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CAREER BANDING Human Resources

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Title: CAREER BANDING Human Resources


1
  • CAREER BANDING Human Resources

2
Todays Purpose
--Review the meanings behind confusing competency
terminology --Overview Human Resources career
band application at UNC Charlotte --Competency
Assessment Changes -- What to do before
September 30
3
Career Banding Crosswalk for Human Resources
Implementation
4
Career Banding Competencies
  • Competencies - Competencies are a set of
    attributes which encompass skills, knowledge and
    behavioral characteristics that employees need to
    successfully do their jobs must be demonstrated
    on the job measured according to standards set
    by the organization, and required of the job
    based on the organizations need.
  • Competency terminology can be misleading!

5
Contributing Competencies
  • The span of knowledge, skills and successful work
    behaviors
  • ---consistent with competencies required in
    positions paying at the lower end of the entire
    career band range
  • ---meeting a business need as described by the
    contributing level of the competency profile.
  • ---Positions requiring contributing competency
    may be entry level, of more limited scope, or
    have less delegated authority than journey level
    positions.
  • ---This is the best placement for employees
    entering a new band with new competency
    requirements.

6
Journey Competencies
  • ---Fully acquired knowledge, skills and
    successful work behavior demonstrated in the
    career band that demonstrate development beyond
    the contributing competencies.
  • ---A position requiring journey competencies will
    pay in the mid range of the career band and meets
    a business need as described by the journey level
    of the competency profile.
  • ---In most career bands, the majority of
    positions require journey level competency.

7
Advanced Competencies
  • ---The highest or broadest scope of knowledge,
    skills, and work behavior demonstrated in the
    career band, which illustrates attained
    knowledge, skills, and competencies that are
    beyond journey competencies.
  • ---Positions requiring advanced competencies pay
    at the higher end of the career band and
    incumbents serve in unique roles of leadership,
    applying advanced institutional and program
    knowledge and/or highly developed technical
    expertise as described by the advanced level of
    the competency profile.
  • ---This term is not related to performance.
  • It describes market position.

8
Career Band Market Range (HR Specialist)
29,357 45,560 57,417
C-MRR 35,874
J-MRR 45,560
A-MRR 51,483
Questions We Ask What is this set of required
competencies worth in current market? What does
the pay factor of internal equity and basic
good judgment allow on our campus?
9
Example of Competency Profile
Career Band HR Specialist Role Description by
Competency Level
It is easy to apply the A language to just about
everyone, but we cant. Why?
10
Leveling Factors Considered
  • Size of unit in terms of employees, occupational
    groups represented, funding sources, overall
    budget, and impact
  • Nature of supervision given Does administrator
    delegate or control?
  • Education and Experience
  • Comparable jobs and salaries

11
Example of Market Rates and Ranges
Min 43,474 Max 92,000 Career band
Contributing Range Journey
Range Advanced Range
Market Reference Rates
Market Reference Ranges -- calculated to create
a continuous pay band and allow for overlap
between levels. These ranges represent the salary
span within which an employees salary in a
position assigned to a particular career band and
level will fall, ideally based on demonstrated
competencies. Not always 90-110
12
CB Salary Administration
  • Salary increases are may be approved when
  • employee demonstrates new or better
  • developed competencies within the same band
    level in response to business need
  • Funds must be available
  • Must have a business need
  • Internal alignment must be considered

13
Your Role as Supervisor
  • Evaluate employees initial competency level
  • Discuss CA with employee
  • Observe changes in demonstrated competency levels
    and level required to meet business need
  • Plan for budget requests including career
    progression increases for employees who have
    increased competency
  • Revise and submit competency assessments with
    career progression increase requests

14
Your Role (contd.)
  • Provide detailed documentation for
  • positions band/level placement of the
  • employee CA
  • proposed salary adjustments
  • Plan career development activities
  • with each employee
  • Assess and apply pay factors equitably

15
Assessing Competencies

How to Assess Functional Competencies
16
Step 1 Identify Competencies
List competency title and definition
17
Step 2 Define Expectations
  • Consider your expectations for the position (not
    the person in the position) In most cases, will
    be consistent with overall position level.
  • Use the Competency Profile for language to
    describe expectations (shortened here due to
    space)

Language for Contributing Expectations
Language for Journey Expectations
Language for Advanced Expectations
18
Step 2 Define Expectations
  • Competency Expectations are copied from the
    competency profile.
  • (If the expectation is considered too vague, the
    supervisor may add qualifying statements, but
    must be careful that the level of the competency
    expectation is not changed.)
  • Identify Level of Expectation

Competency Expectation at Journey level
EXAMPLE Journey Perform budget analyses and
conduct budgetary forecasting in a financial
environment with varied resources.
19
Step 2 Define Expectations
Describe expectations
Indicate level needed for this position
20
Step 3 Document Results
  • Write an assessment statement for the employee.
  • Describe how the employee has demonstrated the
    competency
  • Assess against expectation

Assessment statements for employee
EXAMPLE Jill created a spreadsheet compiling five
years of student fee income, parking fee income
and state fund history analyzed student and
employment growth over the five years to predict
employment growth for the following five years
analyzed cost of parking decks built in the same
five year period tracked cost increase trends
and assimilated this information to project the
necessary increase in parking fees to fund the
planned parking decks through 2013.
21
Step 3 Document Results
Step 3 Document Results
22
Step 3 Document Results
  • Use of shortened documentation is a new option
    if employee is demonstrating expected level of
    competency
  • Must provide documentation for any assessment
    ratings above or below position level
  • Short-cut documentation may not be best option
    for employees
  • Short-cuts cannot be used when a salary
    increase above market is requested

23
Step 4 Determine Level
Indicate demonstrated competency level J
24
Step 5 Determine Overall Level
Shortened documentation
25
Step 5 Determine Overall Level
  • Overall level same level as majority of
    individual competencies
  • Exception - if one or more competencies is more
    critical to the organization, may carry more
    weight in overall assessment. Explain and
    justify in Comments section.
  • If overall competency level varies from position
    competency level, the Reviewer and HR must review
    the assessment before obtaining employee
    signature
  • Be sure to record overall employee competency on
    first page of form

26
Step 6 Plan Career Development
  • Organizational need?
  • Competencies to develop or strengthen to meet
    organizational need?
  • Employee interests and motivation?
  • Attainable in current position work unit?

27
Step 6 Plan Career Development
  • Resources available?
  • Reasonable time frame?
  • Specific activities and/or training
  • to improve the competency?
  • Responsibilities employee supervisor

28
Career Development Plan
The career development plan section is required.
29
Review of Steps for Initial Competency Assessment
due by September 30, 2009.
  • Step 1 Identify competencies
  • For each competency..
  • Step 2 Identify expectations (use
    profile)
  • Step 3 Document results
  • Step 4 Determine level C, J or A
  • Step 5 Determine overall level
  • Step 6 Plan Career Development

30
Summary of Impact
  • Moves focus to market compensation
  • Allows option for compensation differences within
    a market range based on employee competency
  • instead of E E credit
  • Provides clearer career development paths for
    employees
  • Adds person element as salary factor to
    position/business need element

31
Career-banding salary example(Administrative
Support Associate-Contributing position)
  • Competency Assessment, Spring 06
  • Verbal/Interpersonal J
  • Problem Resolution C
  • Records Administration J
  • Use of Technology C
  • Written Communication C
  • Program Knowledge C

Competency Assessment, Spring 08 Verbal/Interpers
onal J Problem Resolution C Records
Administration C Use of Technology
J Written Communication C Program
Knowledge J
Supervisor could document observed changes and
request pay action based on development of
additional Journey level competencies. Contributin
g MRR 25,284 Contributing range max 27,812
Salary Increase Approved from 25,284 to 27,000
(within J)
32
Improving the System
  • Changes
  • All employees should have an overall competency
    assessment that is aligned with their positions
    competency assessment.
  • Any overall competency assessment rating that
    varies from the position competency level (above
    or below) is an exception which must be reviewed
    by the supervisors Reviewer/Manager and an HR
    analyst before obtaining employee signature.
  • A job audit may be conducted by HR to determine
    if business need and employee competency have
    been accurately accessed. Disparate ratings
    signed by employee prior to HR review will not be
    recorded until validated.

33
Improving the System
  • After the initial competency assessment has been
    submitted, the form should be retained in
    electronic format and revised and submitted to
    the HR Department only
  • ----when competency changes have been
    demonstrated by employee to the extent that a
    request for a career progression adjustment seems
    warranted.
  • ----Revised competency assessments must include
    detailed documentation identifying changes in
    demonstrated competency for HR review.

34
Improving the System
  • Work Plans and Annual Appraisals (the Performance
    Management part of the PCAC) will be separated
    from the Competency Assessment process.
  • Supervisors will share competency profiles and
    level expectations with employees during the
    initial work planning discussion, but competency
    expectations will not have to be written into the
    work plan.
  • Initial competency assessments on employees new
    to the position will be completed after six
    months re-submitted only when business
    need/competencies have changed.
  • Annual appraisals at end of cycle (end of
    February of each year)

35
Myths and Misunderstandings
  • Career banding will result in pay increases for
    everybody. Employees at or over market rate for
    the work they are doing (most of ours) will not
    benefit from career banding unless they begin to
    fill a business need for doing something more
    difficult, with less supervision, with greater
    consequence of error, with impact to larger
    groups or business operations

36
Myths and Misunderstandings
  • Career banding will require less paperwork.
    Until technology changes current processes, there
    is more paper required than before. Now both
    competency assessments and position descriptions
    may be required in some cases to change a salary.
    Competency assessments require much thought,
    more conversations with employees, and more
    documentation. Competency assessments MUST
    document advancement BEFORE position can move.

37
Myths and Misunderstandings
  • All jobs provide unlimited career growth
    opportunities. Some jobs provide no opportunity
    for career growth. Some supervisors have a
    management style which prohibits employee growth.
    Some employees do not enjoy a heavier weight of
    responsibility and facing greater consequences of
    error. Some jobs meet a business need that will
    not change much over time.

38
Myths and Misunderstandings
  • All outstanding employees are Advanced
    employees. Outstanding employees are found at
    all market levels. The C, J, A terms define
    positions in terms of market and business need.
    Employees may be demonstrating a variety of
    competency levels (defined by the competency
    profile) in their work. Where does the work
    compare in the market?

39
Human Resources Contacts
  • All Classification, Career Banding, Salary
    Inquiries on current employees
  • Amy Braun, ext 74270 (AA, DA, CU, Fin. Svcs, no
    IT)
  • Hal Walter, 74660 (IT, Bus. Aff., Bus. Svcs.,
    FM)
  • Kathy Helvey, ext 72010 (Forms and processes)
  • All Recruitment, New Hire, Promotion Inquiries
  • Kieffer Gaddis, ext 74272
  • Ruby Lewis, ext 72279
  • Robyn Flowers, ext 76290 (advertisements)
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