1 / 17

Compensation

Compensation. Extrinsic Rewards Monetary wage and salary commissions and bonuses Benefits Intrinsic Rewards recognition, promotion opportunities, working conditions, nature of the work. Objectives of Compensation. Attract Good Applicants Market competitiveness Wage survey

mgiannone
Télécharger la présentation

Compensation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Compensation • Extrinsic Rewards • Monetary • wage and salary • commissions and bonuses • Benefits • Intrinsic Rewards • recognition, promotion opportunities, working conditions, nature of the work

  2. Objectives of Compensation • Attract Good Applicants • Market competitiveness • Wage survey • External equity • Retain Good Employees • External and internal equity • Distributive and procedural justice • Job Evaluation • Motivate Employees ???

  3. Does Pay Motivate ? YES • Reinforcement Theory • Pay is positive reinforcement • Expectancy Theory • Effort = Expectancy * (Sum (Instrumentality*Valence)) • Pay is valent outcome that is contingency-based • Equity Theory • Social comparison of inputs and outputs • Paid less for same or more effort = less effort

  4. Does Pay Motivate ? NO • Maslow’s Need Hierarchy Theory • Pay is lower-order need, once it is satisfied it no longer motivates -- move to higher order needs. • Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory • Motivators and Hygiene Factors • Pay is Hygiene Factor - presence will not motivate • Motivation comes from presence of motivators (recognition, job enrichment) • Deci’s Theory of Intrinsic Motivation • intrinsic rewards gained from certain activities • extrinsic rewards decrease intrinsic motivation

  5. Does Pay Motivate ? Compromise • Individual differences in response to pay as a motivator • Need pay, but don’t rely on it as a sole motivator • Pay loses potency over time • Establish clear performance-reward contingencies • Good performance appraisal system; feedback • Make sure employees have skills, abilities and resources needed to do the job (selection; training) • Ensure equity (perceived and actual) • Money is not for everyone: determine individual reinforcers (reinforcement buffet)

  6. Issues in Compensation: Overview • Pay-for-Performance • Fixed vs. Variable Pay • Performance vs. Membership • Job vs. Individual Pay • Open vs. Secret Pay Policy • Egalitarianism vs. Elitism • Monetary vs. Nonmonetary Rewards • Below-Market vs. Above Market Compensation • Centralization vs. Decentralization of Pay Decisions

  7. Pay-for-Performance • Incentive system rewards employee performance • performance rather than entitlement orientation • Assumptions: • individuals and teams differ in contributions • performance-based pay will affect attraction, retention and motivation • vs. aspects of job, job security, corporate culture • assumes performance appraisals are done well (cont’d)

  8. Pay -for -Performance (cont’d) • Advantages: • Merit-based • Objective rather than subjective • Disadvantages: • “Do only what you get paid for” syndrome • employees focus on rewarded measures of job & ignore other important aspects (quality or service) • manipulate system • negative effects on cooperation: increases competition • Lack of control over factors affecting performance • performance of other group members, job support, materials • leads to job dissatisfaction and stress • Difficulties in measuring performance (individual and team) • Encourages short-term orientation (performance over a year) • Psychological contracts (broken when changing system) • Lack of confidence in the system (is it really fair?)

  9. Establishing Effective Pay-For-Performance Incentive Systems • Is it appropriate for the job? • piece-rate: absolutely • other knowledge-based jobs? What is the product? • Reinforce with other HR systems • Performance appraisal, selection, rater training • Build employee trust • Does it pay for me to work longer, harder, smarter? • Does anyone notice my extra efforts? • Promote belief that performance makes a difference • Use multiple layers of rewards (individual and team) • Involve employees in design of pay plan • Complement with non-financial rewards

  10. Pay-For Performance Plans: Individual • Examples: merit pay, piece-rate, commissions, bonuses • Advantages: • individual equity • ties with goal theory, expectancy theory & reinforcement theory • fits individualistic cultures • Disadvantages: • create competition and destroy cooperation among peers • general pitfalls of p-f-p most evident at individual level • Use: • contributions of individual employee can be accurately isolated • job demands autonomy • cooperation not critical; competition encouraged

  11. Pay-For Performance Plans: Team Incentives • Advantages: • Foster group cohesiveness • Reflect current work situation: more effective measurement level • Disadvantages: • Lack of fit with individualistic corporate cultures • Free-riders • Social pressures to limit performance • Difficulties in identifying groups • Intergroup competition leading to a decline in overall performance • Use: • high task interdependence within group • independent tasks between groups • objective to foster self-managed work teams

  12. Pay-For Performance Plans: Organizational • Examples: gainsharing, profit sharing, ESOP • Advantages: • employee ownership • provides financial flexibility for firm (cost is automatically adjusted downwards during economic downturns) • tax advantages • Disadvantages: • profits vary from year to year • payoff removed from employee efforts • stock risks • Use: • large corporations with interdependent business units (difficult to target contributions of individual units) • with other individual and team incentive programs

  13. Job vs. Individual Pay • Knowledge-based or skill-based pay: employees paid on the basis of the jobs they can do • base level of pay increased with ability to do other jobs • employees move from job to job as needed • Advantages: • increases staffing flexibility • reduces costs of turnover & absenteeism • motivational: job rotation • Disadvantages: • loss of labor specialization • greater difficulty in selecting applicants because qualifications are less specific • chaos if not managed properly

  14. Use Knowledge-based pay system: • limited opportunities for upward mobility • high change in technology and organizational structure • educated work force with ability & willingness to learn new jobs • teamwork and participation stressed • opportunities to learn new skills • high costs associated with absenteeism and turnover

  15. Open vs. Secret Pay Policy • Advantages to Open Pay Policy: • When compensation is secret, people believe they are more underpaid than they really are • Forces managers to be more fair and effective in administering compensation • bad decisions cannot be hidden • good decisions motivate others • Disadvantages: • Managers forced to defend decisions publicly • may give everyone the same raise to avoid conflict; demotivates high performers. • Pay becomes political -- unleashes jealousy, conflict • Use Open Pay Policy: • Egalitarian culture with employee involvement • Cultures with trust and commitment

  16. Elitism v. Egalitarianism • Egalitarianism: employees under the same compensation system (ie. all employees eligible for stock options) • Reduces barriers between employees • Allows reassignment of employee to different area without changing compensation package • More common in highly competitive environments • Elitism: different compensation plans for different groups • Increases stability: have to stay in organization and move up through ranks to get stock options • More common in older, well-established firms with mature products

  17. Other Compensation Questions • Monetary vs.Non-monetary Awards? • Non-monetary Awards: interesting work, job security, work sabbaticals, flexible work, benefits, overseas transfers, extensive training and development. • Use combination; contingent on employee and position. • Below-Market vs. Above Market Compensation? • Depends on labor market, position, technology, geographic location. • Implications for turnover, organizational commitment, getting and keeping top performers. • Pay Decisions Centralized vs. Decentralized? • Centralization may be cost efficient; hire compensation specialist • Centralization increases internal equity, but may be less in touch with external market. • Decentralization better in large and diverse organizations.

More Related