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Group assignment
CHALLENGES FACED IN DEVISING
A
COMPENSATION PLAN
GROUP MEMBERS
SAHANA.U
GEETANJALI
PRITHWIRAJ DEB
RATISH BABU
BHARAT RAM.K
A good Compensation plan is a must for any Company, big or small. The following
checklist must be considered for devising a compensation plan for the organization:
However there are various problems, deterrent and challenges while devising a
compensation plan. An HR in an organization has to deal with various questions, both at
the organizational and individual level while forming the compensation plan. Some of
these questions are as follows:
Taking the time to consider and answer these questions will make the both the process of
developing and administering a compensation plan much easier and will result in the
development of a compensation plan that more closely matches the organization's goals
and objectives.
Every organization's base pay program has certain objectives. The principal ones are as
follows:
• Internal equity
• External equity (or competitiveness)
• Individual equity
• Process equity
• Performance or productive incentives
• Maximum use of financial resources
• Compliance with rules and regulations
• Administrative efficiency.
It is important for H.R. personnel to balance all these objectives for a sound base pay
program. As these points are being reviewed, management should ask the following
questions:
• Is this point important to this organization? If so, how important?
• What are the implications of this point to the current or desired practices?
Internal Equity - Internal equity deals with the perceived worth of a job relative to other
jobs in the organization. All employees compare their jobs to other jobs within the
organization. The management must often determine the "worth" or "value" of one job in
relation other jobs for the purpose of pay programs. Maintaining appropriate pay relative
to value or worth is achieving internal equity.
External Equity - External equity deals with the issue of market rates for jobs. An
employer's goal should be to pay what is necessary to attract, retain and motivate a
sufficient number of qualified employees. This requires a base pay program that pays
competitively.
Individual Equity - Individual equity deals with how individuals perceive how they are
being paid relative to other individuals within the organization and perhaps within the
same position. In simple terms, employees want to feel that the rewards they receive for
how they do their work are comparable to the rewards received by others for the same
amount of effort or output, all other factors being equal. Management has to take into
account this factor too.
Maximum Use of Financial Resources - Since an organization does not have unlimited
financial resources, the management needs to be design the base pay program to
maximize the value to the organization with minimum use of these limited resources.
Compliance with Laws and Regulations - While not the primary objective of a pay
program, one of the objectives of the management is to see that a pay program is kept in
compliance with various state and central laws and regulations.
The basis for most pay programs is a pay structure - a hierarchy of jobs with pay ranges
and/or rates assigned. This is yet another challenge for the management to look for
while devising a compensation plan. Pay structures are designed so that the greater the
worth of a job, the higher the pay grade and range. For the management developing a
pay structure is a process with a series of steps:
Job Analysis - This involves collecting and evaluating relevant information about jobs.
Any data collected should clarify the nature of the work being performed (principal or
essential tasks, duties and responsibilities), the level of the work being performed, the
extent and types of knowledge, skill, mental and physical effort and requirements, and
responsibility required for the work being performed.
Development of a Job Worth Hierarchy - A job worth hierarchy is the result of job
evaluation, the overall process of comparing jobs. There are 6 major methods of
comparing jobs in order to develop the job worth hierarchy. The first three methods are
"whole-job" evaluations and are non-quantitative in nature. These include ranking,
classification and slotting. The second three are "factor" evaluation and are quantitative in
nature. These include point factor, factor comparison, and scored questionnaires.
Labor Market Data Collection and Analysis - Before an organization begins the
process of collecting labor market data, it must first define its relevant labor market. This
may include similar organizations in the same labor market, all employers in the local
market, similar organizations in the regional or national market, and/or all employers in
the regional or national market. The goal of labor market data collection is to find data
from employers with whom the organization competes for employees. Once the data has
been collected, it must be analyzed. The simplest analysis involves comparing the going
market rate and approximating this rate within the organization's own pay structure.
Other methods involve using advanced statistics to study relationships among certain
items in a specific job or market group. An organization may find pay range information,
as well as weighted average of actual pay, very helpful.
• How should the organization's pay level relate to the external market? Should the
organization be a pay leader, match the market or pay less than market?
• What is the organization willing to pay for: job content, seniority, performance,
skills, cost of labor, or some combination of all of these?
• What steps does the organization need to take to ensure that pay is administered
in a manner free of bias and discrimination?
If an organization decides to use pay ranges, it will have to determine how many ranges
to have. This will depend on the number of different levels of relative job value that are
recognized by the organization and the difference in pay between the highest and lowest
paid jobs in the pay structure.
Creating a pay structure is not the final step in the creation of a compensation plan. An
organization must also decide how to administer this compensation plan. This means
deciding how to pay new employees, how and when to give employees increases, how to
determine the pay increase for an employee being promoted from one job to another and
what influence, if any, cost of labor increases will have on the determination of pay
increases for employees. This is also a challenge for the management.
Performance Appraisal
If an organization chooses to pay for performance, the compensation plan must include a
well-designed and properly administered performance appraisal system in order to be
complete. Following are some questions that will help determine if an organization's
current performance appraisal system meets these criteria.
• Is performance appraised on the direct measurement of an employee's output or
results? Does the performance appraisal system consider only job-related
behavior rather than personality traits?
• Are supervisors and managers trained in the performance appraisal process?
• Are the criteria used to measure performance as objective and quantitative as
possible? Or are the criteria open to subjective interpretation?
• Have objective job standards been developed? Have the employees had input into
the development of these standards? Are they communicated to the employees at
the beginning of the appraisal period? Are job standards reviewed regularly to
ensure relevance and importance to the department and organization?
• Is the employee actively involved in the performance appraisal process? Or is a
performance appraisal something that is "done" to the employee?
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