Employers get creative with compensation
According to compensation software and services company PayScale, 86 percent of top-performing companies -- those who are leaders in their industry and who exceeded revenue targets for 2015 -- agree with this statement: “Our people are our greatest asset.” In contrast, 78 percent of average companies agreed with the statement.
The 2016 Compensation Best Practices Report, released at the end of last month, surveyed 7,600 executives, line of business managers and human resource practitioners worldwide in November and December 2015 to gauge current attitudes about compensation, business growth, hiring and retention.
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The smartest companies are using compensation strategies like transparency, variable pay and bonuses to reward top-performing employees; 81 percent of these highly successful companies reported giving bonuses, compared to 74 percent overall. In addition, top-performing companies were 5 percent more likely to give team bonuses and half of all top-performing companies who give bonuses are increasing the size of their bonus budget in the coming year.
"Businesses are becoming more strategic and discriminating about how they allocate pay -- they want to make sure they are aligning compensation with important business initiatives and strategies. As IT salaries continue to increase, there's a greater awareness that yearly increases at such a large scale might not be sustainable, so companies are using bonuses and other methods to balance between rewarding top performers and keeping compensation levels more reasonable," says Tim Low, senior vice president of marketing, PayScale.
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The trend toward using bonuses and variable pay goes hand-in-hand with a shift toward more open, transparent communication about compensation, says Low. Companies are becoming more willing to engage in conversations about why certain roles are compensated at different levels, and to explain how and why performance expectations are tied to salary and bonuses, Low says.
"We're seeing movement away from just salary increases as the only pay instrument, in tandem with awareness of the need for more transparency and openness around pay. The smart companies are doubling down on their “social contract” with their employees, and bringing them into conversations about how and why compensation and bonus levels are decided. That leads to greater buy-in all around, and that helps with engagement and retention," he says.
Nearly half, 47 percent, of top-performing companies revealed that they have adopted open communication around pay, compared to 40 percent of the average companies. However, there's a chasm here. While 40 percent of all companies responding to the survey say they have salary transparency at their organization, only 21 percent of employees say their company had open discussions around pay.
"There's a major opportunity here for businesses to address perception and communication gaps with their employees around pay, and that can go a long way toward helping with retention -- which was the top concern or a major concern for 57 percent of respondents. Talk with your employees about your compensation practices so they can see why they're paid what they are, and explain the deciding factors. You don't even have to adjust salary or bonus levels -- just communicating more openly about it is all employees want," says Low.