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Compensation Management

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

1 Compensation Management
Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon Chapter 11

2 Compensation Management
Is the total of an employee’s pay and benefits. Costs are frequently 65 to 70 percent of total production costs in today’s firms. Affects the process of both attracting and of retaining employees. Therefore, firms should design the system to meet the various needs of employees. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

3 Compensation Management
The Compensation System Includes anything that an employee may value and desire and that the employer is willing and able to offer in exchange. Compensation components – all rewards that can be classified as monetary and in-kind payments. Non compensation components – all rewards other than monetary and in-kind payments (e.g. company cafeterias and gyms). Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

4 Compensation Management
Types of Compensation Base pay – Wages are paid on an hourly basis; salary is based on a longer time period. Wage and salary add-ons – includes overtime pay, shift differential, premium pay for working weekends and holidays, etc. Incentive pay – (a.k.a. “variable pay”) is “pay for performance”, and commonly includes piece work in production and commission sales. Benefits – indirect compensation that provides something of value to the employee. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

5 Compensation Management
Motivation and Compensation Planning Goal of compensation – to motivate employees to do the things the firm needs, consistently, over time. Expectancy Theory – employees believe the rewards for accomplishing a task are worth the effort. Clearly define goals and how to achieve them. Tie performance to rewards. Be sure rewards have value to employees. Make sure management does what it says it will. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

6 Compensation Management
Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

7 Compensation Management
Motivation and Compensation Planning Equity theory – employees are motivated when the ratio of their perceived outcomes to inputs is at least roughly equal to other referent individuals. Employees perceive being under-rewarded decrease inputs, increase outcomes. Employees perceive being over-rewarded – this does not usually disturb employees. Employees perceive being equitably rewarded – will continue to perform if still content that their incomes and outputs are in balance. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

8 Compensation Management
Learning Theories Positive reinforcement – if employees get something they want in return for doing what the firm needs, they are more likely to continue doing the same. Negative reinforcement – firms take away something employees don’t want, motivation increases. Avoidance reinforcement – work standards dictate work/compensation levels. Punishment – used when employee do not meet work standards. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

9 Compensation Management
Organizational Philosophy  Decisions Ability to pay. What types of compensation? Pay for performance or for longevity? Skill-based or competency-based? At, above or below the Market? Wage compression. Pay secrecy. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

10 Compensation Management
Legal and Fairness Issues in Compensation Firms must offer equal pay for equal work, unless there is a difference in productivity, seniority, merit, or other factors “other than sex”. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

11 Compensation Management
Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

12 Compensation Management
Fair Labor Standards Act of (Amended) Covers minimum wage, overtime issues, and child labor rules for most U.S.-based businesses. Minimum wage is the lowest hourly rate of pay generally permissible by federal law. Employees with specific duties are exempt from minimum wage, overtime, and child labor rules. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

13 Compensation Management
Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

14 Compensation Management
Overtime A federally mandated, higher-than- minimum wage, required for nonexempt employees if they work more than 40 hours/week. Is currently set by the FLSA as “time and a half”, or 150% of the employee’s normal wages. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

15 Compensation Management
FLSA and Child Labor 14 and 15 year olds may work outside school hours no more than ”three hours on a school day, 18 hours in a school week, eight hours on a non-school day, and 40 hours in a non-school week.” Permissible work hours are also restricted. 16 and 17 year olds cannot be employed in hazardous jobs, but their work hours are unrestricted. Individuals 18 or older can be hired for all work. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

16 Compensation Management
Pay Equity and Comparable Worth Comparable worth – when jobs are distinctly different but entail similar levels of ability, responsibility, skills, and working conditions, they are of equal value and should have the same pay scale. The comparable work concept is broader than “equal pay for equal work” because the work need only be similar, not the same. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

17 Compensation Management
Job Evaluation Is the process of determining the worth of each position relative to the other positions within the organization. Job ranking – subjectively ordering jobs from lowest to highest or vice versa, in terms of value to the company. Point-factor – objectively breaking down a job into “compensable factors” and applying points to each factor based on the job’s level of difficulty. Factor comparison – analyzing and ranking “compensable factors” of benchmark jobs in pay surveys and ranking all of the firm’s jobs against the benchmark. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

18 Compensation Management
Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

19 Compensation Management
Job Structure and Pay Levels Pay structure creates a hierarchy of jobs and their rates of pay within the organization; made up of job structures and pay levels. Job structure is the stacking up of the jobs in the organization from the lowest to the highest levels. Pay levels provide minimum to maximum pay for a group or subset of jobs in the organization Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

20 Compensation Management
Creation of Pay Levels A single pay level (a.k.a. “pay grade”) is made up of several to many different jobs. Each pay level has a maximum and minimum pay rate. Pay rates are determined by comparisons with Labor Market Competition (minimum pay level), Product Market Competition (top pay level), and supply and demand, to insure equity. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

21 Compensation Management
Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

22 Compensation Management
Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

23 Compensation Management
Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

24 Compensation Management
Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

25 Compensation Management
Delayering and Broadbanding Delayering – the process of changing the company structure to get rid of some of the vertical hierarchy (reporting levels). Broadbanding – the combining of multiple pay levels into one. Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.

26 Compensation Management
Human Resource Management: Functions, Applications, Skill Development by Robert N. Lussier and John R. Hendon © 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc.


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