Applied HR Strategies, Inc. (AHRS) is a strategic compensation consultancy that specializes in the development of customized compensation related solutions. We believe consulting is a relationship business, and work hard to please our clients, most of whom we maintain an ongoing long-term relationship with.

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Is it Worth it to Engage/Re-engage? You be the Judge!

Is it crucial to maintain a competitive pay posture to attract and retain high quality talent?  We think so (that why we spent over a year writing a book about how to do it!), and most HR and rewards professionals believe that as well.  But does paying competitively make your people happy, engaged and/or driven to perform?  Generally not, unless you're using a well-designed incentive program to drive certain behaviors (but that only addressees the behavior component).

Competitive base pay is absolutely critical to attract talent, and to maintain a basic level of satisfaction with the compensation that employees receive for voluntarily sharing their skills with your organization.  Beyond base pay though, what really drives motivation, worker engagement and the desire to stay with an organization are how you manage and treat them.

See the table below and tell me what you think of the difference is between an employee who is willing to stay with your organization because they are basically satisfied (but not terribly engaged) vs. an employee who really wants to stay with your organization and believes in it (i.e. is engaged).

Source: Employee Hold'em, 2009

The data above is from a large study done every two years or so by by an organization that focuses on employee engagement, and the results are clear: it's not just about the money!  In fact, we would argue that how you manage and treat your employees is more important than the money, assuming the money is about where it should be (you're paying at least close to or better than competitively).

With dollars scare these days (over 50% of employers gave 0% - or less - pay increases last year, and 2010 pay increase budgets are south of 3% for now), how you treat your employees is even more critical.  Hence, there is a growing movement towards more qualitative rewards (feedback/communication, appreciation, training, etc.) , as opposed to just quantitative ones (mostly pay and benefits)

We'll continue to bring you more information and data on this large topic of worker psychology, qualitative rewards and employee engagement in the coming months.

 


Don't miss an opportunity to sign up and participate in these upcoming events:

Compensation, Rewards & Employee Engagement Trends - 2010 and Beyond (approved for 3.5 HRCI Credits)
Date: May 13th, 2010 8:00 AM to noon
Location: Bellevue Harbor Club
Cost: $295.00
Register for this Event

Organizations are struggling to keep up with changes in salary and compensation trends. As the economy recovers, what is the future of pay and employment? What can employers do to retain and re-engage talented employees? In this half-day session, participants will explore 1) the latest compensation trends and future rewards thinking and 2) the elements of a successful employee engagement and recognition strategy. Participants will take away low-cost tools, ideas and resources to build a culture of appreciation within their teams and organizations. Workshop instructors include StrategicPay Series creator, Doug Sayed and Chief Motivation Officer, Theresa Chambers of Recognition Works. The program will be held at the Harbor Club in Bellevue from 8am to noon. The program includes a continental breakfast, parking validation, as well as a discount coupon to purchase the Base Pay Toolkit worth one-half the tuition cost alone, if interested.

 
Utilizing Market Data & Conducting a Competitive Pay Analysis (approved for 3.5 HRCI Credits)
Date: June 10th, 2010 8:00 AM to noon
Location: Bellevue Harbor Club
Cost: $295.00
Register for this Event

This half-day program will focus on how to conduct a market-based pay analysis, including selecting and using pay data sources, grading jobs into a salary structure and evaluating how the company measures up.  This is an advanced, in-depth course.  Participants will walk away with a working knowledge of the subject matter, as well as the tools and templates to execute in their company.  The cost includes a continental breakfast and parking validation, as well as a discount coupon to purchase the Base Pay Toolkit worth one-half the tuition cost alone.

Are You Getting What You're Paying For?

Note: this is an updated version of my recent Compensation Cafe Post.

Amid all of the talk about motivation and incentives in the past few months, as HR and compensation influencers, we need pay attention to what we're paying for, why we are paying it (are we getting what we think we're paying for?), and in communicating this information throughout our organizations.

In their classic book "Pay People Right," Zingheim and Schuster argue that base pay should be pay for ongoing value, not for results. Each person brings to work their unique set of education/training, skills, experiences and talents, and base pay is to compensate for use the of skills and abilities that employees bring to work every day.

Zingheim and Schuster go on to say that variable pay (typically in the form of short-term cash incentives) should be used as pay for results. Using their model, we can use base pay to pay for what I call the employee's "toolkit" (all those skills, abilities, etc.), while reserving variable pay for the actual results achieved via a combination of the employee's abilities and efforts.

Although employee efforts are a key component of achieving desired outcomes, efforts do not always equal results, and so we should separate them from each other in terms of pay and rewards.

Efforts are critical though, especially those "discretionary efforts" that we as HR and rewards professionals seek out, and thus, while we probably shouldn't pay for them per se, we certainly can recognize, applaud and occasionally even celebrate these "above and beyond" efforts.

In the book "17 Rules for Successful Companies Use to Attract and Keep Top Talent" author David Russo states ("Rule #6") "applaud effort; reward contribution" and I couldn't agree more.  Efforts are critical, and worthy of recognition and applause, but not of pay per se.

If we pay for effort alone, in the absence of tangible results, we run the risk of creating rewards confusion (especially for those who actually achieve intended results) and possibly of mis-placed rewards expectations and/or feelings of entitlement ("I busted my butt on that project...").

Of course, we need to be clear and transparent about what we pay for and why; what base pay is for, and what variable pay/incentives reward. If we don't do that, many of our pay related programmatic efforts will be waisted, because people will not understand what they are paid for and how they can improve their own personal rewards system.

Doug Sayed is principal at Applied HR Strategies, a Seattle area compensation consultancy and author of the StrategicPay Series Base Pay Toolkit, a hands-on, "do-it-yourself" (DIY) guide to developing a strategic market-based compensation program, complete with dozens of pre-built tools and templates, ready for use.