COMPENSATION: Introduction © Nancy Brown Johnson 1/05 Why is compensation important?  Society  Firm  Individual What are the elements of compensation?  Base pay  Incentives  Fringe benefits What are different forms of payment?  Cash  Benefits – Payment for time not worked – Non-pecuniary benefits (gym memberships, child care)  Intrinsic Exchange Theory  Pay is an exchange for efforts  Implicit Social Contract – beliefs about mutual obligations  Implicit Psychological Contract  Temporal Quality – amount of time in job & career Equity Theory Pay, benefits, opportunities, etc. OUTCOME INPUTS the same more or less <=> ? OUTCOME INPUTS effort, ability, experience etc. A person evaluates fairness by comparing their ratio with others. IRWIN ©a Times Mirror Higher Education Group, Inc., company, 1997 Equity Theory Workers compare their compensation with others If unequal workers attempt to restore equity Workers Restore Equity by:  Reducing input  Attempting to get raise  Quitting  Psychological Adjustment Compensation Model Equity Individual (Pay for Perf.) Internal (Pay Structure) External (Pay Level) Procedural Justice (Pay Administration) Compensation Tool Seniority, Performance Job Evaluation Objective Market Surveys Attraction Communication, Appeals Organization Citizenship, Commitment Motivation Retention Internal Equity  Comparison of Jobs  Jobs worth to the Employer – Similarities and differences in work content – Relative contribution to organization objectives  Accomplished through job evaluation External Equity  Value of the job to the labor market  Assessed through wage surveys Individual Equity  Relative pay between individuals doing the same job  Influences motivation Organizational Justice Perceived fairness of the pay system –Outcomes –Process Issues –Interactions Influences Commitment, Organization Citizenship Strategic Perspectives  The strategy balances 4 types of equity  Best Practice  Contingency: – organizations will have pay systems that fit with their business strategy – organizations that have “fit” will outperform those without “fit”  Strategic Decisions include: – pay level, pay structure, individual rewards, team rewards, pay administration Best Practice v. Strategy Debate  Best practice - there are a set of compensation practices that are good for all firms.  Strategy - the set of compensation practices that are good for firms will vary based upon the firm’s goals. Best Practice Examples*  High wages  Guarantee of Employment Security  Use incentives; share gains  Employee Ownership  Participation & Empowerment  Teams  Smaller pay differences *Source: Pfeffer, Competitive Advantage Through People, 1994 Summary  There are four key elements to equity  The strategic contingency view is that some firms may weight those elements differently depending on firm objectives  The best practice view is that there are good practices that all firms should engage in no matter what their strategy. Summary (continued)  Equity forms the basis for compensation management  Strategy guides the organization in the balancing of equity components  The test is whether the compensation system reinforces sustained competitive advantage
© Copyright 2025