Editor’s Note: Unfair pay remains pernicious in the workplace despite efforts to combat it. The following is excerpted from Get Pay Right, How To Achieve Pay Equity That Works, by Salary.com CEO Kent Plunkett and employment lawyer and pay equity expert Heather Bussing.
Considering pay equity is an ideal time to look at your overall compensation philosophy and strategy. Is there a coherent set of values and criteria to explain why people make the compensation they make? If it’s complicated or messy, that’s absolutely normal. But it’s worth the time and effort to step back and review the organization’s approach to compensation and articulate what you’re trying to do with pay and assess if it’s working.
Labor costs are the biggest line item of most organizations’ budget. And having the right people doing the work is what makes a business successful. Therefore, getting pay right is essential to operations, no matter what your industry or company size. Having a clear compensation strategy will also help you recruit and retain employees and make budget and planning easier and more straightforward.
Even if you are not planning on hiring soon, you may have people leave (or want someone to leave). When you are hiring for an unexpected opening, you want to understand whom you need, where to find them and what the going pay for the role is. For larger organizations who can predict their overall turnover, although not usually who will leave, having guiding principles for salary ranges, incentive pay, benefits and other pay decisions makes negotiations smoother and faster for everyone.
Pay raises are usually larger when people change [jobs] than if they stay for the annual cost-of-living adjustment and scheduled pay increase. While changing jobs involves many factors besides pay, being prepared compare the market can be a key to keeping the people you have.
It’s much better to be able to plan for raises and handle budgeting for benefits when you know your strategy for compensation in general, know what’s going on in the market and have thought through your approach to staying competitive. Some organizations take a straightforward approach and address base pay. Others may not have budget for big raises but can compete with other benefits, flexible schedules or remote work. The important thing is to have the information you need, know your priorities and have the guiding principles in place.
Pay equity is an essential piece of compensation strategy. This is where the commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) and pay equity become real by committing to and budgeting to close pay gaps. As new people are hired at higher rates, it’s essential to track what’s happening overall with pay equity and whether any pay gaps can be justified for legitimate business reasons or whether there is potential bias that can be correlated to gender, race, age or other protected factors. Most pay equity issues are not intentional and can be difficult to spot. Monitoring pay equity will help you implement your compensation strategy and address any issues before they become bigger problems.
Here are the things to think through when you are building a compensation strategy.
Start with your compensation philosophy. Identify the principles and practices your organization uses to make compensation decisions:
The focus should be on why you pay people what you pay and what factors are important in how your total compensation is structured.
You can always do more of what you’ve been doing. But before you make that the default, it’s worth understanding whether it’s working. Before you start making compensation decisions, it’s good to get a clearer picture of some key indicators:
There are some aspects of compensation that are required by law and not optional. Understanding and monitoring compliance with compensation laws should be an essential part of any compensation strategy:
This is where you look at where the organization wants to go and what resources are allocated to getting there:
Assessing how your pay compares with similar organizations will tell you if your compensation budget is realistic and competitive:
If your compensation is not competitive, you will need to figure out how to adjust budget or headcount and get creative with benefits and other aspects of total compensation.
There is a bit of a myth that if employees meet goals and perform at or above expectations, they should get a raise each year. That’s not always possible and often not how it works. There are many types of incentive pay designed to encourage certain performance besides annual raises or cost-of-living adjustments:
Money is not always the most important thing to people. Scheduling, the ability to work remotely, paid time off, signing bonuses and help with retirement savings or student loan payments can all change the equation for potential and existing employees:
While money is always an important factor, there are many other aspects of total compensation that can make your organization stand out against the competition. Know what they are and regularly reevaluate what’s possible.
Building a successful compensation strategy is about having the right information on your organization, the market and the organization’s goals, then determining what’s working, determining what isn’t and exploring options.
Excerpted with permission from Get Pay Right: How to Achieve Pay Equity That Works by Kent Plunkett. Copyright © 2024 by Kent Plunkett. Used with permission from SHRM.
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