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Unit 10: Compensation and Benefits




              As  employees begin to equip themselves  with more organizationally-relevant  skills-  Notes
               through constant training and developmental initiatives undertaken by the organization-
               they become more valuable to an organization.
              Of course, the system is not without critics.  Identifying competencies, their proficiency
               levels,  and  assessing  employee  competencies  from  time  to  time  would  demand
               considerable amount of managerial attention, time and commitment.
              Many a time, an organization might be forced to pay employees for knowledge and skills
               they possess but not put into practice!
              The linkage between competency learning  and pay  increases need to be  highlighted
               constantly.

              It all depends on how employees ultimately evaluate the effort-reward relationship.
              If competency development is viewed as something not  related  to  increases in  pay,
               employees may not be enthusiastic about learning new competencies.

          It is therefore, not surprising to find that in recent times, competency-based pay has become the
          focus of much heated debate in corporate as well as academic circles. While its advocates assert
          it achieves precisely measurable benefits, its opponents argue that it tends to lead to unfair,
          invalid, and discriminatory outcomes. Among companies that have implemented competency-
          based pay, there is evidence that the failure rate is relatively high.
          10.6.2 Guidelines for Effective Performance based Pay System


          To be fair  to employees, organisations should  keep the following guidelines  in mind  while
          instituting merit-pay systems.

          Establish high standards of performance, so that only the truly outstanding employees emerge
          as winners.
          Develop accurate performance appraisal systems. The focus must be on job-specific, results-
          oriented criteria as well as employee behaviours.
          Train supervisions in the mechanics of carrying out appraisals and offering feedback to employees
          in a proper way.

          Tie rewards closely to performance.
          Use a wide range of increases. Also, make pay increases meaningful.

          10.6.3 Incentives

          Fringe benefits are different from incentives. Incentives are paid in lieu of superior performance
          shown by an employee. It is like a reward paid for performance. They are paid as a means to
          attract, motivate and retain employees. Incentive pay plans can elicit strong feelings. Incentive
          pay plans is based on the philosophy that a fair day's work is not normally attainable without
          some proportion of pay being at risk because time based workers produce only about 50 to 60
          percent of the output of incentive pay workers. Incentives can be broadly classified into financial
          and  non-financial  incentives. Financial  incentives  are  the monitory  benefits  provided  to
          employees for their superior performance whereas non-financial incentives are those incentives
          that satisfy social and psychological and esteem needs of an employee. They can be further
          classified into following types:







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