Chapter 9: Compensation Flashcards
fixed pay
based on working hours
variable pay
based on the employee outcomes or job performance
Barr states that compensation can contribute to the organization’s effectiveness in 3 ways:
- attract the best human assets to the firm.
- help retain good performers.
- motivate to affect performance.
aims of compensation
- influence employee attitudes and behaviors
- controlling labour costs
- employer branding
basis for pay
- set of tasks within given position
- individuals knowledge and skills
- seniority
- status, reputation
what temporary contracts are connected with
saving labor costs,
but low commitment to the org, and high turnover
payrolling
new employees are not officially employed, but instead they have a legal and transactional contract with an external org specialize d in both the administration and legal affairs of employement relationships
fixed pay is also known as
salary; and is mainly determined by CBAs
variable pay limitations
- Measurement
- Influence
- Transparency and fairness
- Too narrow focus on financial success
- Continuous renewal of PRP systems
whats required for cafeteria plan
IT system
equity theory
people’s attitudes and behaviors are affected by their assessment of their work contributions (inputs) and the rewards they recieve (outputs)
equitable payment
individual employee perceives their outcome / input ratio to match that of the others
i-deals
deals between 1 individual and the direct supervisor that are often not written down
Lazear tournament model + relative compensation theory
- promotion leads to better compensation.
- workers are not promoted because they are good, but because they are better than the others at their current level.
- The level of effort with which employees pursue the promotion depends on the size of the
potential increase in their wages - There is a limit to spread the model. People are not likely to participate in a winner-takes-all
tournament because of the high risk of ending with nothing.
key concepts of expectancy theory
- Expectancy representing the individual employee belief ‘that a particular degree of effort will
be followed by a particular level of performance’. - Instrumentality representing the perceived link between employee behaviour and pay.
- Valence representing ‘the positive or negative value people place on outcomes’.