MAN 4330/5331 Compensation Final Exam
Graphical Rating Scale
- simplest and most popular method for evaluating performance - scale lists the traits or dimensions of performance and the range of performance values for each rating element - several rating options
Four categories of legally required benefits
- social security - workers' compensation - unpaid family and medical leave - health insurance
Four types of performance appraisal plans
- trait systems - comparison systems - behavioral systems - goal-oriented systems
Seniority and longevity pay rewards employees...
- with permanent additions to base pay - according to the employee's length of service in performing their jobs
Improshare
-Measure productivity physically rather than in terms of dollar savings -Incentive to finish products -Bonuses paid on a weekly basis based on a ratio of standard labor hours to actual labor hours -Includes a buy-back provision
Compa-ratio meanings
1 = market match rate <1 = market lag rate >1 = market lead rate
How many hours of work are required within a 12-month period for an employee to qualify for protection under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)?
1,250 hours
Goal-oriented Systems
Used mainly for managerial and professional employees and typically evaluate employees' progress toward strategic planning objectives
Pay Compression
When the pay spread between newly hired or less qualified individuals and more qualified job incumbents is small
Midpoint = (formula)
[(Max - Min) / 2] + Min
core competencies are derived from...
a company's strategic statements
Comparison Systems
evaluate a given employee's performance against the performance of other employees
benefits of forced ranking
forces managers to make clear decisions about talent, and in particular it forces them to confront poor performance
Preferred Provider Organization (PPO)
group of healthcare providers that provide services to a specific group, often at a reduced rate
most companies offer which time of life insurance plan?
group-term life insurance
Defined Benefit Plan
guarantees a specified level of retirement income (pension)
what was once a discretionary benefit but is now a legally required benefit?
health insurance
Health Maintenance Organizations (HMO)
health insurance plans which directly employ or contract selected medical professionals to provide health care services
reasons an employer would adopt a person-focused pay system
* technological innovations * increased global competition - removes entitlement label - connects pay to job-related abilities - increases employee autonomy - jobs require new and different worker skills
Disadvantages of profit sharing
- Can undermine the economic security of employees - May fail to motivate employees if they do not see a direct link between their efforts and profits
Two types of behavioral appraisal systems
- Critical Incident Technique (CIT) - Behaviorally anchored rating scales (BARS)
Advantages of profit sharing
- Enable employees to share in companies' profits - Allow companies greater financial flexibility
compensation fluctuates according to...
- a pre-established incentive formula - individual or group goals - company earnings or performance
Purpose of Incentive/variable pay
- adds to base pay on a nonrecurring basis - can help manage salary costs - motivates employees through explicit goal setting and recognition
Five pay considerations to consider when adopting an incentive program
- based on individual, group, and/or performance - acceptable level of risk - replace traditional pay - performance criteria evaluated - appropriate time horizon
major types of rater error
- bias errors - contrast errors - errors of central tendency - errors of leniency or strictness
Companies recognize pay differences by paying individuals according to their: (4 things)
- credentials - knowledge - geography - job performance
Rucker plan
- emphasis employee involvement - uses a value-added formula (value added/total employment costs) [- value of sales price - value of materials used - total labor costs] - larger ratios show that value added is greater than employment costs
Scanlon plan
- emphasis on teamwork - based on a cost savings suggestion system - production-level committees - screening or review committees - rewards = labor costs/SVOP - smaller Scanlon ratios show that labor costs are lower relative to SVOP
defined contribution plan
- employee contributions: expressed as a percentage of wage or salary - employer contributions: expressed as a percentage of an employee's contribution up to a specified limit
the two company-wide incentive plans
- employee stock option plan - profit sharing
Critical Incident Technique
- employees and supervisors identify and label specific critical job behaviors and results - supervisors observe and compile or record observed tasks/ behaviors (positive and negative) throughout the evaluation period - meet with employee periodically throughout the year to provide feedback - requires extensive documentation; typically narrative based
Behavioral Anchored Rating Scales (BARS)
- evaluation tool that anchors a numerical scale with specific examples of good and/or poor performance - based on 8-10 expected job behaviors - employees rated on ability to perform each behavior - ratings are highly (and legally) defensible - encourages all raters to make evaluations in similar ways
red circle rates result from
- failure to raise pay range maximums - attempt to retain exemplary employees not ready for promotion to jobs in successive pay grades - demotion of employee from a higher pay grade to a lower pay grade
pay compression is caused by
- failure to raise pay range minimum and maximum rates - scarcity of qualified applicants
Traditional Pay Methods
- generally includes an annual salary or hourly wage - Increased periodically on a seniority or merit basis with permanent increase to base pay
Three categories of incentive pay systems
- individual - group or work unit - organizational
basic assumptions of an incenctive and variable pay
- individual employees and work teams differ in how much they contribute to the company, both in what they do as well as how well they do it - the company's overall performance depends to a large degree on the performance of individuals and groups within the company - to attract, retain, and motivate high performers and to be fair to all employees, a company needs to reward employees on the basis of their relative performance
Stair step model
- jobs from same job family - jobs differ in complexity - higher the step, greater the skills - companies use separate models - models designed to match jobs
negative aspects of incentives
- must balance intrinsic and extrinsic rewards - unintended consequences of behavior - some programs can de-motivate behavior if people feel the goals are unattainable or not realistic - can drive unhealthy competition that negatively effects the larger organization - incentives may not create lasting or sustainable commitment - incentives may not improve performance
Requirements that must be met to qualify for unemployment insurance benefits
- not have left the job voluntarily - be able and available for work - be actively seeking work - not have refused an offer of suitable employment - not be unemployed because of a labor dispute (exception in a few states) - not have had employment terminated because of gross violations of conduct within the workplace
Disadvantages of seniority pay
- pay practice may not support the organizational strategy - inhibit changing long-standing practices or procedures - create morale issues among employees - can lead to belief in entitlements relating to employment and promotional opportunities, compensation, and benefits
Pay structures represent
- pay rate differences for jobs of unequal - the framework for recognizing differences in employee contributions
Two main types of person-focused pay systems
- pay-for-knowledge - skill-based pay
Green circle rates result from
- paying employees who do not meet the minimum requirements less than the minimum rates - failure to raise pay range minimum and maximum rates
person-focused pay vs. job-based pay
- person-focused pay compensates employees for flexibility, potential contributions, skills and knowledge - job-based pay compensates employees for current jobs, sets pay limits for each job, evaluates based on job description and objectives, includes merit and incentive pay
Three initial purposes of social insurance programs
- preventing destitution of unemployed or injured - stabilizing well-being of dependents - enabling retirees to maintain subsistence income
three cateogires of discretionary benefits
- protection programs - paid time off - services
rating options of the graphical rating scale
- rate on generic job dimensions such as communication, teamwork, quality, etc. - rate actual job duties - rate achievement of meeting certain performance expectations or objectives - rate the level of exhibited competencies
positive aspects of incentives
- recognizes and rewards exceptional performance of employees and/or work units - encourages employees to attain higher levels of performance by giving them something to strive for - employees see how the companies' financial success is tied to their success - loyalty may increase because they become invested in the company - group incentives can improve cooperation among employees
Competencies
- refer to an individual's capability to coordinate and apply combinations of knowledge and skills consistently over time to perform work successfully in the required work situations
three common gain-sharing plans
- scanlon plan - rucker plan - improshare
Five Steps in Building a Pay Structure
1. decide how may pay structures to construct 2. determine a market pay line 3. define pay grades 4. calculate pay ranges 5. evaluate results
disability benefits are available to disabled workers who are unable to work because of a serious medical or mental impairment that lasts at least ___ months
12
forced distribution
A performance appraisal ranking system whereby raters are required to place a certain percentage of employees into various performance categories - pay raises (and evaluation ratings) based on ranking
employee stock option plan
Companies grant employees right to purchase share of company: - Company stock - Company stock shares - Stock options
Gain-sharing plan
Incentives based on company performance in: Increased productivity, Increased customer satisfaction, Lower costs, and Better safety records - Based on open leadership - Involves employee participation - Includes bonuses
Minimum = (formula)
Midpoint/1 + (Range spread/2)
Maximum = (formula)
Minimum + (range spread x minimum)
individual incentive
a reward that depends on the performance of the individual employee
Rater error
an error in performance appraisals that reflects consistent biases on the part of the rater
Skill block:
applies to jobs within the same job family, but skills do not necessarily build on one another
Compa-ratios are used to
assess the competitiveness of an employee's pay level
Straight commision
based on a fixed percentage of sales price
according to the Human Capital Theory, employees...
become more valuable over time
Discretionary benefits
benefits not required by law
limitations of forced ranking
can create fear and turn employees against one another
Most employers use what type of retirement plan?
defined contribution (401k type)
Compa-Ratio
divide pay rates by midpoint
Whole life insurance
does not terminate until payment is made to beneficiaries
Legally required benefits
employee benefits mandated by law
referral plan
employees receive bonuses for recruitment of highly qualified employees
Behavior encouragement plans
employees receive payments for specific behavioral accomplishments
Job-point accural
encourages employees to develop skills and learn to perform jobs from different job families
One advantage of a person-focused pay system is the...
increase in employee commitment
graduated commission
increased percentage rates for higher sales volume
multi-tiered commission
increased percentage rates for meeting and exceeding sales goal
Challenge of pay compression
it threatens competitive advantage
Short-term disability length
less than six months
depth of skills
level of expertise or specialization an employee possesses
Leniency Errors
managers rate employees' performances more highly than they would rate them using objective criteria
Merit Pay Systems
pay raises and bonuses are based on the merit rating received from their boss; pay for performance
Red Circle Rates
payment rates above the maximum of the pay range
Green circle rates
payment rates below the minimum of the pay range
group or work unit incentive
promote supportive, collaborative behavior among employees
cross-departmental
promotes staffing flexibility by training employees in one department with critical skills they would need to perform effectively in other departments
Term Life Insurance
provides protection to employees' beneficiaries only during a limited period based on a specified number of years
Behavioral Systems
rate employees on the extent to which they display successful job performance behaviors
Trait Systems
raters evaluate each employee's traits or characteristics (or competencies)
piecework plans
reward employees for every item produced over a designated production standard
Pay-for-knowledge plan
reward managerial, service, or professional workers for successfully learning specific curricula
Person-focused pay system
rewards employees for acquiring job-related knowledge and/or skills
Horizontal skills
skills at the same level of responsibility or difficulty (skills necessary to do the job)
vertical skills
skills that are traditionally considered supervisory
Strictness Error
supervisors rate employees' performance lower than they would rate them using objective criteria
Midpoint is largely based off _______.
the market
HIPPA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act)
three provisions: - guarantee that employees and their dependents that leave their employer's group health plan will have ready access to coverage under a subsequent employer's health plan, regardless of their health or claims experience - sets limits on the length of time that health plans and health insurance issuers may impose preexisting health conditions and identify conditions to which no preexisting condition may apply - protects the transfer, disclosure, and use of health care information
organizational incentive
tie employee compensation to a company's performance over a short time frame
Purpose of legally required benefits
to provide a form of social insurance; minimize the possibility that individuals who become unemployed or severely injured while working would become destitute
Skills-based pay
used mostly for employees who do physical work; increase these workers' pay as they master new skills
General considerations for merit pay systems
▪ Communicate link between pay and performance ▪ Establish increase amount and types ▪ Driven off base pay level; in most cases is an additive to base pay ▪ Use of effective appraisal methods (performance management) is essential ▪ Align increase amount with performance criteria
Merit pay increases are based on...
▪ Current pay/salary ▪ Position in the salary range ▪ Internal equity ▪ Reflects performance relative to employees in your work group/like position ▪ Budget
Factors that affect merit increases...
▪ Needs to motivate ▪ Needs to be meaningful ▪ Influenced by the cost of living ▪ Indexed as a percentage of budget (usually set annually) ▪ Individually administered as a percentage of salary