230 likes | 924 Views
. . I. Compensation: An Overview. A. Direct Financial CompensationWages, salaries, bonuses, commissionsB. Indirect Financial CompensationAll financial rewards not included in direct compensation (benefits)C. Nonfinancial CompensationSatisfaction received from the job or from the psychological and/or physical environment of the job.
E N D
1. Financial Rewards and
Compensation
Anil Verma, Professor
Rotman School of Management
University of Toronto
2. I. Compensation: An Overview A. Direct Financial Compensation
Wages, salaries, bonuses, commissions
B. Indirect Financial Compensation
All financial rewards not included in direct compensation (benefits)
C. Nonfinancial Compensation
Satisfaction received from the job or from the psychological and/or physical environment of the job
3. II. Compensation Equity A. Equity
Perception that one is being treated fairly
B. External Equity
Employees are paid comparably to those who perform similar jobs in other firms
C. Internal Equity
Employees are paid according to relative value of their jobs within an organization
D. Employee Equity
Individuals performing similar jobs for the same firm are rewarded according to factors unique to the employee, such as performance level or seniority
E. Team Equity
More productive teams receive greater rewards than less productive groups
5. The Organization as a Determinant of Financial Compensation A. Pay Leaders
Organizations that pay higher wages and salaries than competing firms
B. Going Rate
Average pay that most employers provide for the same job in a particular area or industry
C. Pay Followers
Managers who choose to pay below the going rate because of poor finances or because they believe that they do not require highly capable employees
6. The Labour Market as a Determinant of Financial Compensation (1 of 3) A. Compensation Surveys
Organizations conduct surveys to determine prevailing pay rates and benefits within labour markets
B. Cost of Living
A pay increase must be roughly equivalent to cost of living increase to maintain the level of real wages
C. Labour Unions
When a union uses comparable pay as a standard in making compensation demands, the employer must obtain accurate labour market data
7. The Labour Market as a Determinant of Financial Compensation (2 of 3) D. Society
Compensation paid to employees affects a firms prices for its goods or servicesconsumers may be interested in compensation decisions
E. The Economy
A depressed economy generally increases the labour supply, serving to lower the average wage rate
In most cases, the cost of living will rise in an expanding economy, exerting upward pressure on pay levels
9. The Job as a Determinant of Financial Compensation Employees are paid for the values attached to duties, responsibilities, and other job-related factors like working conditions
Techniques for determining a jobs relative worth include job analysis, job descriptions, and job evaluation
A. Job Analysis and Job Descriptions
Job analysis is a systematic method of determining the skills and knowledge required for performing jobs
The job description is the primary product of job analysis, consisting of a written document that describes job duties and responsibilities
Job descriptions are an essential part of all job evaluation systems
10. Job Evaluation (1 of 2) Job evaluation is a technique or process used to determine the relative value of one job in relation to every other job.
The Ranking Method
Raters examine each job description and arrange jobs in order according to their perceived value to the company
Classification Method
Classes or grades are defined to describe a group of jobs
The raters compare the job description with the class description
The class description that most closely agrees with the job description determines the jobs classification
11. Job Evaluation (2 of 2) Factor Comparison Method
Raters make decisions on separate aspects of the job; assuming there are 5 universal job factors
Point Method
Numerical values are assigned to specific job components; the sum of these values provides quantitative assessment of a jobs relative worth
The Hay Guide Chart-Profile Method is a highly refined version of the point method, which uses only a few factors: know-how, problem solving, accountability, and, where appropriate, working conditions
12. The Employee as a Determinant of Financial Compensation (1 of 4) A. Pay for Performance
Theory: Rewarded behaviour tends to be repeated.
Types of P-f-P:
Individual Incentives
Compensation programs that relate pay to individual performance
Line-of sight is very clear
14. The Employee as a Determinant of Financial Compensation (3 of 4) E. Seniority
Length of time employee has been associated with the company, division, department, or job
F. Skill-based pay
Employees are compensated on the basis of job-related skills and knowledge
G. Experience
On-the-job experience may greatly enhance a persons ability to perform