Reward and Compensation Systems
Reward and Compensation Systems
Reward and Compensation Systems
Reward and
Compensation Systems
A merica’s fat cats are getting fatter,” according to the title of a recent arti-
cle in The New Yorker magazine.1 The article begins by reporting that “J. P.
Morgan, seldom portrayed as a radical, maintained that no corporate chief-
tain should earn more than twenty times what his workers were paid.
Things have changed since Morgan’s day.” The article goes on to claim that
by 1990, CEOs took in about 85 times as much as factory workers. “Still, the
rewards that senior executives enjoyed . . . were mere hors d’oeuvres com-
pared with what was to come.” The article reports a study finding that be-
tween 1990 and 1998 the annual compensation of CEOs at large firms rose
from $1.8 million to $10.6 million—an increase of almost 500 percent. The
author goes on to assert that, in the past year, “big-league CEOs” pocketed,
on the average, 419 times the earnings of a typical production worker. These
76
top executives’ huge compensation increases, we are told, come in the form 77
of stock grants and options packages. CHAPTER FOUR
The author of this article points out that “in theory at least, these re- Reward and
muneration schemes can perform useful economic functions,” such as re- Compensation
warding executives for acting in the interests of shareholders, allowing Systems
companies to recruit talented executives, and rewarding outstanding per-
formance. The article concludes, however, that the payment of stock options
to executives has, in fact, “degenerated into a boondoggle that robs share-
holders and taxpayers while rewarding cronyism and mediocrity.”
Similar magazine, newspaper, and television reports about the rising
tide of executive compensation often promote a particular point of view, rep-
resent some identifiable bias, or at least include assertions that can be de-
bated. But they also highlight some of the key issues that managers must
understand in maintaining effective compensation and reward systems.
Managers’ decisions about compensation and reward systems are intended
to fulfill some of the objectives mentioned in the article cited above. For ex-
ample, we expect our pay systems to help us attract high-quality employees
to our firms, help us retain our valuable contributors, and help us maintain
positive morale among our employees. We even expect our pay systems to
enhance our employees’ motivation, and therefore their productivity.
We cannot claim that after reading this chapter you will possess a pre-
cise knowledge of why some top executives earn 400 times the pay of a pro-
duction worker. The myriad reasons for these findings are often quite a
mystery, even to compensation experts. But insight into the major compo-
nents of a total compensation system and the key decisions managers must
make might provide at least some understanding of why a top executive, a
rock star, or a professional athlete makes so much more than a secretary, a
production worker, or even a professor. For example, managers must con-
sider both the external competitiveness of their firms’ pay levels compared
to other firms and the internal consistency and fairness of the pay for vari-
ous jobs within the firm. And in determining how to reward the contribu-
tions of individual employees, managers must consider how various
performance-contingent pay practices, including executive stock options,
might enhance employee motivation.
This chapter focuses on what general managers need to know about
compensation systems—systems that relate to how employees are given pay
and benefits based on factors such as the jobs they hold, or their skills, their
performance, or even their seniority. A definition of compensation for our
purposes is “all forms of financial returns and tangible services and benefits
employees receive as part of an employment relationship.”2
The themes presented in Chapter 3 are our starting point for this chap-
ter. We elaborate as to what general managers need to know about aligning
a company’s reward and compensation systems with its business strategy,
deciding on appropriate levels of pay compared to competitors, and es-
tablishing a systematic and fair way to set pay ranges for various job
classes within the company. We also delineate managers’ options for placing
at risk some portion of employees’ pay and for linking pay to employee
78 performance, skill, or seniority. Finally, we discuss what managers should
PART TWO know about delivering employee benefits, including both the level of benefits
What the compared to competitors and the amount of flexibility offered to employees
General Manager in choosing benefits.
Should Know Since our intention is to provide general managers with knowledge of
key issues in maintaining effective compensation systems, we do not ana-
lyze compensation systems in depth or describe pay and benefit options in
detail. The reader who intends to work as a human resource specialist can
consult a number of excellent resources for thorough coverage of these re-
ward and pay system issues.3 Managers should be aware of the possibilities
for employee rewards and compensation and then be able to select an inte-
grated set of compensation practices that fit the unique circumstances of job
classes in their companies. This knowledge will also assist them in working
with both internal HR compensation specialists and outside consultants.
One basic pay policy decision managers must make is whether to pay at
(meet), below (lag), or above (lead) the market. The market is defined as
the average pay level offered by companies competing for employees with
similar skill profiles. Managers typically consider the pay of other employ-
ers in the area or industry. The company’s financial situation, labor costs,
expected profits, and union pressures are also sometimes relevant.
The pay policy decision can have a major impact on the quality of a com-
pany’s workforce—and therefore on company performance. Table 4–1 shows
the probable effects of alternative pay-level policies.
Compensation Objective
Enhancing
Attracting Retaining Controlling Employee
Pay Level Policy Employees Employees Labor Costs Satisfaction
Lead market ?
Meet market
Lag market ?
80 2. The firm’s ability to attract employees would be limited by lower
PART TWO pay rates.
What the 3. Managers feel somehow obligated to pay prevailing rates.5
General Manager
Should Know Because there are so many forms of compensation and many ways to survey
competitors’ rates and compute the statistics, maintaining a policy of meet-
ing the market can at best be an approximation.
A second option available to managers is to lag the market, meaning to
pay lower than prevailing pay rates. Not surprisingly, a lag policy may hin-
der a company’s ability to attract and retain employees. Following a lag pol-
icy is typically a way to control labor costs. If a company’s corporate strategy
or past financial performance leads to a decision to follow a lag-the-market
policy, the company will have to make other adjustments to compete for the
most desirable job candidates. Surely, this can be a difficult position for the
company. But some employers are successful because (1) they provide other
desirable outcomes to employees, such as advancement and training oppor-
tunities, or (2) they find some other way to encourage high levels of individ-
ual effort, such as creating performance–reward connections by putting
large amounts of pay at risk.
Following a lead policy should provide a number of positive outcomes
for the company:
1. The ability to attract the cream of the crop from the labor market.
2. High levels of employee satisfaction.
3. The ability to retain outstanding employees.
Offering higher-than-market pay may also help the company to offset un-
desirable features of the work, such as lack of advancement opportunities,
poor working conditions, or undesirable geographic locations.
Managers should also be aware that they have the option of adopting
different pay-level policies for different job classes. For example, a com-
pany may be a pay leader for job classes requiring critical skills, meet the
market for most other job classes, and lag the market for a few job classes
readily filled by the local labor market. Managers may also decide to use dif-
ferent pay-level policies for different components of pay. Consider a com-
pany that has decided that, to generate more sales, it is important to
stimulate high levels of motivation for its sales force. To accomplish this, the
company’s managers may decide to offer above-average levels of incentive
pay along with base pay that slightly lags the market.
The pricing of individual jobs or job families within the firm is another key
decision-making issue. In setting the pay for individual jobs, internal con-
sistency in the relative pay of different jobs within the firm must be main-
tained. It is important to design a pay structure that is fair to employees,
that is tied in to the work performed, and that directs employees’ key be-
haviors as desired by the firm.
The overall pay structure also includes decisions about
• The number of pay grades or levels.
• How much pay differential exists between and within pay levels.
• The criteria used for determining pay differentials.
The ultimate success of a company’s pay structure depends on how well the
structure supports key employee behaviors and, possibly most important,
the level of employee acceptance of the pay structure. The level of employee
acceptance is critical for maintaining the firm’s ability to attract and retain
valuable employees.
FIGURE 4–1. Pay structure with pay policy line and pay grades
Maximum
Maximum
Midpoint
Maximum
Midpoint Minimum
Salary ($)
Maximum
Minimum
Midpoint
Maximum Minimum
Minimum
Minimum
Most managers understand that pay can be a powerful tool for enhancing
employee motivation. To put it more precisely, pay and other rewards can
88 stimulate employee effort toward reaching key goals—such as high perfor-
PART TWO mance. Consider again our Chapter 2 discussion of the expectancy model of
What the motivation, and the key concepts of expectancy, instrumentality, and valence.
General Manager We can enhance employee motivation for performance by fostering employ-
Should Know ees’ perceptions that there are strong connections (instrumentalities) be-
tween performance and the receipt of valuable (highly valent) outcomes. Of
course, employees also need to perceive that if they try, they will be able to
achieve high performance (expectancy).
Thus, the key to the use of performance-contingent rewards is creating
in the minds of employees this instrumentality connection: High perfor-
mance leads to valuable rewards. There are a number of alternative ap-
proaches for creating this performance–reward connection. First, keep in
mind that pay is one of a variety of rewards that can be linked to perfor-
mance. Other rewards include status and recognition, challenging work,
promotions to higher level jobs, opportunities for skill development, and
benefits. Second, pay can be used to motivate through a variety of particular
mechanisms, which we will consider shortly.
In recent years, firms have begun to more frequently choose pay-for-
performance mechanisms that put pay at risk. Pay at risk is a type of
variable pay that can be contrasted with the more traditional add-on pay.
Add-on pay is a system in which the firm pays employees base pay and then
shares gains (from increased profits or reduced costs) with employees. If the
firm reduces base pay by a certain amount (e.g., 5 percent) and offers vari-
able pay for performance improvement, then the former fixed base pay be-
comes at-risk pay.11 This approach to performance-contingent pay shifts
some of the risk of doing business from the firms to the employees. In pay-
at-risk plans, total annual compensation varies as a function of individual,
group, or business-unit performance. This approach increases employees’
level of uncertainty about the total amount of pay they will receive. It is pos-
sible for total compensation to increase, remain about the same, or decline
from one year to the next. We often find that making pay contingent on per-
formance also puts some pay at risk. We next provide an overview of some of
the mechanisms for linking pay to performance.
Merit Pay
In the typical merit plan employees’ performance is evaluated using some
type of rating scale, and their base pay is adjusted upward based on the level
of their individual performance. Since base pay is not adjusted downward,
merit plans involve little pay risk compared to other types of performance-
contingent plans. Likewise, under merit plans the performance–pay connec-
tion is not as strong as under other types of performance-contingent plans
(e.g., incentives) in which pay can increase or decrease.
In addition, the size of merit adjustments often reflects factors in the
pay structure other than performance. The factor most commonly con-
sidered, in addition to performance, is the level of an employee’s base pay
relative to the midpoint of the job’s pay range. Employees whose base pay is
below the midpoint of the pay range are allowed to receive a higher pay
increment for a given level of performance than employees located above the 89
midpoint. This reflects the need to control the frequency and size of pay in- CHAPTER FOUR
creases as employees begin to reach the upper limits of their pay range. If Reward and
the position within the pay range is not taken into account, the integrity of Compensation
the entire pay hierarchy is jeopardized because pay for top performers can Systems
exceed the maximum rate allowed for their job. Merit plans maintain their
ability to provide sufficient incentives for many key contributors only if top
performers can be promoted into the next higher pay grade.
When using this extremely popular motivational tool, managers should
be aware of possible pitfalls or problems. Merit pay will lose its motivational
power if the performance appraisal system is seen as unfair or inaccurate
(see Chapter 7). Merit pay, like any individual-oriented pay-for-performance
mechanism, may also inhibit cooperation and instead foster competition
among work group members. In addition, because of the use of subjective
performance evaluations, some argue that merit pay can harm employees’
self-esteem, perceptions of equity, and even their “intrinsic” interest and mo-
tivation in their work.12
Lump-Sum Bonuses
Lump-sum bonuses are increasingly being used as a substitute for merit
pay. These financial bonuses are granted to individual employees after they
are judged by the firm to have reached their performance goals. The bonuses
are not added into employees’ base pay; thus there is more risk to employees
since they must re-earn this extra pay year after year. Using lump-sum
bonuses allows the firm to better control wage costs, since the bonuses are
not added to base salaries and are not necessarily paid in subsequent years.
Individual Incentives/Commissions
Individual incentives and commissions are increments to an individual’s pay
tied directly to the employee’s extra output, such as piece rate pay for pro-
duction workers or sales commissions. Thus, the measure of performance is
more objective than under merit adjustments and lump-sum bonuses. In-
centives and commissions can place significant amounts of pay at risk if
they are the only element of pay. However, often they are an add-on to base
pay. But base pay may be set at a low rate, thus making performance output
or sales a critical determinant of one’s overall pay.
1990=100 600
$10.6 million
CEO 500
400
300
Production
200
worker
$29,267
100
1990 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98
Cashing in
Gain on
Exercising
Options
Company Chief Executive 1998, $ in millions
Source: The Economist, September 11, 1999; August 7, 1999. Reprinted with permission. Further
reproduction prohibited. www.economist.com
So far our overview of compensation and rewards has focused on the use of
“job-based” pay structures and performance-based reward systems. Man-
agers should understand, however, that not all pay structures are strictly
job-based, and not all pay increments are based on performance.
Foundations
Quality course
Shop floor control
Materials handling
Hazardous materials video
5 Safety workshop
Optional Orientation workshop
electives Core Electives
Skills Points Skills Points
Longeron Fabrication 10 Leak Check/Patch Weld 5
Panel Fabrication 15 Final Acceptance Test 10
$14.50 Shell Fabrication 15 Welding Inspection 15
365 End Casting Welding 20 Flame Spraying 15
3 Finishing—Paint 20 Assembly Inspection 5
Core
Optional Finishing—Ablative/Autoclave 20 Safe % Arm Assembly 15
electives
electives Finishing—Surface Prep 10 MK 13 Machining 25
13.00 MK 13 Assembly 15 MK 14 Machining 25
Optional MK 14 Assembly 15 Tool Set Up 10
electives 240 Finishing Inspection 5 NCI Inspection 30
Core Machining Inspection 20 Degrease 10
electives Pad Welding 15 Guide Rail Assembly 5
140
12.00 Core Receiving Inspection 5
40 electives
Core electives Optional Electives
11.00 Maintenance Career Development
Foundation Logistics—JIT Group Decision Making
Foundation Foundation Foundation
all mandatory Plant First Aid Public Relations
10.50
Geometric Tolerancing Group Facilitator
Entry Tech Tech Tech Tech Computer-Lotus Training
I I II IV Computer-dBASE III Group Problem Solving
Computer-Word Processing Administration
Assessment Center Plant Security
Consensus Building
Source: G. T. Milkovich and J. M. Newman, Compensation, 6th ed. (New York: Irwin/McGraw-Hill, 1999), p. 150. Reprinted with permission
of the McGraw-Hill Companies.
93
94 Many firms have also explored what they label “competency-based pay”
PART TWO for managers and professionals. Although there is no agreed-on definition,
What the one representative definition of a competency is “demonstrable characteris-
General Manager tics of the person, including knowledge, skills, and behaviors, that enable
Should Know performance.”21
Seniority-Based Pay
We briefly mention the possibility that seniority, defined as the length of ser-
vice in an employment unit, can be used as a basis for allocating many re-
wards, including wages, promotions, and the right to continue as an
employee in the face of a downsizing program. Unions in the United States
traditionally have supported seniority-based decisions, which can be readily
seen in collective bargaining agreements.
However, for any employees, seniority-based rewards might be appro-
priate for the particular circumstances surrounding a job class in a firm.
Consider our discussion of the use of pay grades and the criteria for moving
employees through their pay grades (e.g., seniority, performance). Clearly,
the trend in HRM is to focus on performance as the basis for providing base
salary increments—merit pay. But some firms provide predetermined, auto-
matic salary increments based on length of service. And as we mentioned in
FIGURE 4–4. Example of competency-based pay for managers 95
CHAPTER FOUR
Reward and
Compensation
Systems
Firm Identifies Broad Competencies
• Adaptability
• Communication
• Creativity
• Customer focus
• Problem solving
• Expertise
• Relationships
• Results orientation
• Team orientation
• Understanding the business
End-of-Year Assessment
• Supervisor rates progress
on competencies
• Salary increment
determined
96 Chapter 3, seniority makes sense as a basis for rewards when (1) the goal is
PART TWO to promote a high degree of company loyalty and commitment, (2) there is a
What the need to encourage cooperative and team-oriented behavior, and (3) the situ-
General Manager ation requires extensive learning of company-specific knowledge and skills.
Should Know
CONCLUSION