Compensation Exam 2
Benchmark job approach
Benchmark jobs have stable job content, are common across different employers and include many employees
How does the market drive demand and supply of human capital?
Demand side (actions of employers) determines how many new hires they seek Supply side (employees) qualifications and the pay they are willing to accept
Effectiveness of a pay model is dependent on what three concepts
Efficiency= performance plan must support corporate objective. Need to meet standards on measures, eligibility and funding Equity= distributive and procedural justice, communicate fairness and expectations Compliance= comply with all existing laws
Self-determination theory
Employees are motivated by reward systems, pay grades and extrinsic and intrinsic motivation. Highest quality of motivation comes from autonomy, competence and relatedness. In addition to compensation, employees also value empowerment, recognition, etc.
What are the two types of skill plans
Specialist = depth Generalist = breadth
How is competitive intelligence used?
To understand how competitors achieve market share and price products
What happens when pay is based on individual performance?
Turnover is higher for poor performers Too little pay triggers feelings of unfair treatment
What are fuzzy markets?
Unique jobs and structures that need unique skills and talents. Difficult to compare to others
Central Tendency
a midpoint in a group of measures
Shared Choice
an external competitiveness policy that offers employees a substantial choice among their pay forms
Competency
basic knowledge and abilities employees must acquire or demonstrate in a competency-based plan in order to successfully perform the work, satisfy customers, and achieve business objectives
Skill block
basic units of knowledge employees must master to perform that work, satisfy customers, and achieve business objectives
Agency Theory
both sides seek to make most favorable exchange possible.
Tacit work
complex work (as compared to transactional, or routine, work)
Skill requirements
composite of experience, training, and ability as measured by the performance requirements of a particular job
Reliability
different evaluations produce same results
Expectancy Theory
employees choose behaviors that yield the most satisfaction/exchange
What are the elements of employee behavior
function on the basis of motivation, ability and environment
Herzberg's two factory theory
hygiene factors are pay and basic needs while satisfiers/ motivators are motivations like recognition
Low-high approach
identify the lowest and highest paid benchmark jobs
Why would an organization choose to lag competition?
if they add the promise of high future returns (stock ownership), it may increase commitment
What are aspects that influence motivation
individual behavior, changes in cost of living, seniority, market rate
What is "word of mouse"
internet searching for salary information (salary.com)
Reservation wage
lowest wage an employee will accept
Market pricing
matches a large percentage of their jobs with market data and collect as much market data as possible. The objective is to base most of the internal pay structure on external rates
Bias in internal structures
may lead to discrimination
What are the two aspects of pay structure?
pay policy line and pay ranges
Equity theory
people are concerned about fairness- what is expected and what is received.
Maslow's needs hierarchy
people are motivate by needs, lower basic to higher order
Satisfiers
people that take the first job offer they get where the pay meets their reservation wage
benchmark conversion/survey leveling
process of matching survey jobs by applying the employers plan to the external jobs and then comparing the worth of the external job with its internal " match
Zones
ranges of pay used as controls or guidelines within pay bands that can keep the system more structurally intact. Maximums, midpoints, and minimums provide guides to appropriate pay for certain levels of work. Without zones employees may float to the maximum pay, which for many jobs in the band is higher than market value
Pay Mix
relative emphasis among compensation components such as base pay, merit incentives, and benefits
Topping out
situation in which employees in a skill-based compensation plan attain the top pay rate in a job category by accumulating and/or becoming certified for the top-paid skill block(s)
Quoted-Price Market
stores that label each item's price or ads that list a job's opening starting wage are examples of quoted-price markets
Job-based systems
systems that focus on jobs as the basic unit of analysis to determine the pay structure; hence, job analysis is required
Multiskill system
systems that link pay to the number of different jobs (breadth) an employee is certified to do regardless of the specific job he or she is doing
Ability to Pay
the ability of a firm to meet employee wage demands while remaining profitable; a frequent issue in contract negotiations with unions. A firm's ability to pay is constrained by disability to compete in its product market
Validity
the degree to which job evaluation assesses what it is supposed to
Why would an organization choose to pay with competition?
to try to ensure that wage costs are approximately equal to competitors and ability to attract applicants is equal to competitors
Why would an organization choose to lead competition?
to try to maximize the ability to attract and retain employees there is a link between higher wages and ease of attractions, reduced turnover and absenteeism
Market Pay Line
using key/ benchmark jobs, a market pay policy line can be constructed that shows external market pay survey data as a function of internal job evaluation points. In many cases, the market pay policy line is obtained by using regression analysis which yields an equation of the form "market pay= intercept + slope x job evaluation points." By plugging the job evaluation points for any job (both benchmark and non-benchmark jobs into the equation, the predicted pay for each job can be obtained
What is plotted on the x and y axis of survey data?
x axis= internal aligned structure y axis= salaries paid by relevant companies (externally competitive data)
What are organizational factors that influence compensation?
- Industry and Technology *labor-intensive industries tend to pay less than tech-intensive industries -Employer Size *large organizations tend to pay more -Organizational Strategy *pay levels that lead competition are used in jobs that directly impact organizational success. *jobs with less impact have pay levels that meet competition pay -People's preference *pay forms and amounts that employees value
The purpose of skill based structures
- support organizational strategy and objectives -support work flow -fair to employees -motivates behavior
Motivation
-What is important to a person -How to offer it in exchange for desired behavior
How/When to choose between the pay policies?
An organization may adopt a lead policy for skills critical to success, a match policy for less critical skills and a lag policy for jobs easily filled in the labor market.
Pay Level Formula
(base + bonuses + benefits + value of stock holdings)/ number of employees
Do people join a firm because of pay?
- Job candidates look for organizations with reward systems that fit their personalities. - Candidates look for a 'fit.': Materialistic= relatively more concerned with pay level Low self-esteem= want large, decentralized organization with little pay for performance Risk takers= want more pay based on performance Risk-averse= want less performance-based pay Individualist= want pay plans based on individual performance - A strong pay/performance link is attractive.
Competencies are...
-Skills that can be learned and developed -Traits that include attitudes and motivations -Focused on minimum requirements that organizations need to stay in business -Focuses on outstanding performance -Characteristics of the organization -Characteristics of the employee
What are the questions that need to be answered when designing a survey?
-Who should be involved in survey design? -How many employers should be included? -Which jobs should be included? -What information should be collected?
What is the purpose of skill-based structures
-align internally -support the strategy and objectives -support work flow -be fair to employees -motivate behavior toward organization objectives
What are factors that affect the supply of labor?
-geographic barriers -union requirements -lack of information about job openings -degree of risk -degree of unemployment
What are the two key product market factors?
-product demand -degree of competition
How to select relevant market competitors?
-same occupation or skills -employees in the same geographic area -same products and services
Examples of competencies
-skills -knowledge -self-concepts -traits -motives
What are important things to consider when conducting surveys and utilizing information?
-verifying data -beware of outliers -conduct regression analysis (straight line that best fits data -frequency distribution -central tendency (reduces a large amount of data into a single number -Mean vs weighted mean (weighted mean gives equal weight to each individual employee's wage) -variation (distribution of rates around a measure of central tendency -standard deviation
What aspects of setting pay help balance intern and external pressures?
Job structure orders jobs on the basis of internal factors Pay structure is anchored by external competitive positions
Labor Cost formula
Labor Cost= Pay level x the number of employees The higher the pay level relative to what competitors pay, the greater the relative costs to provide similar products or services
What types of environments are good for skill-based pay
Team, multiskilled and flexible (manufacturing)
Why do organizations choose to differentiate their pay strategy?
There is a need to balance internal and external pressures
What is the major strategic decision associated with external competitiveness in compensation strategy?
Whether to mirror what competitors are paying or to design a pay package that may differ from those of competitors but better fit the business strategy
Pay Satisfaction
a function of the discrepancy between employees' perception of how much pay they should receive and how much pay they do receive. If these perceptions are equal, an employee is said to experience pay satisfaction
What can be one reason for a compensation differential?
a job is dangerous and therefore gets paid more
Market Line
a line on a graph that links a company's benchmark job evaluation points on the horizontal axis (internal structure) with market rates paid by competitors (market survey) on the vertical axis. It summarizes the distribution of going rates paid by competitors in the market
Bureau of Labor Statistics
a major source of publicly available pay data. It also calculates the consumer price index
Bourse Market
a market that allows haggling over terms and conditions until an agreement is reached
Consumer Price Index (CPI)
a measure of the changes in prices in a fixed market basket of goods and services purchased by a hypothetical average family. Not an absolute measure of living costs; rather, a measure of how fast costs are changing. Published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor
Behavior Model
a model that assumes people have accurate information about jobs and that no barriers exist to an individuals ability to get the job
Skill-based pay
a pay structure in which workers are paid for the skills they are certified to have obtained
Broad Banding
collapsing a number of salary grades into a smaller number of broad grades with wide ranges -provides flexibility to define job responsibilities -fosters cross-functional growth -places emphasis on lateral movement with no pay adjustments -take advantage of flexibility without increased labor costs, turnover, or vulnerability to inconsistent or illegal practices
When administering and evaluating person-based structured compensation, what elements are important for acceptance
communication and employee involvement
Competency-based structure
compensation approach that links pay to the depth and scope of competencies that are relevant to doing the work. Typically used in managerial and professional work where what is accomplished may be difficult to identify
Signaling
employers design pay levels as part of a strategy that signals to both prospective and current employees the kind of behaviors that are sought
Goal setting theory
need to identify motivation. Identify desired behaviors and the goals expected to come from these behaviors. We set goals to influence performance of employees.
Pay Grades
one of the classes, levels, or groups into which jobs of the same or similar values are grouped for compensation purposes. All jobs in a pay grade have the same pay range- maximum, minimum, and midpoint
What is the thought process behind flexible compensation
only the individual employee knowns what package of rewards would best suit their personal needs Important to make sure the dollar cost of the package an employee selects meets employer budgetary limits
Pay-with-competition policy
policy that tries to ensure that a firm's labor costs are appropriately equal to those of its competitors. It seeks to avoid placing an employer at a disadvantage in pricing products or in maintaining a qualified workforce
Job Structure
relationship among jobs inside an organization, based on work content and each job's relative contribution to achieving the organization's objectives
Pay-Policy Line
representation of the organization's pay-level policy relative to what competitors pay for similar jobs. May need to be aged halfway through the plan year Can also use %s
Extrinsic Rewards
rewards that a person receives from sources other than the job itself. They include compensation, supervision, promotions, vacations, friendships, and all other important outcomes apart from the job itself.
Transactional work
routine work
How to express external competitiveness
setting a pay level that is above, below or equal to competitors, determining the pay mix relative to those of competitors
Hit rates
the ability of a job evaluation plan to replicate a predetermined, agreed-upon job structure
Marginal Product of Labor
the additional output associated with the employment of one additional human resource unit, with other factors held constant
Marginal Revenue
the additional revenue generated when the firm employs 1 additional person
Utility Theory
the analysis of utility, the dollar value created by increasing revenues and/or decreasing costs by changing one or more human resources practices. It has most typically been used to analyze the payoff to making more valid employee hiring/selection decisions.
Pay Structure
the array of pay rates for different jobs within a single organization; they focus attention on differential compensation paid for work of unequal worth.
Equal Pay Act
the best approach may be to provide sufficient ambiguity (loosely linked internal alignment) to afford flexibility to adapt to changing conditions.
Competitive Intelligence
the collection and analysis of information about external conditions and competitors that will enable an organization to be more competitive
Total Compensation
the complete pay packages for employees, including all forms of money, bonuses, benefits, services, and stock
Sorting
the effect that pay strategy has on who is attracted and who is retained
Labor Demand
the employment level organizations require. An increase in wage rates will reduce the demand for labor, other factors constant. Thus, the labor demand curve (the relationship between employment levels and wage rates) is downward-sloping
Perquisite
the extras bestowed on top management, such as private dining rooms, company cars, and first-class airfare.
External Competitiveness
the pay relationships among organizations; focuses the attention on the competitive positions reflected in these relationships
Survey
the process of collecting and making judgments about the compensation paid by other employers they are used to provide data for policy into pay levels, pay mix and structures
Shirking Behavior
the propensity of employees to allow the marginal revenue product of their labor to be less than its marginal cost; to be lax
What are the goals of compensation
- attract employees -keep good employees -motivate employees to perform well -none of this is possible if performance rewards can't be measured
What are the factors that affect pay mix decisions/ external competitiveness?
- competition in the labor market for people with various skills - competition in the product market - characteristics unique to each organization
What are the three alternatives to choose between when collecting survey data?
-Base pay (amount of cash the competitors decided each job and each incumbent is worth) -Total Cash (base, profit sharing, bonuses) -Total Compensation (total cash + stock options) Total compensation is higher than base pay alone or base plus bonuses
What areas see consequences of pay level and pay mix decisions
-Operating expenses -Employee attitudes and work behaviors -Efficiency (little research) -Fairness (more is better in terms of pay and employee satisfaction) -Compliance (living wage, pensions, health care, avoiding antitrust violations)
What behaviors do employers care about
-Perform in ways that lead to better organizational performance -Need employees with ability (recruitment, selection, training) -HR needs to design policies and compensation that leads employees to behave in ways that support corporate goals -Pay should reinforce desired behaviors
What are the 5 areas that people thought competencies focused on?
-Skills (demonstration of expertise) -Knowledge ( accumulated information) -Self-Concepts (attitudes, values, self-image) -Traits (general disposition to behave in a certain way) -Motives(recurrent thoughts that drive behavior
What are the major skill analysis decisions
-What is the objective of the plan? -What information should be collected? -What method should be used? -Who should be involved? -How useful are the results for pay purposes?
Why develop grades for pay ranges?
-build flexibility into structure -enhance an organization's ability to move people around with no change in pay -each grade has its own pay range and all the jobs within a single grade have the same pay range
What factors go into choosing whether to on-site, off-site, or offshore?
-customer preferences -time schedules -nature of the project
What are the assumptions about labor markets
-employees seek to maximize profits -people are homogeneous and interchangeable -pay rates reflect all costs -markets are competitive, so there is no incentive to pay above or below the market rate
Steps in creating a skill analysis
-group related skills into a skill block -arrange skill blocks by level into a skill structure -create a process to describe, certify, and value the skills -build the structure
What are the three basic data types to collect in a survey?
-information about the organization -information about the total compensation system -specific pay data on each incumbent in the jobs understudy
What are other rewards a company can offer
-job satisfaction -pay and benefits -social -organizational commitment -organizational prestige
What factors are used to determine the relevant labor markets?
-occupation -geography -competitors
What elements make up the perfect structure
-pay increases by promotions to more responsible jobs -employees focus on getting promoted -controls cost -offset higher rates with higher
What are the three groups of competencies to collect
-personal characteristics (personality) -visionary (highest-level competencies, big picture) -organization specific
What the major decisions in setting external competitive pay?
-specify the employer competitive pay policy -define the purpose of the survey -select relevant market competitors -design the survey -interpret survey results and construct the market line -construct a pay policy line that reflects external pay policy -balance competitiveness with internal alignment through the use of ranges, flat rates and/or bands
What is the purpose of conducting a survey?
-to adjust pay level in response to changing rates paid by competitors -to set the mix of pay forms relative to that paid by competitors -to establish or price a pay structure -to analyze pay-related problems -to estimate the labor costs of product/service market competitors
What are the three possible pay decisions? What is the most popular?
-to lead -to meet -to follow (lag) Most common is to match competition
what are the two objectives of compensation competitiveness
1) Control Costs and Increase Revenue 2) Attract and Retain Employees
Managers using the marginal revenue product model must
1) determine the pay level set by market forces 2) determine the marginal revenue generated by each new hire
What are the two steps in banding?
1) set the number of bands 2) price the bands by referencing market rates
The difference between skill based pay and job based pay
In skill based pay people can be used in the way that best matches the flow of work and wages are attached to the person (not the job). In a job based plan, employees are paid for the job they are assigned and not their skills.
Regression
a statistical technique for relating present-pay differentials to some criterion, that is, pay rates in the external market, rates for jobs held predominantly by men, or factor weights that duplicate present rates for all jobs in the organization
Job Evaluation
a systematic procedure designed to aid in establishing pay differentials among jobs within a single company. It includes classification, comparison of the relative worth of jobs, blending internal and external market forces, measurement, negotiation, and judgment
Skill analysis
a systematic process to identify and collect information about the skills required to perform work in an organization
Efficiency Wage Theory
a theory that explains why firms are rational in offering higher-than-necessary wages
Lead Pay-Level Policy
a wage structure that is set to lead the market throughout the pan year. Its aim is to maximize a firm's ability to attract and retain quality employees and to minimize employee dissatisfaction with pay
Lag Pay-Level Policy
a wage structure that is set to match market rates at the beginning of the plan year only. The rest of the plan year, internal rates will lag behind market rates. Its objective is to offset labor costs, but it may hinder a firm's ability to attract and retain quality employee
What are the things that need to be possible no matter what the basis for the pay structure is?
a way to -collect and summarize information about the work -determine what about the work is of value to the organization -quantify that value -Translate that value into an internal structure
Employment Cost Index
allows firms to compare changes in its average costs to industry
Pay Level
an average of the array of rates paid by an employer
Compensating Differentials
an economic theory that attributes the variety of pay rates in the external labor market to differences in attractive as well as negative characteristics in jobs. Pay differences must overcome negative characteristics to attract employees
Diminishing Returns
an employer will continue to hire until the marginal revenue generated by the last hire is equal to the costs associated with employing that person
What is emphasis now placed on for competencies?
business-related behaviors, why excellent performers are doing more consistently than average employees. Competencies are becoming a collection of observable behaviors that require no inference, assumption, or interpretation
Flexible Compensation
the allocation of employee compensation in a variety of forms tailored to organization pay objectives and/or the needs of individual employees
Rent
the amount by which payment to a factor of production (capital or labor) exceeds the payment needed to keep it employed and/or its productivity. In the case of an employee (labor), economic rent would be compensation paid beyond what is necessary to retain the employee and/or beyond his/her marginal product
Job Pricing
the process of assigning pay to jobs, based on thorough job analysis and job evaluation.
Pay Ranges
the range of pay rates from minimum to maximum set for a pay grade or class. It puts limits on the rates an employer will pay for a particular job. Usually down with base pay data exists whenever two or more rates are paid to employees in the same job
Range Midpoint
the salary midway between the minimum and maximum rate of a salary range. The midpoint rate for each range is usually set to correspond to the pay-policy line and represents the rate paid for satisfactory performance on the job
Job Analysis
the systematic process of collecting information related to the nature of a specific job. It provides the knowledge needed to define jobs and conduct job evaluation
Employer of Choice
the view that a firm's external wage competitiveness is just one facet of its overall human resource policy and that competitiveness is more properly judged ob overall policies. Challenging work, great colleagues, or an organization's prestige must be factored into an overall consideration of attractiveness
Why do applicants select job opportunities?
there is perceived match between their personal dispositions and the nature of the organization
Relevant Markets
those employers with which an organization competes for skills and products/ services. Three factors commonly used to determine the relevant markets are the occupation or skills required
What questions to ask to determine if a data point is an anomaly?
-Does any one company dominate? -Do all employers show similar patterns? -Are there any outliers?
What are the outcomes of skill-based pay plans
-Generally well accepted -Learn to earn mentality -Younger employees, more educated employees with stronger growth needs, organizational commitment, and a positive attitude toward workplace innovation were more successful in acquiring new skills -people can top out so this method is sometimes abandoned -best aligned with cost-cutter strategy or in industries where labor costs are a small % of total costs
What are the benefits of higher wages?
-Higher pay satisfactions -Improved attractions and retentions of employees -Higher quality and effort of work
How have pay forms changed?
New forms of pay are less entitlement-oriented and more aligned to the uncertainties of individual, group and corporate performance. Some employees may be willing to risk higher risk in return for greater chance to earn large payouts.
Base Wage
The basic cash compensation that an employer pays for the work performed. Tends to reflect the value of the work itself and ignore differences individual contributions
What is the employee advantage of multi-skill systems
The more they learn the more they earn