THE CRITICAL LINK: GLOBAL TOTAL REWARDS CULTURE, STRATEGY AND YOUR BOTTOM LINE Deborah Voyt, Ph.D. Presented at D-SHRM Total Rewards October 2013 1 Global economy and need to manage costs has changed the total rewards model • Traditional view of total rewards - pay and benefits • Limited compensation budgets and benefit reductions • Companies must focus on other key total rewards elements aligned with organizational culture • Maximize the employee value proposition - globally • Attract, retain, and engage knowledge workers • Global framework with local flexibility 2 New Total Rewards Model WorldatWork Total Rewards Model • Compensation • Benefits • Performance and recognition • Development and career opportunity • Work life Total rewards model is flexible and tailored to meet the needs of the business, employees, and aligned with organizational culture 3 Organizational Culture and Total Rewards • Highly successful companies have strong unique cultures • Support employees to achieve strategic objectives and enhance organizational performance • Total rewards systems design and how individuals are rewarded communicate an organization’s beliefs and values • Attract the right employees • Key to understanding organizational culture 4 Total rewards can support or detract • Attract individuals with right values, skills, knowledge, abilities • Motivate to further organizational goals and objectives • Reward systems that do not fit the culture can negatively impact performance and employee engagement • Business culture and local country culture 5 What is culture? • It’s simple “the way we do things around here” • A set of shared, subconscious assumptions and tacit beliefs 6 Total rewards systems reflect and reinforce the cultural norms • Primary signal of organizational values and culture • Business leaders and human resources professionals are placing greater emphasis on culture and the fit with total rewards to attract, retain, and motivate employees to increase individual and firm performance • A survey of 1,200 international business executives show that 90% believe that corporate culture is as important as business strategy for organizational success (Bain & Company, 2007) 7 Challenges to Culture and Change • • • • New competitors Demanding customers Complaining staff Decreasing profit and sales • Merger or reorganization • Going global 8 Culture has an impact Research has shown the powerful impact on performance and long-term effectiveness of organizations 9 Culture makes the difference The effects on employee morale and retention, commitment, productivity and innovation are well documented 10 If you don’t use culture, culture will use you • If you’re not aware, it will shape you • Human beings Copy, Coach, and Correct each other to fit into the group • So make sure Culture works for you, instead of against your necessary change 11 Competing Values Framework Cameron and Quinn, 2006 12 Survey Questions • The Organizational Culture Assessment Instrument (OCAI)* was used to identify the dominant culture of your organization based on the Competing Values Framework (CVF) • Three open-ended questions were examined, organized, and coded into total rewards categories or broad themes • Question 1: The most important characteristic or attribute that makes my organization's total rewards strategy effective is: • Question 2: The one or two characteristics or attributes that need to be changed to improve the effectiveness of my organization's total rewards systems are: • Question 3: Success of the total rewards system at my organization is measured by: * OCAI developed by Cameron and Quinn (2006) 13 Company Profiles Organization Type Distribution Organization Distribution Size Number of employees For profit, privately held/partnership/consultancy 38% > 5000 54% For profit, publicly traded 42% 1000 - 5000 31% Governmental 12% 50 - 250 8% Nonprofit 8% 500 - 1000 8% 14 Organizational Culture Type Survey Results Culture Type Distribution Number of Companies Clan 31% 8 Adhocracy 4% 1 Hierarchy 27% 7 Market 38% 10 15 Top 3 Themes Identified Pay-program attributes, Alignment, and Benefits • Pay-program attributes (22%) – Needs improvement (14%); effective (8%) – Funding, stability, pay differentiation, timing • Alignment (14%) – – – – Needs improvement (6%); effective (8%) With organizational strategy, objectives, and results Other total rewards elements and human resources systems Alignment with organizational culture and employee line of sight • Benefits (13%) – Needs improvement (7%); effective (6%) – Competitive position to the market – Need to improve retirement plans through reinstatement of the company 401k match – Education reimbursement 16 Organizational Culture Type Survey Results 17 How Total Rewards Success is Measured Retention/Turnover Total 30% Employee engagement/commitment surveys 17% Not formally measured 11% Company Financial Performance 9% Ability to Recruit 9% Cost 7% Pay Program Attributes 4% Program Utilization 4% Responses Left Blank/Unknown 4% Customer Feedback 2% Leader Effectiveness 2% 18 Clan Culture • People-oriented, friendly • Leader: facilitator, mentor, team builder • Value: commitment, communicate, develop • Effectiveness: development and participation Cameron and Quinn, 2006 19 Total Rewards Major Themes Clan Culture • Pay-program attributes – 8% – Stability and funding – Link between pay and performance • Alignment – 5% – Alignment with organizational strategy and other HR systems • Benefits – 3% – Organizational culture • Work environment – 3% – Work-life balance 20 How success is measured Clan Culture • • • • Retention Employee engagement scores Attraction Total rewards utilization 21 Clan Culture Total Rewards Considerations Rewards Emphasis • Respect the organization’s traditions • Focus on interpersonal and employee needs Base Pay • Competitive or above (caring family) • Pay reductions rather than layoffs Bonus • Team-based Benefits • Inclusive and competitive; flexible Performance and Recognition • 360 degree feedback • Competencies and values rather than numeric ratings • Group recognition Development and Career Opportunity • Individual and team important Work-Life • Important to take care of family 22 Market Culture • Results-oriented, competitive • Individuals are competitive and goaloriented • Leader: hard driver, competitor, producer • Value: market share, goal achievement, profitability • Aggressively competing and customer focus Cameron and Quinn, 2006 23 Total Rewards Major Themes Market Culture • Pay-program attributes (6%) – Link pay and performance – Timeliness • Alignment (6%) – Alignment with organizational strategy – Integration with other reward programs – Alignment with organizational culture and other human resources systems • Development and career opportunities (4%) 24 How is Success Measured Market Culture • • • • Retention – 40% Exit interviews – 20% Cost – 20% Not measured – 20% 25 Market Culture Total Rewards Considerations Rewards Emphasis • External market focus • Emphasis on individual performance • Earn rewards based on achieving agreed-upon goals Base Pay • Competitive with market • Differentiate based on performance rather than seniority Bonus • Individual/company performance Benefits • Employees take greater responsibility Performance and Recognition • High performance standards that differentiate individual performance • Goals and expectations • Spot awards and individual recognition important Development and Career Opportunity • Individual development • Use of “stretch” assignments Work-Life • Important for recruiting • Employee resolves with manager 26 Hierarchy Culture • Controlled, structured • Leader: coordinator, monitor, organizer • Value: efficiency, consistency, timeliness, uniformity • Control and efficiency and capable processes Cameron and Quinn, 2006 27 Hierarchy Culture • Benefits (4%) – Providing good benefits • Communication (4%) – Providing open communication about total rewards – Value of total rewards – Linkage to business strategy • Development and career opportunities (3%) – Need to improve Cameron and Quinn, 2006 28 Hierarchy Culture Total Rewards Considerations Rewards Emphasis • The reward systems respect the hierarchy and the need for a predictable and secure environment Base Pay • Competitive • Well-defined procedures important Bonus • Individual/company performance • Targets support hierarchy Benefits • Traditional with focus on long-term job security to maintain a smoothrunning organization Performance and Recognition • Highly structure performance management systems • Formal recognition plans with welldefined criteria • Service awards Development and Career Opportunity • Important for advancement within the structure Work-Life • Not highly valued – slow to adopt 29 How is Success Measured Hierarchy culture • • • • • Retention (5%) Employee engagement scores (1%) Ability to recruit (1%) Cost (1%) Customer feedback (1%) Cameron and Quinn, 2006 30 Adhocracy Culture • Dynamic, entrepreneurial • Leader: innovator, visionary, entrepreneur • Value: innovation, agility, transformation • Innovativeness, vision and new resources Cameron and Quinn, 2006 31 Total Rewards Major Themes Adhocracy culture • Pay-program attributes – Pay above market levels – Alignment with future business/growth strategy • Benefits – Retirement – Education assistance • Work-life balance • Respect for employees 32 How is Success Measured Adhocracy culture • Company performance – 50% • Cost – 50% 33 Adhocracy Culture Total Rewards Considerations Rewards Emphasis • Attract creative individuals who can take innovation to next level Base Pay • Above market based on individual talent • Skill-based pay a consideration Bonus • Individual/company performance • Patents/innovation Benefits • Flexible and latest innovations Performance and Recognition • Support innovation • System encourages mistakes • Punishes inactivity • Recognize and celebrate success Development and Career Opportunity • Symposiums and forums • Tools, technology, and systems to support individual important Work-Life • Flexibility is important 34 Questions 35