BMG346J2 Human Resource management - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 24
About This Presentation
Title:

BMG346J2 Human Resource management

Description:

Articulate the differences between payment by results, performance related pay ... See www.hmrc.gov.uk/shareschemes for further information. Flexible benefits ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:24
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 25
Provided by: normah
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: BMG346J2 Human Resource management


1
BMG346J2 Human Resource management
  • Week 10
  • Employee remuneration and motivation

2
Objectives
  • Understand basic trends in pay setting in the UK
  • Articulate the differences between payment by
    results, performance related pay (PRP), profit
    sharing
  • Be aware of the advantages and disadvantages of
    PRP

3
Reward management defined
  • Reward management is concerned with the
    formulation and implementation of strategies and
    policies the purposes of which are to reward
    people fairly, equitably and consistently in
    accordance with their value to the organisation
    and to help the organisation to achieve its
    strategic goals
  • Armstrong and Stephens (20053)

4
The importance of reward management
  • It constitutes an economic exchange
  • Reward is important in forming an employees
    notion of fairness
  • What employees believe is expected from them and
    what they expect in return
  • Reward systems teach employees what is valued
  • For example by incentivizing particular types of
    performance eg increased sales

5
Reward policy addressing the issues
  • Level of reward which may depend on
  • Levels of performance
  • Competition
  • Employee benefits
  • External competition versus internal equity
  • Job evaluation may be used to determine internal
    equity
  • Will market supplements be paid in addition?
  • Achieving equal pay
  • Is it necessary to undertake an equal pay review?

6
Reward policy addressing the issues (2)
  • Approach to total reward
  • Scope for contingent rewards related to
    performance, competence, contribution or skill
  • Role of line managers
  • To what extent is responsibility for reward
    devolved?
  • Transparency
  • To what extent is pay secret?
  • Ref Armstrong and Stephens (2005)

7
Selection of pay system should be based on 3
questions below
  • What are the organisations pay objectives?
  • Organisational commitment through profit sharing?
  • Team ethos through group bonuses?
  • Individual performance through merit pay?
  • What pay system furthers these objectives?
  • Is the payment system right for the
    organisation?
  • Technology
  • Nature of work
  • Organisation culture

8
Pressures on reward systems
  • Competitive product markets dictating greater
    need for cost control
  • Need to reward customer focused behaviours
  • Flatter organisation structures resulting in
    fewer opportunities for promotion
  • Tight labour market where employers have to
    design reward systems to attract and retain key
    employees

9
Rewarding individual and team contributions
  • Individual payment by results
  • Collective payment by results
  • Performance related pay
  • Profit sharing and share options
  • Employee benefits

10
Individual payment by results
  • Positive impact of linking financial reward to
    quality and/or quantity is recognised by many
    motivational theories
  • Arguments in favour
  • Increase in management control?
  • Less supervision needed?
  • Opportunities to achieve high earnings
  • Create a joint appreciation of the need to
    increase profit for mutual benefit

11
Criticisms of payment by results
  • Relationship between effort and reward is
    portrayed too simplistically
  • Workers can develop routines of resistance
  • Changes in working practices may be resisted if
    bonuses are threatened

12
Collective payment by results
  • Collective schemes seem to be most effective
    when
  • Groupings are stable and mature
  • Identifiable as a performing unit
  • Autonomous
  • Composed of people who are interdependent
  • Made up of people who are flexible, multi-skilled
    and good team players

13
Problems with collective PBR
  • Demotivation of high performers
  • Resistance to transfers out of high-performing
    teams
  • Resistance to change from an individualistic
    culture

14
Performance related pay
  • Individual performance related pay relates pay
    progression to the assessed performance of
    individuals(Armstrong, 2003)
  • Torrington, Hall and Taylor divide PRP schemes
    into
  • Merit based schemes based on performance
    appraisal
  • Goal based schemes based on achievement of
    objectives

15
Individual performance related pay- reasons for
introducing PRP
  • To increase the motivation of employees
  • To encourage certain behaviours
  • To help in recruitment and retention
  • To facilitate change in organisational culture
  • To encourage the internalisation of performance
    norms
  • To weaken trade union power
  • Increased control of line manager
  • Moral justification

16
Possible problems with PRP
  • Motivation is influenced by factors other than
    pay
  • Employees may focus only on certain objectives
  • Cohesion of the work group may be undermined
  • Financial constraints may limit PRP increases
  • See article by Lewis (1998)on financial services,
    Marsden and Richardson (1994) on Inland Revenue,
    Brown (2001) on public sector

17
Questions to be answered before installing PRP
(Armstrong, 2003)
  • Will the proposed scheme motivate people?
  • Is there an effective performance management
    process in place?
  • Can managers be trained to rate performance
    fairly and equitably?
  • Will there be enough money available to provide
    worthwhile rewards?

18
Employee share schemes
  • Share Incentive Plans (SIP) where companies can
    give shares to each employee
  • Savings Related Share Option Schemes (SAYE) where
    participants can save on a monthly to acquire
    shares
  • Motivation is involvement/giving a stake in the
    company
  • See www.hmrc.gov.uk/shareschemes for further
    information

19
Flexible benefits
  • Offering benefits on a job for life assumption
    is unrealistic
  • How do employees perceive benefits?
  • Are benefits valued and appropriate to company
    and employee needs?
  • Offer choice within and between benefits
  • Options
  • Increase some benefits and decrease others
  • Use pay to buy new benefits
  • Decrease benefits and take cash released

20
Flexible benefits
  • Advantages
  • Addresses needs of different sections of the
    workforce
  • Spend money on benefits perceived to be valuable
  • Employees gain appreciation of the value of the
    benefit package
  • Disadvantages
  • Benefits must be accurately costed
  • Administration problems
  • Individuals may make wrong choices

21
Evidence of take up of performance-related and
new practices (CIPD Reward Management Survey
2006)
  • Team based bonuses
  • Approx 25 usage
  • Share ownership schemes
  • Approx 39 usage (private sector)
  • Flexible benefits
  • 25 of respondents planning to introduce a
    voluntary or flexible scheme

22
IPRP evidence from CIPD (2006) survey
  • Pay progression wholly based on individual
    performance used by
  • 15 of respondents for senior managers
  • 13 for middle/first line managers
  • 13 for technical and professional employees
  • Individual performance combined with other
    factors more common
  • 58 used for senior managers, 53 for middle
    managers, 52 for technical and professional
    employees
  • Factors include competency, market rates,
    organisational performance, length of service

23
Conclusions from CIPD (2006) survey
  • A minority of employers (35) have a reward
    strategy
  • Relevance for public sector?
  • Many employers do link pay progression, pay and
    bonuses to performance
  • New benefits are being introduced by many
    employers to aid recruitment and retention

24
References
  • Armstrong, M.(2003) A handbook of Human Resource
    Management Practice. Kogan Page, London
  • Armstrong,M. and Stephens,T. (2005) A handbook of
    reward management and practice, Kogan Page,
    London
  • Brown,M. (2001) Merit pay preferences among
    public sector employees, Human Resource
    Management Journal, Vol 11, No 4, pp38-54
  • CIPD (2006) Reward Management Survey, CIPD,
    London
  • Lewis,P. (1998) Managing performance related pay
    based on evidence from the financial services
    sector, Human Resource Management Journal, Vol 8,
    No 2, pp66-77
  • Marsden,D. and Richardson,R. (1994) Performing
    for pay? The effects of merit pay on motivation
    in a public service, British Journal of
    Industrial Relations, Vol 32, no 2, pp243-261
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com