Compensation
Compensation
Compensation
Important Terms
Wage :Compensation consisting of Basic Wage +Allowances Salary :Compensation paid to indirect labour on time rate basis Minimum wages :Fixed by Government on the basis of cost of living Fair wages :Above the Minimum wage but below the Living wage
Important Terms
Living wage :Basic requirement of Roti,Kapada aur Makhan + other welfare and safety measures (insurance ) Take Home Pay :Gross Salary -----Deductions -----Take Home Salary____ CTC (cost to the company)
Compensation: An Overview
Compensation - Total of all rewards provided to employees in return for their services Direct financial compensation - Pay that a person receives in the form of wages, salaries, bonuses, and commissions Indirect financial compensation - All financial rewards that are not included in direct compensation
The HR or compensation manager along with top management creates pay policies that are consistent with the firms strategic aims.
Objectives of Compensation
ARM Control of Cost Collective Bargaining Competitiveness Recognition of Merit and Effort Tax considerations Government compliance Ensuring equity
Paid holidays
Geographic costs of living differences Expatriate compensation
Market Rate
Labour supply and demand Cost of Living Labour Unions Economy
Globalization
Collective Bargaining Technology
Government Legislations
Payment of Wages Act,1936
Job Evaluation
Firm determines the relative value of one job in relation to another Compensable factor
A fundamental, compensable element of a job, such as skills, effort, responsibility, and working conditions.
Compensable factors
Skills
Working Conditions
Examples
1. In operating an adding machine, the knowledge of which key to depress for a subtotal would be skill. 2. In automobile repair, the ability to determine the significance of a knock in the motor would be skill. 3. In hand-firing a boiler, the ability to determine from the appearance of the firebed how coal should be shoveled over the surface would be skill. 3. Physical Requirements A. Physical effort, such as sitting, standing, walking, climbing, pulling, lifting, etc.; both the amount exercised and the degree of the continuity should be taken into account. B. Physical status, such as age, height, weight, sex, strength, and eyesight.
Ranking Method
Simplest method Raters examine description of each job Jobs arranged in order according to value Must first conduct job analysis and write job description
Job Classification
Raters categorize jobs into groups or classes of jobs that are of roughly the same value for pay purposes.
Classes contain similar jobs. Grades are jobs that are similar in difficulty but otherwise different. Jobs are classed by the amount or level of compensable factors they contain.
Point Method
A quantitative technique that involves:
Identifying the degree to which each compensable factors are present in the job. Awarding points for each degree of each factor. Calculating a total point value for the job by adding up the corresponding points for each factor.
Performance-Based Pay
Merit pay - Pay increase given to employees based on their level of performance as indicated in the appraisal Variable pay - Compensation based on performance Skill-based pay - System that compensates employees on the basis of job-related skills and knowledge they possess Competency-based pay - Compensation plan that rewards employees for their demonstrated expertise
Competency-Based Pay
Competencies
Demonstrable characteristics of a person, including knowledge, skills, and behaviors, that enable performance.
3. A work design that lets employees move among jobs to permit work assignment flexibility.
Job Pricing
Placing a Rupee value on the worth of a job Pay grades - Grouping of similar jobs to simplify pricing jobs Wage curve - Fitting of plotted points to create a smooth progression between pay grades Pay ranges - Minimum and maximum pay rate with enough variance between the two to allow for a significant pay difference
Base Pay
Short-term Incentives
Long-Term Incentives
Boards are reducing the relative importance of base salary while boosting the emphasis on performance-based pay.
Compensating Professional Employees Employers can use job evaluation for professional jobs.
Compensable factors focus on problem solving, creativity, job scope, and technical knowledge and expertise. Firms use the point method and factor comparison methods, although job classification seems most popular.
Professional jobs are market-priced to establish the values for benchmark jobs.
Benefits
Benefits
Indirect financial and nonfinancial payments employees receive for continuing their employment with the company.
Types of Benefits
Flexible Benefits Programs
Cafeteria (Flexible Benefits) Approach Each employee is given a limited benefits fund budget to spend on preferred benefits. Flexible Work Arrangements Flextime schedules Compressed workweek schedules Job sharing Work sharing Telecommuting
Types of Benefits
Payment for Time not worked
Hours of Work Paid Holidays Shift Premium Holiday Pay Paid Vacation
Employee Security
Retrenchment Compensation Lay Off compensation
Types of Benefits
Safety and Health
Safety measures
Workmens compensation Health benefits