation on theme: "Compensation."— Presentation transcript:

1 Compensation

2 Employee’s Perspective
What compensation do you seek? Direct Money Indirect Benefits

3 Employer’s Perspective
What do you compensate? Individual Characteristics: Ability Training Education Job: Responsibility Critical function Job content

4 Employer’s Perspective
What factors influence your compensation policy? Supply and demand skills Unions Ability to pay Cost of living increases Government (FLSA, min. wage) Strategy

5 Influence of Equity External Market wages Internal Perceived equity

6 Develop a Job Hierarchy
A. Job Evaluation 1. Preliminary planning 2. Select a plan 3. Develop the plan 4. Evaluate jobs, NOT PEOPLE

7 Pricing Jobs "The acceptability of job evaluation
hinges in large part on whether the results are consistent with the ranking of the same jobs in the external labor market."

8 Pricing Jobs A. Use key or benchmark jobs
Jobs that are relatively stable in content and found in many organizations Compare your internal analysis to external wages B. Conduct wage survey to examine external wages

9 Pricing Jobs C. Use points from job evaluation as a predictor
Use predictor to determine wages for non-key positions Non-key positions: jobs that have no similar “comparison job” outside of the organization

10 Develop a Pay Structure
A. Pay on the basis of individual jobs or grades? B. Utilize single rates or a rate change?

11 Inequities Comparable worth Salary compression

12 Pricing Managerial and Professional Jobs
Not easy because there are fewer quantifiable factors Managers are often compensated for long term performance Are executives overpaid?

13 Financial Incentives "The basic aim of an incentive should be
to encourage good performance by linking performance and rewards, and this in turn requires valid, accurate performance appraisals.”

14 Incentives for Production Employees
Piecework Group incentive plans Attendance Annual bonus

15 Incentives for Mangers and Executives
Stock options Long-term incentives

16 Organization Incentive Plans
Profit sharing plans ESOP – Employee Stock Options Plan Cost savings plan SCANLON and Gainsharing

17 Potential Incentive Plan Problems
Worker doesn’t believe that plan will lead to rewards. Unfair standards – too high or unattainable Changing standards – obtain top management commitment to maintain standards

18 Recommendations 1. Ensure that efforts and rewards are directly related. 2. Incentive rewards are understandable and calculable. 3. Use accurate and effective standards. 4. Guarantee those standards.

19 Performance Evaluation

20 Performance Measurement Purposes
A. Administrative decisions Promotion Training Compensation Transfer, demotion, and separation

21 Performance Measurement Purposes
B. Employee feedback and development Roles Strengthens E  P and P  O relationships Allows behavior change

22 Performance Measurement Purposes
C. Evaluations of policies and programs Selection and promotion decisions Aiding in validation of selection tools Helping to determine if programs are effective (e.g. training) D. Defense of policies Use to show job relatedness (performance)

23 Performance Measurement Issues
A. Identifying performance dimensions Most jobs are multi-dimensional Use job analysis to assess performance Errors similar to job analysis B. Establish performance standards Determine legitimate standards Don’t set standards too high or low

24 Performance Measures A. Comparative methods 1. Ranking
2. Forced distribution 3. Problems with comparative evaluations: No indication of potential performance Little specific feedback No feedback about where to improve

25 Performance Measures B. Absolute methods 1. Trait rating scale
Central tendency problems Doesn’t capture specific behaviors 2. BARS (Behaviorally Anchored Rating Scales) Complex and costly Not applicable to a broad group of jobs Avoids contamination and deficiency errors 3. MBO – set for individuals, not jobs

26 Measures of Physical Output

27 Administrative Challenges
A. Components that influence the performance appraisal process 1. Appraiser (rater) 2. Appraisee (ratee) 3. Method 4. Purpose of evaluation 5. Motivation to appraise

28 Administrative Challenges
B. Rater errors 1. Unreliability 2. Leniency 3. Severity 4. Central tendency 5. Recency 6. Halo

29 Administrative Challenges
C. EEO Not only for your selection Show that method isn’t discriminating Validate performance appraisal procedures

30 Trends in PA Research 1. Focused on the accuracy of appraisal and improving method. 2. Focused on rater errors and reduction of errors. 3. Current focus: cognitive processes and interpretation and evaluation of performance.


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