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Projects and Assignment solutions for BBA, MBA M.Sc. Finance of Indian and Foreign Universities
EMPLOYEE COMPENSATION-INDIVIDUAL PROJECT GUIDELINE (PROJECT I)
The objective of this project is to allow the student to
have a “hands-on” experience in appreciating a critical component of
compensation design and execution.
Students shall choose one topic from the following for their
project:
1.
Job evaluation
2.
Designing pay levels-broad bands etc
3.
Pay for performance schemes
5.
Equity (stock/stock options) based compensation
First, the student shall introduce the student to his/her organization’s compensation system by giving an overview of
1.
Compensation strategy (as discussed in class)
2.
Pay bands/ranges
3. What role compensation plays in the entire HR system.(The above shall not take more than one full page.)
The student shall then choose any of the above topics and discuss at length. The length of this component should not be more than 4-5 pages.
Compensation
plays a critical role in aligning employee behavior with business objectives.
Since the industrial age, the four Ms of business management i.e. Man,
Material, Machine and Money are said to contribute to the business’s success. Among
these, man has been considered to be the most important factor contributing to
organizational effectiveness and efficiency.
Compensation
attributes to all forms of pay and rewards received by employees for their
performance, including all forms of benefits, perks, services and cash rewards.
It is paramount to acknowledge and announce the total compensation to your
employees. This needs to be done so that the significance of what you are
putting forth in compensation is clear and hence attracts and retains talent.
A variety
of elements need to be considered when designing a compensation plan that is
also compatible to the employee demographic and budgetary bridles.
The
following should be included when designing a compensation plan:
- Various
elements that will embody the total compensation offered to the employees.
- Comparable
and competitive compensation rates within the industry.
- Compensation
needs to be unbiased. There must always be a logical increase in pay when
it comes to length of service, job title, skills and abilities required to
accomplish the job in a productive manner.
- An
already established criterion that results in a pay increase.
- A
well designed system to measure and control payroll costs.
- A
proper procedure to measure the success of the organization’s compensation
program by determining if the compensation results into favorable
retention numbers, workforce performance and motivation.
Google’s Compensation Strategy
Google’s
compensation strategy is highly competitive compared to the compensation
strategies of competing firms. The company provides high salaries, together
with comprehensive incentives and nonconventional benefits. Financial and moral
incentives are provided. In addition, the company provides benefits like
medical insurance, retirement pensions, free meals, and free use of exercise
equipment. Realistically, Google’s human resource management has succeeded with
regard to the compensation strategy because it effectively attracts highly
qualified smart and excellent employees. People perceive Google as one of the
best places to work.
Compensation is usually given in the form of monetary rewards that can be either direct or indirect:
Role OFCOMPENSATION IN AN ORGANIZATION
- Attract
& retain employees
- Motivate
workforce & sustain high morale
- Meet
legal requirements
- Motivate
personal growth
- In
every organization it is essential to understand the importance of
compensation and the flexibility the hiring managers can have in designing
a compensation package that can in turn attract, retain and develop a
quality talent pool.
- Software Engineer I (skipped because
the range is all over the place and I feel people from I/II/III have placed
their salaries under this title making the range for I hard to decipher)
- Software Engineer II ($72-150k based
on 104 salaries)
- Software Engineer III ($85-166k
based on 226 salaries)
- Senior Engineer ($80-222k based on
241 salaries)
- Staff Engineer ($84-240k based on 61
salaries)
- Senior Staff Engineer ($110-250k
based on 14 salaries)
The term
“pay for performance” refers to a pay strategy where evaluations of individual
and/or organizational performance have significant influence on the amount of
pay increases or bonuses given to each employee.
When a pay for performance system functions properly:
1.
Outstanding
performers will receive the greatest rewards, to acknowledge their superior
contributions and to motivate them to continue high performance.
2.
Average performers will receive substantially
smaller raises, which may encourage them to work harder to achieve larger
raises in the future.
3.
Poor performers will receive no increase,
which is intended to persuade them to improve their performance or leave.
Designing an Effective Pay for Performance Compensation System
Decisions that are made during the design and implementation of a
pay for performance system are crucial. Therefore, decision makers should
carefully consider their design options with full awareness of potential
advantages and disadvantages. The decision makers must address topics such as
who should be covered, what should be rewarded, how to reward employees, and
suggestions for preserving the integrity of the pay system.
Key Decision Points When Considering Pay for Performance
1. Is the organisation ready for pay for performance?
·
The organizational culture supports pay for performance.
·
Management is committed to changing the
culture.
2. What are the goals of pay for performance?
·
Improved recruitment and/or retention
·
Increased individual and/or organizational
performance
·
Greater fairness in pay
3. Who should be paid for performance?
·
All employees
·
Front-line employees
·
Top-level managers
4. What should be the timing for implementing pay for performance?
·
Wholesale
·
Stages
5. What should be rewarded?
·
Individual, team, and/or organizational
achievements
·
Short-term and/or long-term goals
·
Efforts vs. outcomes when external constraints
exist
6. How should employees be rewarded?
·
One-time cash bonus
·
Increase to base pay
·
Combination, such as control points
7. How much pay should be contingent upon performance?
·
Less than 5 percent
·
Approximately 30 percent
8. How should
performance-based pay be funded?
·
Existing funding (e.g., general increases,
within-grade increases)
·
Additional funding
9. How can costs be managed?
·
Forced distribution
·
Reward only top performers (as a percentage of
the workforce)
10. Who makes pay decisions?
·
First-level supervisor
·
Second-level supervisor
11. Who provides input on the performance ratings?
·
First-level supervisor
·
Second- or higher-level managers
12. How can organisations facilitate pay system integrity?
·
Improved performance evaluation process
·
Supervisor and employee training
Organisation must tailor pay for performance systems to their
mission and environment. Pay for performance focuses attention on the monetary
aspect of the relationship between employees and organizations. However, the
greatest changes that pay for performance effects in individual and agency
performance are probably those stemming from increased emphasis on defining and
communicating goals to employees, providing concrete feedback, and heightening
employees’ sense of responsibility for contributing to well-defined portions of
their organization’s goals. To ensure that employees’ efforts are aligned with
agency priorities, supervisors need to take the agency’s unique goals, needs,
and environment into account when defining employee objectives.
For payfor performance to be effective, organisation need to meet certain requirements. These
include:
1. A culture that
supports pay for performance;
2. A rigorous
performance evaluation system;
3. Effective and
fair supervisors;
4. Appropriate
training for supervisors and employees;
5. Adequate funding;
6. A system of
checks and balances to ensure fairness; and
7. Ongoing system
evaluation.
While many of these requirements relate to effective human
resources management practices that are important to any organization, pay for
performance further increases their necessity. Attending to these human
resources management issues provides organisation with a much greater
likelihood of achieving a fair and effective pay for performance system.
To make pay for performance successful, organisations need to make
a substantial investment of time, money, and effort. Pay for performance
systems require substantial initial and continuing investment. These resources
must be carefully spent on building and maintaining a system that suits the
organization’s mission and objectives.
An effective performance evaluation system is a fundamental
prerequisite of pay for performance. Organisation must be able to communicate
with employees regarding what the organization values and how it will
accurately measure employee contributions to these goals. Without this
information, organisation would be unable to appropriately distribute
performance-based pay increases and bonuses.
Organisation should select supervisors based on their supervisory potential, develop and manage them to function as supervisors rather than technicians or staff experts, and evaluate and pay them based on their performance as supervisors.
Because
supervisors play a pivotal role in pay for performance systems, it is essential
that they be able and willing to perform the important supervisory functions
inherent in performance-based pay systems. To achieve this goal, organisation must
select, train, and pay supervisors based on their demonstration of qualities
that are suited to a pay for performance environment.
The key to the effectiveness of a pay for performance system rests
with clarifying the mission and objectives of the organization, how these are
linked with employees’ efforts, and consequently, what competencies, behaviors,
and/or outcomes the organization values. Open communication regarding goals and
progress; training in the philosophy and mechanics of the pay system; and
transparency regarding how the system operates can mobilize the workforce in
the desired direction.
Checks and balances are necessary.
Organisation can greatly facilitate the real and perceived
fairness of the pay system by building in appropriate checks and balances.
Although knowledge about the agency’s pay for performance plan and transparency
regarding its outcomes can help supervisors and employees understand how the
system should work, other mechanisms to ensure fairness are needed to further
raise and maintain confidence in the system.
Being able to provide high performers with meaningful pay
increases is critical to operating an effective pay for performance system.
Therefore, organisation need to have adequate funding to support pay increases
for those who deserve them.
Pay for performance systems should be evaluated regularly and modified when necessary. Organisation
should conduct an ongoing evaluation of the compensation system to help them
ascertain whether organizational goals are being met and identify ways to
improve the process.