230 likes | 272 Vues
The Reward Climate. reward update. employer of choice. pensions. equal pay. total reward. share plans. The Reward Climate. Mark Childs Director, Total Reward Solutions & immediate past V-P Reward, CIPD. Aims. Identify current issues in UK reward
E N D
The Reward Climate reward update employer of choice pensions equal pay total reward share plans
The Reward Climate Mark Childs Director, Total Reward Solutions & immediate past V-P Reward, CIPD
Aims • Identify current issues in UK reward • Review recent reward management trends • Explain the factors which are driving change • Forecast likely developments in the next 12 months
Method • Findings largely from CIPD’s 2005 reward survey • c. 500 organisations participated, from private, public and voluntary sectors • Organisations cover 1.5 million employees • Supplementary data from other recent surveys • Personal insights as a reward practitioner
Overview • Reward Strategy • Pay • Benefits • Pensions • Long Term Incentives
Reward Strategy • Increasing acknowledgement that reward is broader than pay alone • It is an holistic endeavour which: • integrates pay, benefits, incentives, employer brand and corporate purpose • encourages discretionary effort • creates engagement • focuses increasingly on business alignment
45% of respondents have a reward strategy Reward Strategy • 1 in 5 companies of <50 employees and 3 in 5 companies of >5000 have a reward strategy • Sectoral differences continue to be significant • Drivers of reward strategy • Recruit & retain key talent • Reward high performers • Support business goals • In 2004 Manage Pay Costs featured strongly • 30% claim a “Total Reward” approach
Pay Issues • Widespread acknowledgement that there is no “right way” to manage pay • Descriptions such as appropriate, crafted, tailored and best-fit have replaced “best-practice” • Over 50% of employers are using some form of job evaluation system (44% in 2004) • National Minimum Wage still fails to register as a driver/issue in pay determination (tight labour market might help to explain this)
Job evaluation is alive and well Pay Trends • Individual contribution/merit is now the dominant factor in determining pay progression • Persistent pattern of larger companies tending to use formal structures e.g. grades of broadbands • Despite perceptions, job evaluation continues to grow in popularity but in a more innovative way • Take up of broadbanding in public and voluntary sectors continues to lag private sector • Skills based pay continues to decline and regional rates are growing in popularity
Increasing Influence Individual merit Market pricing Broadbanding Career grades Job families Declining Influence Collective bargaining The “going-rate” Narrow pay scales Spine point systems Spot rates Pay Influences
Bonuses are back and rising fast Bonus Trends • 69% of private sector organisations operate a bonus plan, compared to 23% voluntary,22% public • Annual bonus/incentive plans are being extended to cover a higher proportion of their workforces • 6% is the market median for clerical/manual workers and 20% for senior managers • Bonus earnings are recovering strongly (New Earnings Survey), especially financial services – watch out for the December 2005 data
Benefits Issues • 1 in 5 intend to make benefit plan changes in next 12 months – declining from a high of 1 in 3 in 2004 • 25 days holiday p.a. is the “market norm” – with entitlements increasingly harmonised • Childcare vouchers are the benefit most likely to be introduced this year (n.b. tax incentive) • Public sector is leading the pack in workplace creche provision (21% on-site in public sector) • Conflicting picture on private healthcare provision (n.b. recent Mercer’s survey)
The dash to Flex is real but overstated Benefits Trends • Rate of growth of Flex remains slow, but certain • 8% of all organisations have a Flex plan, but • 25% of >5000 report a flexible benefits plan • Flex is rare in <1000 employee organisations • Voluntary benefits appear in 25% of organisations • Fuel provision is evaporating, company cars are being parked, risk benefits are threatened • Long Term Disability under pressure • Dependants benefits declining under Flex
Benefits Influences • Desire for mass customisation is proving more deterministic than the tax system • Choice is becoming more influential than protection against the contingencies of life • Rising costs (n.b. insured benefits) are causing companies to review provision • Emphasis on choice is masking the declining financial value of core benefit provision
Pensions Issues • New entrants now more likely to join a DC plan, but majority of employees remain DB • DB remains prevalent in public sector, but competitive advantage is not being exploited • First signs of public sector change have emerged and are expected to intensify • Slowly dawning on people that employers’ average contribution is 12% DB, 7% DC* • Organisations with <250 employees typically offer stakeholder access only - no employer contribution * NAPF Survey
Share plans still matter Share Plan Issues • There is a continuing, widespread and irrational disillusionment with equity vehicles • Perception that most options are further underwater than Atlantis is just wrong • Value of share awards are going to become an important issue again in the recruitment market • Large numbers of employees are nesting some significant gains – due to hatch in 12-18 months • Accounting changes have not impacted share plans as drastically as they did pension schemes
Share Plan Trends • 40% of employers offer access to some form of share scheme • SAYE Sharesave remains the most popular vehicle • SIP has grown steadily, but note risk to employer • Executive Share Option Schemes are holding up • EMI continues to motor in SME sector • There is more innovation in share plan design
Equal Pay • 41% have completed an Equal Pay Review, up from 26% on 2004 • Private and voluntary sectors are catching up with leading edge public sector practice • All organisations are reporting a higher take up of Equal Pay Reviews, except small employers who generally report they do not have a problem • Reviews tend to cover age and race as well as gender
Pay & Bonus Forecast • Most will focus more on pay progression and retention of talent rather than pay inflation alone • Many will experience market pressure to extend participation in bonus schemes • Trend towards individual merit based awards or salary progression will intensify • Bonus earnings will step up during 2005 • Too many organisations will continue to focus more on design than communication of reward • Small companies will begin to realise they have equal pay issues too
Benefits Forecast • A growing proportion of the best companies will extend from benefits statements into Total Reward Statements • Flex and voluntary plans will continue to grow in popularity – dependents benefits will suffer • Family friendly will be a strong undercurrent in benefits provision – especially childcare vouchers • Free fuel provision will decline further and a good number will run down company car fleets
Pensions Forecast • Public sector will be slow to awaken the sleeping giant of its competitive advantage • By the time it does public sector pensions will be heading for declining value • Immediate vesting will increase costs and further reduce employer commitment to their pension scheme • Pensions has the potential to ignite some serious employee relations issues in the months ahead • A growing proportion of employees will save less than they need to in order to retire when they want to
Share Plan Forecast • A lot of HR practitioners will need to improve their understanding of share plans to earn a place at the decision-making table • There will be some rediscovery of the value of share based long-term incentives • Performance share plans will continue to grow in popularity, especially in US parented organisations • A declining proportion of employees will participate in executive share option plans in the short-term
Summary Reward climate continues to experience global warming and the patterns of the past will not necessarily inform future strategy