MGT 336 Midterm II
Forms of pay - relation returns
learning opportunities, status, challenging work (psychological)
Job description
list of tasks, duties, and responsibilities that make up a job - observable actions.
Job-based structures
look at what people are doing and the expected outcomes
lead pay-level policy
maximizes the ability to attract and retain quality employees and minimizes employee dissatisfaction with pay.
Differentials
pay differences among levels
Salary
pay is given to those who are exempt from regulations of the Fair Labor Standards Act and exempt from overtime pay.
work flow
process by which goods and services are delivered to the customer
Criteria of internal pay structure - job based structure
relies on work content (tasks, behaviors, responsibilties)
Hierarchical structures
send the message that the differences in work content, individual skills and contributions to the organization are valued.
Criteria of internal pay structure - person based structure
shifts focus to the employee (their skills, knowledge, compentencies)
Number of levels
some are hierarchical with many levels and others are compressed with fewer
Quoted Price Market
stores that label each item's price or ads that list a job's opening starting wage are examples of this (Meijer)
Compensable factors should be based on:
strategy and values of the organization, work performed and acceptable to the stakeholders affected by the resulting pay structure
Marginal product of labor
the additional output associated with the employment of one additional person, with other production factors held constant
Sorting effect
the effect a pay plan has on the composition of the current workforce (the types of employees attracted and retained)
Job evaluation
the process of systematically determining the relative worth of jobs to create a structure for the organization (based on a combo of job content/skills required/ value to the org/org culture/external markets)
Survey
the systematic process of collecting and making judgments about the compensation paid by other employers
pay-with-competition policy (match)
tries to ensure that an organization's wage costs are approximately equal to those of product competitors.
marginal productivity
unless and employee can produce a value equal to the value received in wages it will not be worth while to hire that employee
Criteria of internal pay structure - use value
value of goods and services an employee produced in a job
Criteria of internal pay structure - exchange value
whatever wage is agree on for a job
A pay range exists:
whenever two or more rates are paid to employees in the same job.
Criteria of internal pay structure - content
work performed in a job and how it gets done
Criteria of internal pay structure - value
worth of the work
Pay level and pay mix decisions focus on two objectives
-Control costs and increase revenues. -Attract and retain employees.
Strategy
-Fundamental direction that an organization chooses -Defined through trade offs it makes in choosing what or what not to do n
Importance of HR strategy as it relates to compensation
-Internal alignment -Line of sight to show employees how we are paying them for the tasks and things we are asking from them
External competitiveness is made up of
-Labor market factors -Product market factors -Organization factors
An internal pay structure can be defined by:
-The number of levels of work, -The pay differentials between the levels, and -The criteria or bases used to determine those levels and differentials.
Incentives
-Tie pay increases to performance but differ from merit adjustments in that they rely on an objective measure of performance. -They do not increase base wages and must be re-earned each period.
Internal alignment
-addresses relationships inside the organization -The pay relationships among different jobs/skills/competencies within a single organization.
Skill-based structures
-link pay to the depth or breadth of the skills, abilities, and knowledge a person acquires that are relevant to the work. -Purpose: evaluate using the objectives already specified for an internally aligned structure.
Competency-based structure
-must be some way of demonstrating competency -the main appeal - directly links to organization strategy
Compensation - Employee
-source of financial security (vital to social/economic well being) -an exchange between employers and themselves
Pay can influence motivation in 2 ways
1.) affect motivation intensity, direction, and persistence of current employees 2.) it is now about how much they are paid but the results of the sorting effect
Two critical uses of job analysis
1.) establishes similarities and differences in the work content 2.)Helps establish internally fair and aligned job structure
Two strategic choices used to fit the pay structure
1.) how specifically tailored to the organization design and workflow to make the structure (closely tailored: well defined with detailed tasks - McDonald's) 2.) how to distribute pay through the levels in the structure
Compensation - Managers
1.) major expense that needs to be managed 2.) a major determinant of employee's attitudes and behaviors
lag pay-level policy
A policy of paying below-market rates may hinder a firm's ability to attract potential employees
"line of sight"
Employees should be able to "see" the links between their work, the work of others, and the organization's objectives.
Point method
Has compensable factors, with factor degrees numerically scaled, and weights reflecting the importance of each factor.
Egalitarian structures
Have fewer levels and/or smaller differentials between adjacent levels and between the highest- and lowest-paid workers.
Alternation ranking
Orders job descriptions alternately at each extreme.
Procedural justice
Procedures for determining the pay structure
Distributive justice
Results of those procedures - the pay structure itself
Incentive plans
Reward people for developing "innovative" new financial investment vehicles and for taking risks to earn themselves and their firms a lot of money.
Pay structure
The array of pay rates for different work or skills within a single organization. The number of levels, the differentials in pay between the levels, and the criteria used to determine those differences describe the structure.
Pay level
The average of the array of rates paid by an employer.
Base wage
The cash compensation an employer pays for work performed.
Job specification
The knowledge, skills, abilities, and other characteristics necessary for an individual to perform the job.
External competitiveness
The pay relationships among organizations—the organization's pay relative to its competitors.
Pay mix
The various types of payments, or payment forms, make up total compensation.
Paired comparison
Uses a matrix to compare all possible pairs of jobs.
Bourse Market
a market that allows haggling over terms and conditions until an agreement is reached (Ebay)
Compensation
all forms of financial returns and tangible services and benefits employees receive as part of an employment relationship
Heart of skill based:
assumes that possessing these skills will make it easier to match work-flow
Optimal overlap
between grades ought to be large enough to induce employees to seek promotion into a higher grade.
Compensable factors
characteristics in the work that the organization values, that help it pursue its strategy and achieve its objectives
External alignment
comparisons OUTSIDE the organization, comparing with other employers that hire people with the same skills
Compliance:
conforming to federal and state compensation laws and regulations
Broad banding
consolidates traditional grades into a single band with one minimum and one maximum - there are several advantages.
COLA
cost of living adjustment; base wages may be made due to changes in what employers are paying for the same work (change in cost of living, change in skills, change in experience)
Surplus value
creates the difference between use and exchange value
Market pricing
directly matching as many of your own organization's jobs as possible to jobs described in external pay surveys
Heart of person-based plan
employees get paid for the relevant skills and competencies they posees (whether or not they are used)
Grades and ranges offer:
flexibility to deal with pressures from external markets and differences among organizations.
Why perform job analysis?
internal based on job-related info provides both managers and employees a work-related rationale for pay differences