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Setting Up a Pay System
Pay administration is a management
tool that enables you to control personnel cost, increase employee morale,
and reduce workforce turnover. A formal pay system provides a means of
rewarding individuals for their contributions to the success of your firm,
while making sure that your organization receives a fair return on its
investment in employee pay.
this guide provides time-tested concepts for determining competitive
pay levels and for maintaining fair pay relationships among the jobs
comprised by a small company.
Who needs a pay administration plan?
Pay administration may just be a fancy term for something you are
already doing but haven't bothered to name. Or, perhaps your organization
has not been paying employees according to any system, but waiting until
unrest shows up to make pay adjustments - using payroll to put out fires,
so to speak.
A formal pay plan, one that lets employees know where they stand and
where they can go as far as take home money are concerned, won't solve all
your employee relations problems. It will, however, remove one of those
areas of doubt and rumor that may keep your workforce anxious and unhappy
and less loyal and more mobile than you'd like them to be.
What's in it for you? Let's face it, in business - particularly small
business - it's good people who can make the difference between go and no
go. Many people like a mystery, but not when it's about how their pay is
set. Employees under a pay plan they know and understand can see that it's
equitable (fair) and equable (uniform) that pay isn't set by whim. They
know what to expect and what they can hope to shoot for. In the long run
such a plan can help you:
- recruit employees
- keep employees
- motivate employees
It can help you build a solid foundation for a successful business.
Developing and Installing the plan
A formal pay plan doesn't have to cost you a lot of time and money.
Formal doesn't mean complex. In fact, the more elaborate the plan is, the
more difficult it is to put into practice, communicate, and carry out.
the foremost concern in setting up a formal pay administration plan is
to get the acceptance, understanding, and support of your management and
supervisory employees. A well-defined, thoroughly discussed, and
properly-understood plan is a prerequisite for success.
the steps in setting up a pay plan are:1) define the jobs, 2) evaluate
the jobs, 3) price the jobs. 4) install the plan, communicate the plan to
employees, and 6) appraise employee performance under the plan.
Defining the Jobs
Unless you know each job's specifications and requirements, you can't
compare them for pay purposes.
It's no surprise, therefore, that the initial step in installing a
formal plan is preparing a job description for each position.
You may be able to write these descriptions yourself, since in many
small businesses the owner-manager at one time or another has worked at
just about every job. However, the best and easiest way to put together
such job information is simply to ask employees to describe their jobs.
Supervisors should be asked to review these descriptions.
Your best bet here is to prepare a simple form to be filled out by the
employee (or someone interviewing the employee). This is the time to begin
explaining to employees what you are doing. They need to know that their
help is needed to develop the pay plan - that you are not trying to find
out how well they are doing their jobs - just what they do. The form
should contain the following categories:
Job Title
Reporting Relationship
Specifications
Primary function (What is the main responsibility of the job?)
Main Duties (List main duties in order of importance and estimate the
percentage of time spent on each)
Other Duties (List of duties not performed on a regular basis.)
Job Requirements:
Formal Education or Training Required
Experience or Background Required
Technical/Administrative Complexity
Responsibility for Results
Responsibility for Supervision
Unusual Working Conditions
It will probably take some time to prepare job descriptions from the
information you get from your employees, but what you learn may have other
uses besides comparing jobs for pay purposes. For one thing, you may
discover that some employees are not doing what you though they were, or
what they were hired to do. You may find you want to make some changes in
their work routines. The information may also be useful for:
- Hiring, training, and developing employees;
- Realigning duties in the organization;
- Comparing job data for salary surveys;
- Assuring compliance with various employment practice and pay rate
laws; and
- Evaluating job performance based on assigned duties.
Evaluating the Jobs
Nobody knows a scientific, precise way of deciding exactly how much a
particular job is worth to a company. Human judgment is the only way to
put a dollar value on work. A good job evaluation method for firms with
100 or fewer employees is simple-ranking. It's a guess, too, but a pretty
well controlled guess.
Under the simple-ranking system, job descriptions are compared against
each other. They are ranked according to difficulty and responsibility.
Using your judgment, you end up with an array of jobs that shows the
relative value of each position to the company.
After you have ranked the job descriptions by value to the firm, the
next step is to group jobs that are similar in scope and responsibility
into the same pay grade. Then you arrange these groups in a series of pay
levels from highest to lowest. The number of pay levels depends on the
total number of jobs and types of work in your organization, but for a
company with 100 or fewer jobs,10 or 12 pay levels is usually about right.
Pricing the Jobs
So far in establishing a pay system, you've had to look only inside the
company itself. To put a dollar value on each of your pay levels, you
should look outside at the going rates for similar work in your area.
Since you have ranked and grouped jobs in pay levels, you won't have to
survey each job. Survey those in each level that are easiest to describe
and are most common in local industry. Do try, however, to survey those
jobs that have more than one level, for example junior and senior typists.
A survey of who's paying how much for what in your Locality is the best
way of finding out how much you ought to pay for each of your jobs. You
probably have neither the time nor the money to spend on making such a
survey yourself. That shouldn't be a problem; you should be able to get
all the data you need from sources such as your local Chamber of Commerce,
major firms located in your area, or from government agencies. If you
belong to a trade association, you may be able to get its help to find out
what the going rate is for one or more jobs in each pay level.
In studying pay in your area and applying what you learn to your own
jobs, make sure you compare job descriptions, not just job titles. Job
titles can be misleading; there can be great differences between what one
organization and another call their jobs. One firm's janitor may be
somebody else's environmental control engineer.
After you are satisfied that you are comparing apples and apples, you
can compute an average rate (the averages in the guide are purely
arbitrary) for each job and enter it on a worksheet as follows:
Pay Level Position Average Rate
1 Clerk-typist 974
2 Stenographer 1135
3 Payroll Clerk 1287
4 Secretary 1323
Accounting Clerk 1380
5 Computer Operator 1460
(and so on)
You may need to adjust the average rates somewhat to keep a sufficient
difference between pay levels to separate them. The going rates you find
for each pay level can then become the midpoints of your pay level ranges.
(You can, of course, set your midpoints above or below the survey
averages, based on your company's ability to pay, the length of your work
week, and the type and value of your company's benefit programs.)
Typically, the minimum rate in a level is 85 percent of the midpoint
rate, and the maximum rate is 115 percent of the midpoint. With this
arrangement, a new employee can increase his or her earnings by 35 percent
without a job change; thus having performance incentives even if he or she
is not promoted.
You now have a pay range for each position in your organization. Such a
pay range will enable you to tell where your employees' pay and pay
potential stand in relation to the market rates for their kinds of work.
It should show you at a glance where you need to make changes to achieve
rates that are fair within your organization and pay that's competitive
with similar businesses in your community.
In general, with a planned pay structure you should be able to tie
individual rates of pay to job performance and contribution to company
goals. It should also provide enough flexibility to handle special
situations.
Installing the plan
At this point you have the general plan, but you don't of course, pay
in general. You pay each employee individually. You must now consider how
the plan will be administered to provide for individual pay increases.
In administering the pay increase feature of the plan, you can use
several approaches:
- Merit increases, granted to recognize performance and contribution;
- Promotion increases for employees assigned to different jobs in
higher pay levels;
- Progression to minimum for employees who are below the minimum or
hiring rate for the pay level;
- Probationary increases of newer employees who have attained the
necessary skills and experience to function effectively;
- Tenure increases for time with the company; and
- General increases, granted employees to maintain real earnings as
economic factors require and to keep pay competitive.
These approaches are the most common, but there are many variations.
Most annual increases are made for cost of living, tenure, or employment
market reasons. Obviously, you might use several, all, or combinations of
the various increase methods.
You may find that a form for documenting salary increases and recording
the reasons for them can be quite useful. You will probably find that
records such as these are useful references for pay administration
purposes.
Telling employees about the plan
After you have set your pay administration plan into place, you have to
consider how to tell employees about it. If setting up a good program is
number one in importance, a close number two is explaining that plan to
employees.
How to tell them is your decision. Some of the more successful methods
include personal letters to each employee and meetings to explain the plan
and answer question.
However you tell employees, you must clearly, honestly, and openly
explain the way the plan works. This is a prime opportunity for you to
build goodwill and good relations with your employees. Be sure your
supervisors understand and can explain the plan to their people.
Explaining the plan to new hires is also essential, and it's a good idea
to review the plan periodically with all employees.
Employee performance appraisal
The majority of employees in the labor force are under merit increase
pay system, though most of their pay increases result from other factors.
This approach involves periodic review and appraisal of how well employees
perform their assigned duties. An effective employee appraisal plan:
- Achieve better two-way communications between the manager and the
employee,
- Relates pay to work performance and results,
- Provides a standardized approach to evaluating performance, and
- Helps employees see how they can improve by helping them understand
job responsibilities and expectations.
Such a performance review helps not only the employee whose work is
being appraised, but also helps the manager doing the appraising to gain
insight into the organization. An open exchange between employee and
manager can show the manager where improvements in equipment, procedures,
or other factors might improve employee performance. Try to foster a
climate in which employees can discuss progress and problems informally at
any time throughout the year.
Again, to get the best results it's a good idea to use a form for
appraisal. A typical form includes such job performance factors as:
- Results achieved,
- Quality of performance,
- Volume of work,
- Effectiveness in working with others in firm,
- Effectiveness in dealing with customers, suppliers, etc.,
- Initiative,
- Job knowledge, and
- Dependability.
You can design your own form, using examples you can find in books on
personnel administration, if necessary. Your forms should be tailored to
the jobs and should follow from your job analyses.
How can the plan help you?
The best pay plan in the world for employees won't be of any use if it
doesn't help your business. What's in it for you?
Again, the answer is getting, keeping, and encouraging good employees.
Your pay plan will help you:
Recruit - The pay ranges will provide competitive hiring rates for
attracting high caliber employees.
Retain - The performance appraisal plan and pay increase feature
will encourage performance plus growth and development within your
organization.
Motivate - The pay plan will provide something to shoot for to keep
employees interested in and enthusiastic about their present assignments
and also provide the incentive to seek greater opportunity within your
company.
Having capable employees who are interested and enthusiastic will help
you win the battle for business survival and growth.
Updating the plan
To keep your pay administration plan in tune with the times, you should
review it at least annually. Make adjustments where necessary and don't
forget to retrain supervisory personnel. This isn't the kind of plan that
can be set up and then forgotten.
During your annual review, ask yourself if the plan is working for you.
That's the most important question. Are you getting the kind of employees
you want or are you just making do? What's the turnover rate? Do employees
seem to care about the business? In the last analysis, it's not how
elegant the plan is or how beautiful the forms and administration. What
matters is how the plan helps you to achieve the objectives of your
business.
Food For Thought
Visualization plays a key
role in your life, whether you realize it or not. What you constantly
visualize and think about is generally what you become.
If you are always dwelling on the negative -- your health problems,
the money you owe, your troubled relationships -- then you give even
more power to these things and they continue to manifest in your life
in abundance.
By contrast, when you constantly visualize life the way you want it to
be -- optimum health, increased income, free of debt -- then these
things will begin to appear.
It almost seems like magic, but there is nothing magical about it. Our
minds work by association. There is so much information coming at us
on a daily basis that we can't possibly process it all. So we
experience life and relate to the world in terms of things we already
know. You create a model in your mind that allows you to make sense of
the world around you.
When that model is positive, and focused on your goals, then you see
the opportunities in all situations. Make a habit of constantly
focusing on the positive and visualizing the person you want to
become. When you regularly visualize yourself as successful and
effective, then your mind will find a way to bring that visualization
into reality.
To say that the world is moving fast is a woeful understatement.
Knowledge is doubling every 3-5 years. New computers are obsolete in a
matter of months, and have almost no value after 2 years. Whatever
works now is already obsolete -- there's something else ready to take
its place.
The world is constantly re-defining and re-engineering. In order to
keep up, you must always be re-engineering your life. The key is to
make learning a continuing process.
It is unfortunate that so many people decide to stop learning when
they get out of school, or when they have been adequately trained for
their particular job. An attitude like that, in today's world, is a
recipe for failure. The only truly educated person is a person who has
learned how to learn, and who takes the time to do so.
With jobs and careers becoming obsolete, the only income security you
can have is your knowledge and your ability to learn. If you are an
experienced and willing learner, there will always be opportunities
for you.
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