How to Build a Compensation Plan that Drives Performance
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Compensation and performance are intertwined, but their relationship is more complex than it looks at first glance. While a high salary may initially attract a candidate’s interest, driving continued performance and productivity requires a more nuanced compensation strategy.
Erica Pachmann, Senior People Scientist at IceHrm, and Alexis Joseph Merritt, VP of People at Pave, a leading performance management software company, recently collaborated on a webinar focused on optimizing performance management strategies. They provided valuable insights on various aspects of performance management, including developing a performance management philosophy and creating effective performance evaluation frameworks. Their expert guidance aims to help companies enhance their performance management processes, drive employee development, and achieve organizational goals.
A compensation philosophy is a set of guidelines for how your organization compensates employees. Alexis recommends that if your company doesn’t already have a compensation philosophy in place, you create one. The document will serve as a "North Star" to guide all of your company's compensation decisions.
She says, "This is a crucial first step, because it helps your people on HR teams, helps your executives, your executive sponsors, and your managers all clarify that 'why' behind pay, and also helps create a framework to make sure there's consistency across a team, a company, or business."
A compensation philosophy allows the company to be proactive, instead of reactive, around compensation. It also provides transparency into how the company makes these decisions, making the process more consistent – and more equitable.
Tip: Putting your compensation plan in writing shows employees that you’re using specific criteria to build your compensation packages and that you’re making these decisions fairly. That can have a resounding impact. Erica explains, “Perceptions of organizational justice can really affect employee outcomes such as motivation, trust, engagement, satisfaction, performance, and turnover.”
When creating compensation packages, think about what will benefit both the employee and the company, short-term and long-term. Consider including not only direct compensation and indirect compensation but also non-monetary compensation such as recognition programs. Erica says, “That holistic, more inclusive package is really going to be the best way for you to increase your engagement and also keep your top performers within the organization.”
Let’s take a closer look at these three elements.
Tip: Look for ways to incorporate flexibility into your rewards and recognition programs, because people have different needs, drivers, and motivators. When your programs are flexible, you can tailor them based on what works best for the individuals in your workforce. For example, not everyone appreciates the same type of recognition, so it makes sense to provide a variety of ways for leaders to recognize employees.
To ensure managers across your company are equipped to offer competitive, fair, and unbiased compensation packages, provide a framework that shows them how to leverage relevant data. Alexis points out, “It's really challenging to make decisions if you don't have confidence in your data, or if you don't have data.”
If you’re looking for specific benchmarks that align with your company size and employee locations, you don’t have to do the research on your own. Existing tools make it easy to access this information. For example, IceHrm recently partnered with Pave so that our customers have the data points they need to make equitable decisions around compensation. This partnership helps companies attract and retain talent while also reducing costs.
When you create compensation plans based on trustworthy data, you’ll feel more confident in your decisions and be able to justify them to employees and stakeholders.
As your company defines its compensation structure, be transparent with employees about why you made the decisions that you did. Erica believes that when companies don’t do this, it’s a missed opportunity that “really impacts the level of perceived fairness that exists within an organization.” Being open and clear about compensation helps to build trust.
Transparency around compensation involves not only listing pay ranges in your job descriptions to attract qualified candidates but also making sure your current employees understand where they fall in their salary band – and what they need to do to get to the next level. Sharing this information can help employees feel respected, valued, and motivated. If your company takes a continuous approach to performance management, you can discuss the company’s compensation plan as part of your regular feedback and coaching conversations.
You’ll also want to be transparent about the fact that the compensation strategy will evolve over time along with the company. Alexis says, “It’s an ongoing process, and we have to be able, as people leaders, to iterate.”
Concerned that establishing a compensation philosophy or creating strategic guidelines around compensation will lead to cookie-cutter compensation packages? Don’t be. Managers will still have the ability to bring what they know about the individual into the decision-making process – and they’ll be doing it in a more equitable and transparent way.
When you create a holistic, data-backed compensation plan and clearly communicate to your team how compensation decisions are made, you’re creating a culture of trust. When people understand how they will be compensated and recognized for their work, they feel inspired to perform their best.
IceHrm simplifies the execution of your compensation strategy by centralizing policy documentation, performance management, and payroll, offering a unified experience for your HR processes.