| Compensation
Tradeoffs
By
Thomas P. Johnson Jr.
An effective employee compensation
system requires the appropriate mix of fixed and variable
pay.
The financial services industry is among
the leading industries that use variable pay to compensate
its employees. As you’ll read in this issue’s
“The Exacting Science of Compensation,” a
survey by Scottsdale, Ariz.-based WorldatWork finds that
only the real estate, utilities, telecommunications and
information/Internet industries rely on variable compensation
more than financial services.
This suggests how banking has changed
in the last few decades. In an increasingly competitive
environment, banks have come to the conclusion that fixed
salaries may not be sufficient to focus their employees
on sales and service objectives.
“Paying for performance”
is a complex issue. Managers struggle to calculate the
proper mix between the level of compensation that employees
can count on and the level that will vary according to
their performance.
Variable pay, which consists of performance-linked
incentives, obviously rewards the high achievers. But
it can also produce anxiety among many employees, often
to the point of provoking turnover. It has been known
to encourage the wrong kinds of behavior. Employees can
be so fixated on sales that service suffers, for example.
Fixed pay fosters a stable and comfortable
environment — but not necessarily what’s needed
to support sales. Some incentives must be provided to
encourage employees to try harder.
Our article finds that variable pay
is being used within limits. Ceilings are being set on
variable pay for positions where service rather than sales
is the main objective. And, experts are advising that
variable pay be targeted, linked to a handful of products
rather than across the board. Regular monitoring is recommended
to verify progress against corporate objectives.
Of course, corporate objectives are
not the only yardstick for success. Ultimately, compensation
systems need to meet the needs of employer and employee,
both focused on the best interests of the customer. Managers
must come up with the right balance in variable and fixed
pay — as well as other programs such as benefits,
training, coaching and customer satisfaction surveys —
to assure that all stakeholders’ needs are met.
Mr. Johnson
is publisher of Banking Strategies
and president and chief executive officer of BAI.
Copyright © 2005 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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