Job evaluation – how relevant is it today?
Job evaluation, the process used to determine the relative worth of a job to an organisation, has been with us for most of the 20th Century. While it has sometimes fallen out of favour, today in 2007 55% of employers in the UK continue to use job evaluation according to the latest CIPD Reward Management survey which covers 1 million employees’. In a world where employers place an increasingly high value on personal contribution, what accounts for the popularity of job evaluation? Equal pay considerations has become one of the key reasons for using job evaluation, as the results of the 2007 e-reward survey on job evaluation shows, where 86% of organsiations use analytical schemes. It is clear that such analytical schemes, typically Points Rating such as Hay job evaluation or Factor Comparison; which break the job into their component parts, provide a greater defence on equal pay challenges than non analytical schemes. The external market continues to play a primary role in determining pay levels and annual awards. However evidence for the 2007 CIPD survey shows that job evaluation is typically the second most important factor to manage internal pay relativities. Of course, it is easy to forget that, job evaluation often provides the building blocks to establish pay and grading structures within larger organisations, including for example, the NHS Agenda for Change Modernisation programme. Within the public and voluntary sector which account for the largest users of job evaluation, this is often seen as vital to ensure that a fair pay system operates which may include job evaluation committees with trades union or employees as part of the panel. Any form of job evaluation relies on job analysis which, as a minimum, requires current job descriptions, to provide a basis for evaluating jobs. While the analysis process can include questionnaires, interviews etc, there needs to be sufficient information to make qualitative and quantitative assessments of the selected job factors that make up the job being evaluated. Take a look at the Tips section below on what are the Golden Rules that need to form part of your job evaluation scheme?
|