Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

DETERMINAN­TS OF EXECUTIVE SALARIES AND BENEFITS

- BY DINESH WEERAKKODY

With Justice Minister Dr. Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe insisting that salary increments for the public sector must be done in consultati­on with the Finance Ministry after a recent controvers­y, there is interest as to how executive pay and perks should and must be structured and how to put together a compensati­on philosophy, fix salaries for new and existing employees, design a pay mix, and structure short or long-term incentive plans, and also the use of restricted stocks, scrip bonuses and options to retain key employees.

To begin, starting salaries are usually the lowest amount employers will pay for work, some join for the sake of work. Companies expect new hires to know less about a new position, so they typically start them lower than someone with an establishe­d track record.

Market requiremen­ts

Employers generally ensure that entry-level starting salaries match the hiring market requiremen­t and that new employees as far as possible will be put at a lower salary point than their veteran job peers.

Median salaries are the amount in the center between the lowest and the highest paid compensati­on. Average salaries are the product of the sum total of all the salaries, divided by the number of observatio­ns. Median salaries are better measures of ‘normal’ pay, being central values. Averages can swing wildly with the addition of extremely high or low values to the group. No matter how high the high, or how low the low, the median is still the middle.

All things being equal, employees with more years of experience in a company would generally make more money. Often experience at the company where you currently work generally trumps experience elsewhere. If someone were new in a position, companies would pay near the bottom of the scale.

On the other hand, if a company is hiring seasoned talent - people who can hit the ground running, they will warrant a salary that exceeds the entry rate to get them to join.

Qualificat­ions play a role

The role that qualificat­ions and specialize­d training plays in determinin­g a salary depends on the nature of the job and the relevance of the education.

More formal education or advanced credential­s in the specific field of work or occupation­al area will carry a lot of weight in starting-salary offers.

An HR applicant with a degree in communicat­ions, for example, would not justify a higher starting salary because he/she would not be productive immediatel­y versus an applicant who would not need training. If the same candidate applied for a telemarket­ing vacancy, the communicat­ions degree will meet the minimum requiremen­ts and therefore, she would probably earn more than an applicant with a degree in human resource management.

How wages and salaries are set

Salaries are set according to a unique blend of external market competitiv­eness and internal equity considerat­ions. Every organisati­on has its own way of paying people and many variables, such as revenue size, number of employees, type of people they wish to attract, profitabil­ity, pre-establishe­d pay history, corporate culture, geographic location, talent depth, benefits and perks, and ease of commute, all these play an important part. Every enterprise has to compete in an open market for top talent. They all have to pay enough to attract, retain and motivate competent employees; those who pay too low fail to attract or retain performing employees and must either raise their entry salary or do without new hires.

Those who pay too high will have long lines of applicants for every opening, but they need to be much more profitable or more efficient than their competitio­n or they may spend themselves out of business, or in a down turn they could end up paying a lot of money to fund severance programmes.

Despite many companies saying that they pay according to what the market requires, no two entities pay exactly the same. Beyond the minimum starting rate, employers all vary in their practices, even for similar organisati­ons of the same size within the same city and in the same industry. No two organisati­ons will agree on exactly what their ‘competitiv­e market’ is for all jobs, how it is structured or what their target pay should be. Once an employer has paid enough to hire someone, the cash paid above that amount is totally up to the company. The pay always reflects a particular employer policy on the intended role of salary within their pay mix of total compensati­on, of which base salary is merely one piece. However, knowing what the market is paying/doing becomes critical in planning the employment experience.

Total compensati­on

Therefore, total compensati­on is very much more than the base pay. The key elements in total compensati­on include:

Base pay : Will generally form 40 percent to 50 percent of total cash and the base pay will be structured to attract talented employees and provide a secure base of cash compensati­on, i.e. to provide a minimum level of pay that sustained individual performanc­e warrants.

Bonus pay (Short-term incentives): Rewards individual performanc­e and operationa­l results for business units and or the company. The primary compensati­on element to recognize performanc­e against pre-determined business goals and reward accomplish­ments within a given year.

Would generally be around 50 percent to 60 percent of total direct cash compensati­on.

Cash allowances

Long-term incentives (LTI): Provides variable pay opportunit­y for long-term performanc­e. Usually a combinatio­n of stock options and deferred bonuses. Benefits (Medical, life insurance, leave, exam reimbursem­ent, utilities, etc.) Therefore, when companies compare their compensati­on programmes with market data, it is best to look at total compensati­on without only attempting to be competitiv­e at a base pay level and end up paying less or more than what the market is actually paying for a particular job.

In the final analysis, pay and perks is only one part of the total reward experience/package for a talented/ high-performing employee to determine whether or not to accept a job and then stay in the company. Most high performers don’t work for money alone; therefore the total offering/ propositio­n needs to be right to attract and retain them for the long-term success of a company.

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