1 / 42

Human Resource Management TENTH EDITON

? 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. . 12?2. Learning Objectives. After you have read this chapter, you should be able to:Identify two general types of compensation and the components of each.Give examples of two different compensation philosophies in organizations.Discuss

rafal
Download Presentation

Human Resource Management TENTH EDITON

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. Human Resource Management TENTH EDITON Compensation Strategies and Practices

    2. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–2 Learning Objectives After you have read this chapter, you should be able to: Identify two general types of compensation and the components of each. Give examples of two different compensation philosophies in organizations. Discuss four strategic compensation design issues. Describe three considerations affecting perceptions of pay fairness. Identify the basic provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA).

    3. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–3 Learning Objectives (cont’d) Define job evaluation and discuss four methods for of performing it. Outline the process of building a wage and salary administration system. Discuss how to establish a pay-for-performance system.

    4. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–4 Compensation Systems Objectives of an Effective Compensation System: Legal compliance with all appropriate laws and regulations Cost effectiveness for the organization Internal, external, and individual equity for employees Performance enhancement for the organization

    5. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–5 Nature of Compensation Types of Rewards Intrinsic Intangible, psychological and social effects of compensation Extrinsic Tangible, monetary and nonmonetary effects of compensation

    6. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–6 Components of A Compensation Program

    7. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–7 Direct Compensation

    8. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–8 Typical Division of HR Responsibilities: Compensation

    9. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–9 Continuum of Compensation Philosophies

    10. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–10 Compensation Approaches

    11. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–11 Compensation Quartile Strategies

    12. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–12 Decisions About Compensation Levels

    13. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–13 Competency-Based Pay

    14. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–14 Competency-Based Systems Outcomes

    15. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–15 Individual vs. Team Rewards

    16. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–16 Perceptions of Pay Fairness

    17. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–17 Equity Considerations in Compensation

    18. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–18 Fair Labor Standards Act (FSLA) of 1938

    19. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–19 Wage/Hour Status Under Fair Labor Standards Act

    20. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–20 Wage/Hour Status Under Fair Labor Standards Act

    21. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–21 Wage/Hour Status Under Fair Labor Standards Act

    22. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–22 The IRS Test for Employees and Independent Contractors

    23. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–23 Other Laws Affecting Compensation Davis-Bacon Act of 1931 Required payment of “prevailing wage” by firms engaged in federal construction projects. Walsh-Healy Public Contracts Act and the Service Contracts Act Extended the payment of “prevailing wage” to service contracts Required overtime payment for any employee hours worked over eight hours in one day; applies only to to federal contracts, not the private sector.

    24. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–24 Pay and Gender Equal Pay Act of 1963 Requires that men and women be paid the same for performing substantially similar jobs with limited non-gender exceptions (e.g., merit and seniority). Issue of Pay Equity Similarity in pay for all jobs requiring comparable level of knowledge, skills, and abilities, even if actual duties and market rates differ significantly.

    25. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–25 Compensation Administration Process

    26. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–26 Job Evaluation Job Evaluation The systematic determination of the relative worth of jobs within an organization. Benchmark Job A job found in many organizations and performed by several individuals who have similar duties that are relatively stable and require similar KSAs.

    27. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–27 Job Evaluation

    28. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–28 Job Evaluation Point Chart

    29. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–29 Legal Issues and Job Evaluation

    30. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–30 Developing Pay Surveys

    31. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–31 Pay Structures Market Line The line on a graph showing the relationship between the job value, as determined by job evaluation points, and pay survey rates. Common Pay Structures Hourly and salaried Office, plant, technical, professional, managerial Clerical, information technology, professional, supervisory, management, and executive

    32. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–32 Establishing Pay Structures

    33. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–33 Pay Structures (cont’d) Pay Grades A grouping of individual jobs having approximately the same job worth. Broadbanding The practice of using fewer pay grades having broader pay ranges that in traditional systems. Benefits Encourages horizontal movement of employees Is consistent with trend towards flatter organizations Creates a more flexible organization Encourages competency development Emphasizes career development

    34. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–34 Traditional Pay Structure vs. Broadbanding

    35. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–35 Pay Scattergram

    36. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–36 Typical Pay Range Widths

    37. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–37 Example of Pay Grades and Pay Ranges

    38. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–38 Pay Rate Issues Rates Out of Range Red-Circled Employees An incumbent (current jobholder) who is paid above the range set for the job. Green-Circled Employees An incumbent who is paid below the range set for the job. Pay Compression A situation in which pay differences among individuals with different levels of experience and performance in the organization becomes small.

    39. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–39 Issues Involving Pay Increases Seniority Time spent in an organization or on a particular job. Used to determine eligibility for organizational rewards and benefits. Maturity Curve A curve that depicts the relationship between experience and pay rates. Assumption is that as experience increases, proficiency and performance increase.

    40. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–40 Issues Involving Pay Increases Cost-of-Living Adjustments (COLA) A percentage increase in wages that allows employees to maintain the same real wages in a period of economic inflation. Adjustments are tied to changes in an economic measure (e.g., the Consumer Price Index). Lump-Sum Increases (LSI) A one-time payment of all or part of a yearly pay increase. Lump-sum payments do not increase base wages

    41. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–41 Pay Adjustment Matrix

    42. © 2002 Southwestern College Publishing. All rights reserved. 12–42 Compa-Ratio Example Compa-ratio The pay level divided by the midpoint of the pay range.

More Related