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Human Resource Management

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Human Resource Management Lecture-28 Job Pricing Developing a Base Pay System Compensation system Pay is a statement of an employee s worth by an employer. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Human Resource Management


1
Human Resource Management
  • Lecture-28

2
Job Pricing
3
(No Transcript)
4
Developing a Base Pay System
5
Job Analysis
Pay Surveys
Job Evaluation
Pay Policies
Pay Structure
Performance Appraisal
Individual Pay
Implementation, Communication, Monitoring
6
Compensation system

7
  • Pay is a statement of an employees worth by an
    employer.
  • Pay is a perception of worth by an employee.

8
HR Management Strategy Model
HR Strategy
Desired Results
9
Employee Compensation
10
  • Employee compensation refers to all forms of pay
    or rewards going to employees and arising from
    their employment.
  • It consists of 2 parts
  • Direct financial payments
  • Indirect financial payments

11
Direct or Indirect compensation is given based on
12
  • Increments of time
  • Hourly
  • Salaried
  • Performance
  • Piecework
  • Commission

13
  • Piecework - Pay is tied directly to what the
    worker produces

14
Wages versus Salaries
15
  • Wages
  • generally refer to hourlycompensation paid to
    operating employees the basis for wages is
    time.
  • Salary
  • is income that is paid an individual not on the
    basis of time, but on the basis of performance.

16
Total Compensation
17
Compensation of Employees
Extrinsic Rewards
Hourly Wages Salary Monetary Bonuses Rewards
Commissions Pay Incentives
Insurance Retirement Paid
Vacations Benefits Food Services Credit
Union Recreation
Recognition Intrinsic Promotion
Opportunities Rewards Working
Conditions Interesting Work
18
Consequences of Pay Dissatisfaction
19
Performance
Desire for more Pay
Absenteeism
Strikes
Grievances
Turnover
Search for job
Psychological Withdrawal
Pay Dissatisfaction
Lower Attractiveness of job
Job Dissatisfaction
Dispensary Visits
Poor Mental Health
Absenteeism
20
Compensation System
  • A total reward system includes both monetary and
    nonmonetary compensation.


21
Phases of Compensation Management
22
  • Phase-1. Evaluate every job to ensure internal
    equity based on each jobs relative worth.
  • Phase-2. Conduct wage and salary surveys to find
    the rates paid in the labour market.
  • Phase-3. Price each job to determine the rate of
    pay based.

23
Objectives of Effective Compensation Management
24
  • The Big Three
  • Attract qualified employment applicants
  • Retain qualified employees, while discouraging
    retention of low performing
  • Motivate employee behavior toward organization
    objectives

25
  • Ensure Equity
  • Reward Desired Behavior
  • Control Costs
  • Comply With Legal Regulations
  • Facilitate Understanding

26
  • Achieve external competitiveness
  • Support organization priorities
  • Strategy and goals
  • Culture and values
  • Easy to administer

27
Steps for Establishing Pay Rates
28
  • Conduct a salary survey of what other employers
    are paying for comparable jobs
  • Employee committee determines the worth of each
    job in your organization through job evaluation

29
  • Group similar jobs into pay grades
  • Price each pay grade by using wage curves
  • Fine-tune pay rates

30
Pay Grade Structure for Job-Based System
Corporate Policy Line
Rs 50,000
Maximums
Monthly Pay
Rs 30,000
Pay Grade Width
Midpoint
Rs 10,000
250 350 450 550
650 Job Evaluation
Points
31
What Determines How Much You Pay?
32
  • Prevailing Wages
  • Ability to Pay
  • Cost of Living
  • Productivity
  • Bargaining Power
  • Job Requirements
  • Government Laws

33
  • Equity factors

34
Equity Perceptions
Other
Self
35
Equity Theory
  • Description
  • Pay should be based upon contributions made by
    the Employees. Higher effort should be rewarded
    with higher pay.
  • Application to Compensation
  • Pay should be tied to the performance level of
    individual Employee

36
Equity Theory Predictions
37
Person B
Person A
Under-reward
Outputs Inputs
lt
Outputs Inputs
Outputs Inputs

Outputs Inputs
Equity
Outputs Inputs
Outputs Inputs
Over-reward
gt
38
Balancing Internal and External Equity
Pay Equity
Pay Compression
  • Pay
  • Differentials
  • Market

Internal
External
39
Pay above Market Rate
40
  • Advantages
  • Attracts better employees
  • Minimizes voluntary turnover
  • Fosters strong culture and competitive
    superiority
  • Disadvantages
  • Additional compensation costs
  • Sense of entitlement

41
Pay at MarketRate
42
  • Advantages
  • Higher quality of human resources at midrange of
    market-driven compensation costs
  • Disadvantages
  • Does not attract higher performers
  • Turnover will vary with labor demands of
    competing firms

43
Pay below Market Rate
44
  • Advantages
  • Lower compensation costs
  • Useful in labor markets where unemployment is
    high
  • Disadvantages
  • Lower-quality employees
  • Low morale/job satisfaction
  • Higher turnover especially among high performers

45
Conditions Necessary for Perceptions of Pay
Fairness
  • Internal consistency
  • External competitiveness
  • Employee contributions

46
Line Managers and Compensation
47
  • Evaluate the worth of jobs.
  • Negotiate starting salaries.
  • Recommend pay raises and promotions.
  • Notify HRM department of job changes.

48
The HRM Department and Compensation
49
  • Establish rates of pay.
  • Oversee job evaluation process.
  • Conduct salary surveys.

50
  • Establish procedures for administering pay plans.
  • Ensure compliance with antidiscrimination laws.
  • Communicate benefits information .
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