REWARD FOR PERFORMANCE AND CONTRIBUTION

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5HR03
REWARD FOR PERFORMANCE
AND CONTRIBUTION

PART 1: LEARNING – LEARNING JOURNAL
Let’s look at what we have noted in the Learning Journal:
1. What is your understanding of Reward?
2. What is a specific area of reward that interests you?
3. How will you apply this area of reward to your role?
2
AIMS 1. To explore how internal and external business factors
influence reward strategies and policies, the financial drivers
of the organisation and the impact of reward costs.
2. To consider the importance of the role of people practice in
supporting managers to make robust and professional reward
judgements and the impact of rewarding performance.
3. To analyse the potential cost to the organisation if this is
poorly managed, and the tools and interventions required to
mitigate this risk.
4. To apply theory in practice – embed your learning in the
context of your role.
3
LEARNING OUTCOMES
LO 1: Understand the impact of reward approaches and packages.
1
1.1 Evaluate the principles of reward and its importance to organisational
culture and performance management.
1.2 Explain how policy initiatives and practices are implemented.
1.3 Explain how people and organisational performance can impact on the
approach to reward.
1.4 Compare the different types of benefits offered by organisations and the
merits of each.
1.5 Assess the contribution of extrinsic and intrinsic rewards to improving
employee contribution and sustained organisational performance.
4
LEARNING OUTCOMES
LO2: Be able to develop insight from benchmarking data to inform
reward approaches.
2
2.1 Assess the business context of the reward environment.
2.2 Evaluate the most appropriate ways in which benchmarking data can be
gathered and measured to develop insight.
2.3 Develop organisational reward packages and approaches based on insight.
2.4 Explain the legislative requirements that impact reward practice.
5
LEARNING OUTCOMES
LO 3: Understand the role of people professionals in supporting line
managers to make reward decisions.
3
3.1 Assess different approaches to performance management.
3.2 Review the role of people practice in supporting line managers to make
consistent and appropriate reward judgements.
3.3 Explain how line managers make reward judgements based on
organisational approaches to reward.
6
DAY
1
7
ASSESSMENT SCENARIO
1. The board at GA Pensions has decided to undertake a review of its
reward strategies across the whole company. It is aware that the way
rewards are currently being implemented is
fragmented (the Sales
Department qualifies for bonuses but the People Function does not)
and is causing
dissatisfaction amongst employees, affecting business
and employee performance outcomes
.
2. In your role as Reward Advisor, the board has asked you to provide a
report that gives it an understanding of the context and approaches
to reward and how these might influence a range of organisational
and psychological factors
. It also needs you to clarify the role that
people professionals play in supporting line managers to make
reward decisions.
8
TASK
ONE
REPORT –
CASE STUDY
HARVARD
REFERENCING
(MANDATORY)
WORD COUNT
2600 WORDS
(+ / – 10%)
FOCUS ON THE COMMAND
VERBS
ASSESS, ADVISE
COMPARE, CHOOSE, DISCUSS,
EXPLAIN, EXAMINE, EVALUATE,
IDENTIFY, SUMMARISE, ETC.
9
LEARNING OUTCOME
Understand the impact of reward approaches and
1 packages.
10
A.C.1.1
Evaluate the principles
of reward and its
importance to
organisational culture
and performance
management
EVALUATE WHY THESE PRINCIPLES OF REWARD ARE IMPORTANT
TO GA PENSIONS’ ORGANISATIONAL CULTURE – WHAT IMPACT DO
THEY HAVE?
IDENTIFY 3 KEY PRINCIPLES OF REWARD (E.G. FAIRNESS; EQUITY;
TRANSPARENCY ETC.)
EVALUATE WHY THESE PRINCIPLES OF REWARD ARE IMPORTANT
TO GA PENSIONS’ PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT- WHAT IMPACT
DO THEY HAVE?
APPROX.
300 WORDS
11
REWARD DEFINED
Reward is defined as: ‘’all financial provisions made to employees, including
cash pay, and the wider benefits package (such as pensions or private
medical insurance). It can also include wider provisions for employees, with
the term ‘total reward’ sometimes used to encompass non-pay benefits,
such as flexible working opportunities.’’ CIPD (2022)
Remuneration – Reward – Wider benefits package
Total Reward – Financial + Non-Financial + Psychological
Intrinsic – Psychological – Meaningful work and good performance
Extrinsic – Tangible and visible in exchange for performance – Monetary
12
LET’S REFLECT
• Write down 3 key principles of reward that
are most important to you
• Justify each
• Does your organisation’s reward policy
reflect these principles?
• Why or why not?
13
PRINCIPLES OF REWARD
Reward principles are broad statements which shape how a
company pays its employees and how to reward them for
on-target or above-target performance. They define what a
company pays its employees and why.
• Fairness
• Consistency and transparency
• Promoting a culture of trust
• Balancing internal fairness with external market rates
• Integrating reward with business objectives
14
IMPORTANCE OF REWARD PRINCIPLES TO ORGANISATIONAL CULTURE AND
PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
• Reward should be aligned with the organisational context and culture, relative to the external market environment.
• A good reward system aims to motivate employees to work harder, and align their goals with those of the organisation
they work for.
• Supports the organisation maintain a balance between providing market competitive wages to attract and retain
talented people.
Fairness – merit-based pay ensures employees know they will be paid for performance, experience etc
Consistency and transparency – no hidden agendas
Promoting a culture of trust – Clarity of communication
Balancing internal fairness with external market rates – Are we in line with the market or competitive
enough?
Integrating reward with business objectives – impact everything from employee wellbeing and engagement,
through to the productivity of your workforce and staff retention.
• Stimulating performance by rewarding for value created
• Link to employee engagement – engaging employees to drive performance.
• Reinforcement Theory – cause and effect
15
IMPACT OF LEGISLATION
• UK Equality Act 2010
• Principles:
• Equal pay for equal work
• Same pay for jobs of equal value
• Anti-discrimination
• Nationals vs. Expats
• Regional legislation
16
A.C.1.1 – PRACTICAL – FLIP CHART DISCUSSION
EVALUATE WHY THESE PRINCIPLES OF REWARD ARE IMPORTANT
TO GA PENSIONS’ ORGANISATIONAL CULTURE – WHAT IMPACT DO
THEY HAVE?
IDENTIFY 3 KEY PRINCIPLES OF REWARD (E.G. FAIRNESS; EQUITY;
TRANSPARENCY ETC.)
EVALUATE WHY THESE PRINCIPLES OF REWARD ARE IMPORTANT
TO GA PENSIONS’ PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT- WHAT IMPACT
DO THEY HAVE?
You have a new joiner in your team. They have asked for your guidance on the principle of
reward, their importance to organisational culture and performance management. Provide an
overview on the following:
17
A.C.1.2
Explain how Policy
Initiatives and Practices
are implemented
EXPLAIN HOW GA PENSIONS COULD PUT THIS REWARD POLICY
INTO PRACTICE. HOW IS IT IMPLEMENTED?
EXPLAIN ONE EXAMPLE OF A REWARD POLICY
SUMMARISE THE KEY STEPS: WHO IS INVOLVED; THE ROLE OF LINE
MANAGERS; CONSULTING EMPLOYEES TO INFLUENCE THE DESIGN;
INTEGRATING THE REWARD POLICY WITH OTHER PEOPLE PRACTICES;
EVALUATING THE SUCCESS OF THE POLICY AND HOW IT CAN BE KEPT
UP TO DATE.
APPROX.
300 WORDS
18
WHAT’S A REWARD POLICY?
A documented set of guidance that:
Itemises what is included in the reward system i.e. monetary and nonmonetary (extrinsic – linked to the economic wellbeing of the employees
Details on how the pay system is graded
How this fits with accepted best practice across the industry/sector (perhaps
referring to a salary survey)
Measures/statement avoiding discrimination on the grounds of protected
characteristics (UK Equality Act 2010)
Takes into account the fit between the employee and the role that they
perform
Emphasises and itemised intrinsic reward e.g. recognition
19
REWARD POLICY: PURPOSE
To ensure that the organisation is able to recruit and retain sufficient
number of employees with the right skills.
To motivate and engage employees.
Increase productivity.
To comply with legal regulations.
Appropriate acknowledgement and appreciation of employees’ efforts
in a fair and timely manner.
Employees are acknowledged for their performance in intrinsic or
extrinsic ways.
ACCA Global (n.d.)
20
EXAMPLES OF REWARD POLICIES
Flexi-working
You have control over your start and end work times within the
scope of regular office hours. The only requirement is you must
be in the office during core hours.
Over-time
All salaried employees now receive extra pay for working more
than forty hours per week.
Vacation and other time off
How do reward policies inform reward decisions?
How are reward policies implemented to manage people successfully?
21
HOW TO CREATE A REWARD POLICY
Step 1: Assess the Current System in the
Workplace
Step 2: Have a Predetermined Goal Before
You Start
Step 3: Research Types of Rewards and
Recognition for Employees
Step 4: Implement and Optimise the
Companywide Policy
22
KEY STEPS TO CREATING A REWARD PROGRAM
Who should be involved?
The role of line managers
Consulting employees to influence the design
Integrating the reward policy with other people practices
Evaluating the success of the policy and how it can be kept up to date
23
A.C.1.2 PRACTICAL ACTIVITY – DESIGN A REWARD POLICY
INCLUDE KEY ELEMENTS TO BE INCLUDED BASED ON YOUR ORGANISATION,
EMPLOYEES, LEGISLATION AND REGIONAL CONTEXT
OUTLINE A REWARD POLICY FOR YOUR ORGANISATION
SUMMARISE THE KEY STEPS: WHO IS INVOLVED IN THE DESIGN (STAKEHOLDERS); THE
ROLE OF LINE MANAGERS; CONSULTING EMPLOYEES TO INFLUENCE THE DESIGN;
INTEGRATING THE REWARD POLICY WITH OTHER PEOPLE PRACTICES; EVALUATING
THE SUCCESS
HOW WOULD THIS BE PUT INTO PRACTICE?
As a reward specialist, you have been asked to:
24
A.C.1.3
Explain how people and
organisational
performance can
impact on the approach
to reward
BRIEFLY EXPLAIN WHAT ORGANISATIONAL PERFORMANCE IS AND
HOW YOU CAN MEASURE IT
BRIEFLY EXPLAIN WHAT PEOPLE PERFORMANCE IS AND HOW YOU
CAN MEASURE IT
EXPLAIN HOW SPECIFIC ISSUES WITH PEOPLE PERFORMANCE COULD
IMPACT GA PENSIONS’ DECISIONS ABOUT WHICH REWARD
APPROACHES TO TAKE? (E.G. IF YOUR EMPLOYEES HAD HIGH
ABSENTEEISM, WHAT REWARD APPROACHES COULD HELP ADDRESS
THIS?)
APPROX.
250 WORDS
EXPLAIN HOW SPECIFIC ISSUES WITH ORGANISATIONAL PERFORMANCE
COULD IMPACT GA PENSIONS’ DECISIONS ABOUT WHICH REWARD
APPROACHES TO TAKE? (E.G. IF THE ORGANISATION HAS LOW
PRODUCTIVITY, WHAT REWARD APPROACHES COULD HELP ADDRESS
THIS?)
25
PEOPLE PERFORMANCE DEFINED AND WHY DO WE
MEASURE
People Performance relates to how the individual employee is motivated,
incentivised and reviewed in terms of their performance.
Why do we measure?
Measuring employee performance helps assess those goals by providing insight into where
someone is doing well and could be stretched and areas that are not a strength yet.
Based on performance feedback, self-reflection, and business needs, employees should set their
own goals – not the manager or the organisation.
26
PEOPLE PERFORMANCE: HOW DO WE MEASURE?
A structured approach, performance can be measured as
follows:
Step 1: Clearly define, and ensure all employees understand, the true
purpose of measurement.
Step 2: Increase employee buy-in to measuring performance and
ownership of KPIs
Step 3: Remove KPIs and performance measures from employee
performance appraisals.
Step 4: Upgrade your definition of accountability for performance.
Step 5: Focus teams on measuring their impact on business
performance and strategy execution.
27
ORGANISATIONAL PERFORMANCE: DEFINED AND WHY DO
WE MEASURE?
Organisational performance is the ability of an organisation to reach its goals
and optimise results
. In today’s workforce, organisational performance can be
defined as an organisation’s ability to achieve goals in a state of constant
change.
Organisational performance means the actual output or results of an organisation as measured against its
intended outputs (or goals and objectives).
Why do we measure?
Measuring organisational performance is an essential part of strategic decision-making.
Understanding organisational performance helps leaders at every level to set targets, track their
impact, and provide accountability to stakeholders.
28
ORGANISATIONAL PERFORMANCE: WHAT DO WE
MEASURE?
Three basic measures of organisational performance: an essential tool for
strategic decision-making. Measures at different levels are necessary.
Individual Level Performance – shows employee contribution to the
organisation’s success
Team-Level Performance – Helping teams establish effective
measurements will provide them with the information they need to
improve their performance
Organisation-Level Performance – Better understand how well their
organisations are competing in the market, as well as future predicted
results.
29
ORGANISATIONAL
PERFORMANCE –
HOW DO WE MEASURE?
Organisational performance includes three specific areas of firm outcomes:
Financial performance (profits, return on assets, return on investment, etc)
Product market performance (sales, market share, etc)
Shareholder return (total shareholder return, economic value added, etc)
30
HOW SPECIFIC ISSUES WITH PEOPLE PERFORMANCE IMPACT ORGANISATIONAL DECISIONS &
WHICH REWARD APPROACHES TO TAKE
Employee behaviour
Quality and quantity of work – absence of role clarity
Unclear or unrealistic expectations
Timeliness of the output
Current Knowledge, Skills, Abilities / capability
Absenteeism
Presenteeism
Lack of:
Employee voice, commitment and motivation
Feedback mechanisms, awareness, and autonomy
Training and development, and empowerment
Decreased productivity
Resistance to change
31
HOW SPECIFIC ISSUES WITH ORGANISATIONAL PERFORMANCE IMPACT ORGANISATIONAL
DECISIONS ON WHICH REWARD APPROACHES TO TAKE
Toxic Culture
Increased labour turnover
Difficulty blending different personalities into a unified team
Lack of feedback mechanisms, awareness, empowerment, autonomy and
commitment
Low productivity
Lack of innovation
Shortage of the right talent, skills and resources
Inadequate rewards and recognition
Inability to provide coaching and mentoring
Failure to develop key competencies and behaviours
32
A.C.1.3 – PRACTICAL – FLIP CHART DISCUSSION
HOW DO COMPANIES USE REWARDS STRATEGIES TO INFLUENCE
EMPLOYEE PERFORMANCE AND MOTIVATION?
HOW DO PEOPLE AND ORGANISATIONAL PERFORMANCE IMPACT
ITS APPROACH TO REWARDS BOTH POSITIVELY AND NEGATIVELY?
In your role as an internal people consultant, you have been asked by the reward team to outline the
following:
33
A.C.1.4
Compare two different
types of benefits
offered by organisations
and the merits of each
IDENTIFY ONE FINANCIAL BENEFIT THAT GA PENSIONS COULD
OFFER AS PART OF THEIR REWARD STRATEGY
EXPLAIN WHAT A BENEFIT IS
IDENTIFY ONE NON-FINANCIAL BENEFIT THAT GA PENSIONS COULD
OFFER AS PART OF THEIR REWARD STRATEGY
APPROX.
250 WORDS
IDENTIFY THE MERITS AND DOWNSIDES OF EACH BENEFIT
COMPARE THEM – WHAT ARE THEIR SIMILARITIES AND
DIFFERENCES
A TABLE IS A GOOD FORMAT FOR COMPARISON
34
BENEFITS: DEFINED
Benefits are a form of non-cash compensation, which your employer usually
states in your contract. Benefits aren’t linked to employee performance,
unlike Rewards.
Examples:
Base pay (either a salary or hourly wage rate)
Access to healthcare / health insurance
Dental and vision benefits
Retirement plans and/or contributions
Life insurance
Paid time off (PTO)
Stock options (if applicable)
What benefits are offered in your organisation?
35

FINANCIAL BENEFITS
A benefit, direct or indirect, which is either money or has a monetary
value.
(Anything that is a cost the organisation)
NON-FINANCIAL BENEFITS
Employee rewards are the non-cash benefits that organisations provide
to their employees.
(Anything that is NOT a cost to the organisation)
Health insurance cover Flexible working
Bonuses Job enrichment
Retirement plans Well-being events / workshops
Education costs Empowerment
Paid leaves Employee recognition
Commissions Mentorship programs
Life insurance Birthday off
Disability insurance Employee of the month / quarter
Individual or company-wide performance awards Recognition on social media
Company equipment (including vehicles, laptops, phones) Give employees chance to show appreciation for each other
Paid time off Allow time for volunteer work
Tutition assistance / reimbursement Give employees time to work on their own projects
Staff loans Training
Others? Others?

 

36

BENEFITS OF FINANCIAL BENEFITS
Advantages
Attract and retain top talent
Boost morale, energy and productivity
Healthy workers = happy workers
It can save the employee and employer money
Helps shape the culture of the organisation
Others?
Disadvantages
Rising costs
Administrative costs
May not appeal to all employees
Others?
37
BENEFITS OF NON-FINANCIAL BENEFITS
Advantages
Attract and retain top talent
Boost morale, energy and productivity
Healthy workers = happy workers
Improves engagement
Strengthens the Employee Value Proposition (EVP)
Helps shape the culture of the organisation
Others?
Disadvantages
Administrative costs
May not appeal to all employees
Cultural expectations may not be met
Demotivation for employees who may not be happy with the benefits being offered
Others?
38
CONSIDERATIONS IN PLANNING BENEFITS
Budgets – can the organisation pay?
Culture – what’s the organisational culture?
Employee preferences – diversity?
Employee Value Proposition (EVP) – will they help attract potential talent?
Business case for the proposed benefits and advantages – is it worth it? ROI / ROE?
Facilitate motivation and increased performance – will these benefits help?
Others?
39
A.C.1.4 – PRACTICAL – SAMPLE CASE STUDY – RECKITT
HOW DID THINKING
BEYOND FINANCIAL
INCENTIVES HELP
RECKITT?
WERE THERE ANY OTHER
ALTERNATIVES?
WHAT
RECOMMENDATIONS
WOULD YOU MAKE TO
STRENGTHEN THE REWARD
STRATEGY?
(This is how you need to answer your assessment case
study – GA Pensions)
40
A.C.1.5
Assess the contribution of
extrinsic and intrinsic
rewards to improving
employee contribution
and sustained
organisational
performance.
EXPLAIN THE LINK BETWEEN EXTRINSIC REWARD AND EMPLOYEE
CONTRIBUTION
DEFINE ‘EXTRINSIC’ REWARDS
EXPLAIN HOW BOTH INTRINSIC AND EXTRINSIC REWARDS COULD
SUPPORT ORGANISATIONAL PERFORMANCE FOR GA
APPROX.
300 WORDS
DEFINE ‘INTRINSIC’ REWARDS
EXPLAIN THE LINK BETWEEN INTRINSIC REWARD AND EMPLOYEE
CONTRIBUTION
41
EXTRINSIC AND INTRINSIC REWARDS
Extrinsic Rewards: usually financial or tangible rewards given to employees, such
as pay raises, bonuses, and benefits. They are extrinsic because they are external
to completing the work itself and are controlled by people other than the
employee – short -term
Intrinsic Rewards: usually non-financial or intangible rewards – the sense of
satisfaction that an employee feels when performing a specific task. Intrinsic
rewards are especially effective when one-off tasks are being completed,
typically which are considered to be unusually challenging for an employee –
long-term (behaviour)
42
EXTRINSIC AND INTRINSIC REWARD: LINK TO EMPLOYEE
CONTRIBUTION
What factors need to be considered balancing both types of rewards?
Extrinsic:
Budgets
Industry standards
Competitive
Intrinsic:
Employee Value Proposition (EVP)
Employee retention
Organisational culture
Autonomy
Social interaction
Sense of satisfaction and achievement
Highlights confidence and improves performance
Improves organisational performance
Essential to sustained behaviour change
43
EXTRINSIC AND INTRINSIC REWARD: HOW THEY SUPPORT
ORGANISATIONAL PERFORMANCE
Extrinsic:
Motivates and inspires employees based on financial rewards
Directly proportionate to employee performance in most cases
Boosts the employees’ performance through good working condition, noble
policies, security and reliable relations among peers
Others?
Intrinsic:
Strengthens the employer brand and EVP
Improves organisational performance
Higher productivity
Others?
44
A.C.1.5 – PRACTICAL – MULTIPLE CHOICE
Which of the following is an example of extrinsic motivation? Discuss.
The passion for doing anything in the absence of any compulsion or reward is __________?
Justify.
Do organisations need a balance between extrinsic and intrinsic rewards? Justify.
NEED FOR
ACHIEVEMENT LEVEL OF ASPIRATION ANXIETY REWARD
NEED FOR
ACHIEVEMENT LEVEL OF ASPIRATION ANXIETY REWARD
TRUE FALSE
45
DAY
2
46
RECAP OF DAY 1
What are rewards?
What are principles of rewards?
What is a reward policy? Examples?
What are people performance and organisational performance?
What are benefits – Financial and Non-financial?
What are extrinsic and intrinsic rewards?
Look at the assignment writing guide on the HUB. Against each AC, put a tick on
any task that you can answer, and highlight the ones you need clarity on. There
are additional resources on the HUB can help you with that
47
LEARNING OUTCOME
Be able to develop insight from benchmarking data
2 to inform reward approaches.
48
A.C.2.1
Assess the business
context of the reward
environment
APPROX.
400 WORDS
ASSESS HOW THESE ELEMENTS IMPACT ON GA PENSIONS’ REWARD
DECISIONS (E.G. HOW WOULD RECENT LEGISLATION ON EQUALITY
IMPACT REWARD STRATEGY?)
PICK 3 ELEMENTS OF A PESTLE ANALYSIS AND RELATE THESE TO THE
REWARD ENVIRONMENT. (E.G. LEGAL, ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL)
YOU COULD CONSIDER EQUALITY LEGISLATION; REGIONAL
DIFFERENCES IN PAY; LABOUR FORCE TRENDS, PAY TRENDS, THE
ECONOMY; THE POLITICAL ENVIRONMENT ETC.
49
PESTLE ANALYSIS
What is a PESTLE analysis?
A PESTLE analysis studies the key
external factors (Political, Economic,
Sociological, Technological, Legal and
Environmental) that influence an
organisation.
How is it used?
It can be used in a range of different
scenarios, and can guide people
professionals and senior managers in
strategic decision-making.
CIPD (2021)
POLITICAL
Policies &
Laws
Stability
Corruption
LEGAL
Antitrust
Labour
Copyright
Data
Protection
Health &
Safety
ECONOMIC
Growth
Inflation
Interest
Rates
Employmen
t
HH Income
SOCIAL
Population
Ageing
Career
Views
Lifestyle
Cultural
Barrier
TECH
Tech
Incentives
Innovation
Automation
R&D Activity
ENVIRONMENT
Climate
Change
Ethical
Recycling &
Disposal
Sustainabilit
y
PESTLE
50
HOW DOES THE PESTLE ANALYSIS RELATE TO THE REWARD
ENVIRONMENT?
Governs how much you can give your employees as rewards
and how often you can introduce rewards.
Legislative and regulatory compliance
Competitiveness of reward
Shortage of skills / tight labour market – availability of talent
Demographics
Income distribution
Environmental considerations
Political complexities and alliances
Budgets – ability to pay
Regional context
Industry trends
51
LEGISLATION UK EQUALITY ACT 2010
The Equality Act legally protects people from discrimination in the workplace and in wider society.
Protects people from discrimination, harassment and victimisation – gov.uk (2015)
52
A.C.2.1 – PRACTICAL ACTIVITY – PESTLE ANALYSIS
Pick any 3 relevant elements of the PESTLE analysis and
relate these to the reward environment.
Assess how these elements impact on your organisation’s
reward decisions (e.g. how would recent legislation on
equality impact reward strategy?)
You could consider equality legislation; regional differences
in pay; labour force trends, pay trends, the economy; the
political environment etc.
Do any of the PESTLE elements link to GA Pensions in their
current situation?
53
A.C.2.2
Evaluate the most
appropriate ways in
which benchmarking data
can be gathered and
measured to develop
insight
EXPLAIN WHAT IS MEANT BY BENCHMARKING
THIS TASK IS ABOUT BENCHMARKING AS THE BASIS FOR PLANNING
A REWARD STRATEGY
PROVIDE A CONCLUSION – WHICH METHOD WOULD BE THE MOST
USEFUL FOR GA PENSIONS TO DEVELOP INSIGHT INTO THEIR REWARD
STRATEGY?
APPROX.
400 WORDS
IDENTIFY 3 DIFFERENT WAYS IN WHICH GA PENSIONS CAN GATHER
BENCHMARKING DATA. (E.G. PUBLISHED DATA, PAY CLUBS, SPECIAL
SURVEYS, REWARD CONSULTANTS ETC.)
EVALUATE EACH EXAMPLE – WHAT ARE THEIR PROS AND CONS?
54
BENCHMARKING DEFINED AND ITS IMPORTANCE
Benchmarking is the process of gathering information from outside an organisation in relation to benefits and
pay and using this data to compare with remuneration and reward packages offered by others in the market for
the same role.
Benchmarking matches internal jobs with market pay data, by using a salary survey aiming to identify the
market pay rate for each position.
It’s a vital component of your organisation’s talent management strategy and contributes to your employee
engagement strategy.
Ensuring competitiveness with the market rate
Alignment with the employment market
Strengthening the Employer Brand
Compliance with legal requirements
Pay ‘Efficiency’ is the level of wages paid to workers above the minimum wage to retain a skilled and
efficient workforce
Ensuring equity and fairness
Avoid losing talent to the competition
55
HOW IS DATA GATHERED FOR BENCHMARKING?
Networking
Formal interviews with potential candidates
Questionnaires/surveys – profession specific
Consultants – Korn Ferry, Hay Group, Towers Watson
Published data
Pay clubs
Pros and cons?
Effectiveness?
56
Your CEO has asked to review the current reward strategy and wants a
report on the short presentation on the following:
Identify 3 different ways in which your organisation can gather
benchmarking data. (e.g. published data; pay clubs; special surveys;
reward consultants etc.)
Evaluate each example – what are their pros and cons?
Provide a conclusion – which method would be the most useful for
your organisation to develop insight into your reward strategy
Which method is most relevant to GA Pensions?
A.C.2.2 – PRACTICAL – CREATING A BUSINESS CASE
57
A.C.2.3
Explain how
organisations use
insight to develop
reward packages and
approaches
EXPLAIN HOW YOU COULD DEVELOP AN ORGANISATIONAL REWARD
PACKAGE BASED ON THE INFORMATION GATHERED AS PART OF YOUR
PESTLE ANALYSIS IN AC 2.1
THIS SECTION FOCUSES ON HOW YOU WOULD MAKE SENSE OF THE DATA
TO INFORM THE CREATION OF A REWARD STRATEGY
APPROX.
400 WORDS
WHAT WOULD GA PENSIONS NEED TO CONSIDER WHEN DEVELOPING A
REWARD STRATEGY? YOU NEED TO INCLUDE JOB EVALUATION, GRADE AND
PAY STRUCTURES, ENSURING FAIRNESS OF REWARD AND CORRECT
LEVELLING OF JOBS WITHIN YOUR NARRATIVE
PROVIDE A CLEAR CONCLUSION. HOW DO THESE FACTORS HELP TO
DEVELOP A STRONG REWARD PACKAGE OR APPROACH?
58
HOW IS A REWARD PACKAGE BUILT BASED ON THE PESTLE
ANALYSIS
Remember these are external factors
Understand the impact of each factor and how it links to the creation of a
reward package
The reward package must be suitable to the regional and organisational
context
Job evaluation
Correct levelling of jobs/ job classification –
A system the People Function and People leaders use to define a job role,
develop career pathways and internal mobility processes, and create clear
levels or job hierarchies within an organisation.
Availability of budgets / organisational capability to pay
Prioritise from high importance to low importance
Ensure it’s fair and competitive
POLITICAL
LEGAL ECONOMIC
SOCIAL
TECH
ENVIRONMENT
PESTLE
59
Using the data from the PESTLE analysis used in AC
2.1, develop your organisational reward package.
What things would you need to consider when
developing the reward strategy
How would these factors help to develop a strong
reward package?
A.C.2.3 – PRACTICAL DEVELOP A REWARD PACKAGE
60
TASK
TWO
REPORT –
CASE STUDY
HARVARD
REFERENCING
(MANDATORY)
WORD COUNT
1300 WORDS
(+ / – 10%)
FOCUS ON THE COMMAND
VERBS
ASSESS, ADVISE
COMPARE, CHOOSE, DISCUSS,
EXPLAIN, EXAMINE, EVALUATE,
IDENTIFY, SUMMARISE, ETC.
61
A.C.2.4
Explain the legislative
requirements that
impact reward practice
APPROX.
300 WORDS
YOU MUST PROVIDE THE FULL NAME AND TITLE OF EACH PIECE OF
LEGISLATION. ENSURE YOU INCLUDE YOUR SOURCE SHORT
REFERENCES
IDENTIFY THE LEGAL REQUIREMENTS THAT MUST BE CONSIDERED
BY GA PENSIONS WHEN CREATING A REWARD STRATEGY. WE
EXPECT TO SEE 3 SPECIFIC EXAMPLES OF UK LEGISLATION SUCH AS
EQUAL PAY, MINIMUM WAGE, WORKING HOURS, PAID LEAVE, ETC
EXPLAIN HOW EACH OF THESE LEGISLATIVE REQUIREMENTS
IMPACT ON GA PENSIONS’ REWARD PRACTICE.
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LEGISLATION – UK EQUALITY ACT 2010
The Equality Act 2010 gives a woman the right to be paid the same as a man (and vice
versa) when carrying out:
Like work: two employees who are doing the same or broadly similar roles, or
Work rated as equivalent by analytical job evaluation study: this could be totally different jobs
which have been given the same rating as the result of an analytical job evaluation, or
Work of equal value: when there are two jobs that are very different, but the employee claims
that they require a similar level of skill and ability
Minimum Wage – The National Minimum Wage is the minimum pay per hour all workers are
entitled to
Paid Leave – Legal entitlement to 5.6 weeks’ paid holiday a year (known as statutory leave
entitlement or annual leave)
Working Hours – Capped at 48 hours maximum a week on average (gov.uk 2015)
What happens within your regional context?
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HOW DOES LEGISLATION IMPACT ORGANISATIONAL
REWARD PRACTICE?
Sets a minimum standard of pay for employees, which results in employers not
paying staff less than the stipulated standard
Organisations are subject to monetary penalties in case of any breaches
Ensures fairness, transparency and equity
Boosts organisational reputation
Supports talent attraction
Lends credibility to the organisation
Others?
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A.C.2.4 – PRACTICAL – PRESENTATION
YOU MUST PROVIDE THE FULL NAME AND TITLE OF EACH PIECE OF LEGISLATION. ENSURE YOU INCLUDE YOUR
SOURCE SHORT REFERENCES
IDENTIFY THE LEGAL REQUIREMENTS THAT MUST BE CONSIDERED BY YOUR ORGANISATION WHEN CREATING
A REWARD STRATEGY. WE EXPECT TO SEE 3 SPECIFIC EXAMPLES OF UK LEGISLATION SUCH AS EQUAL PAY,
MINIMUM WAGE, WORKING HOURS, PAID LEAVE, ETC
EXPLAIN HOW EACH OF THESE LEGISLATIVE REQUIREMENTS IMPACT ON YOUR
ORGANISATION’S REWARD PRACTICE.
EXPLAIN HOW EACH OF THESE LEGISLATIVE REQUIREMENTS IMPACT ON GA
PENSIONS’ REWARD PRACTICE
Your reward strategy is being revised and the legal team have expressed concerns that legal requirements
must be firmly covered in the new policy. Create a short presentation
outlining the following:
65
LEARNING OUTCOME
Understand the role of people professionals in supporting line
3 managers to make reward decisions.
66
A.C.3.1
Assess different
approaches to
performance
management
APPROX.
350 WORDS
ADVISE GA PENSIONS OF 3 SUITABLE APPROACHES THAT THEY
COULD USE TO MANAGE PERFORMANCE. (E.G. REVIEW MEETINGS;
DEVELOPING CAPABILITY THROUGH CONTINUOUS PROFESSIONAL
DEVELOPMENT (CPD), COACHING AND MENTORING; OBJECTIVESETTING, APPRAISAL PROCESS, 360- DEGREE FEEDBACK
DEFINE AND EXPLAIN WHAT THE PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
CYCLE IS. WHAT ARE ITS KEY STEPS?
ASSESS THE PROS AND CONS OF EACH
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PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT DEFINED
‘Performance management’ describes the attempt to maximise the value that
employees create. It aims to maintain and improve employees’ performance in
line with an organisation’s objectives. It’s a not a single activity, but rather a group
of practices that should be approached holistically. (CIPD, 2022)
Performance management is a set of processes and systems aimed at developing
employees, so they perform their job to the best of their ability. The goal is to
help employees build on skills that enable them to perform better in their roles,
reach their potential, and boost their success while also accomplishing the
strategic goals of the organisation.
Effective performance management establishes a continuous conversation
between employees, managers, and HR.
Academy to Innovate HR AIHR (n.d.)
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PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT PROCESS
The performance management
process is used
to communicate
organisational goals and objectives,
reinforce individual accountability for
meeting those goals, and track and
evaluate individual and
organisational performance results.
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PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
APPROACHES
Review meetings
Developing capability through Continuous Professional
Development (CPD)
Coaching and mentoring
SMART objectives – setting
Appraisal process
360-degree feedback
Performance roadmaps
KPIs
Reward and recognition programs
Continuous feedback
70
Choose 3 suitable approaches that could be used to
manage performance.
Group 1 will discuss the benefits/pros
Group 2 will discuss the risks/cons
A.C.3.1 – PRACTICAL – DEBATE
71
A.C.3.2
Review the role of
people practice in
supporting line
managers to make
consistent and
appropriate reward
judgements
APPROX.
300 WORDS
PROVIDE 2 EXAMPLES OF HOW PEOPLE PROFESSIONALS COULD
SUPPORT GA PENSIONS’ LINE MANAGERS IN MAKING DECISIONS
ON REWARD
ADVISE GA PENSIONS AS TO WHY IS IT IMPORTANT FOR PEOPLE
PROFESSIONALS TO SUPPORT LINE MANAGERS IN THEIR REWARD
RELATED ACTIVITIES
WHY IS IT IMPORTANT THAT REWARD DECISIONS ARE CONSISTENT
AND APPROPRIATE?
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WHY PEOPLE PROFESSIONALS NEED TO SUPPORT LINE
MANAGERS IN REWARD RELATED ACTIVITIES
Support line managers and supervisors to have a constructive
conversations with employees regarding their performance.
Improves their performance and help to retain employees
Maintaining equity, fairness, consistency and transparency
Compliance with law
Ownership of extrinsic and intrinsic reward
Job evaluation
Promoting responsibility
Reporting requirements
73
HOW PEOPLE PROFESSIONALS SUPPORT LINE MANAGERS IN
REWARD RELATED ACTIVITIES
Provide leadership from the top: ensure that the line managers understand the overall reward strategy of the
company.
Provide systems support: technologies should be used to support line managers, for example, conducting pay
reviews.
Communicate and train: offer training and coaching and clear guidelines on the importance of communicating your
reward offer to staff, people management and how to have difficult conversations.
Ask for frequent feedback: ask line managers on what they think is attractive to staff – managers are a vital source
of information.
Brief: to provide insight and educate managers of up-to-date rewards data about both financial and non-financial
rewards – remote working, training, and development opportunities – encourage line managers to take ownership
of the process and to communicate the results to their subordinates.
Involve: develop ownership and commitment by involving line manages in the design and development of reward
management processes, for instance, through membership of working parties looking at a range of issues such as
performance measures, competencies, pay-banding and the appraisal system.
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WHY IS IT IMPORTANT FOR REWARD DECISIONS TO BE
APPROPRIATE AND CONSISTENT?
Reward distribution should be consistent and based on predetermined
policies
Increases productivity and motivation
Be ethical
Easy to administer
Comply with legislative regulations
75
As a People Professional, how would you support line
managers in your organisation in reward related
activities?
Identify and explain 3 examples
How will you ensure consistency and fairness?
Discuss the benefits and challenges
A.C.3.2 – PRACTICAL – GROUP DISCUSSION
As a people professional, you are a strategic partner for the business and line managers when making
reward-related decisions. As a [point of reflection, provide bullet points on:
76
A.C.3.3
Explain how line managers
make reward judgements
based on organisational
approaches to reward
APPROX.
350 WORDS
EXPLAIN HOW THESE APPROACHES HELP LINE MANAGERS TO MAKE
CONSISTENT AND FAIR REWARD JUDGEMENTS
IDENTIFY 3 ORGANISATIONAL APPROACHES THAT LINE MANAGERS
AT GA PENSION’S COULD USE TO MAKE REWARD JUDGEMENTS.
APPROACHES INCLUDE ETHICS AND ORGANISATIONAL VALUES;
SPECIFIC POLICIES; CAREER DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITIES; LINE
MANAGEMENT APPROACHES TO NON-FINANCIAL REWARDS (E.G.
WORK-LIFE BALANCE, RECOGNITION)
IDENTIFY 1 CHECK GA PENSIONS MIGHT USE TO ENSURE FAIRNESS
AND EQUITY IN LINE MANAGEMENT REWARD DECISION MAKING?
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APPROACHES USED BY LINE MANAGERS TOREWARD
PERFORMANCE
HOW DO THEY HELP MAKE CONSISTENT AND FAIR
REWARD JUDGEMENTS
Use of organisational policies Provides guidance
Performance Related Pay Reward based on merit and output
Evidence Based Judgement No discrimation / based on objectivity
Alignment with Organisational Values and Approach to Ethical Behaviour Value based decision making
Career Development Opportunities Encourages motivation and improves retention
Checks and balances the organisation might use to ensure fairness and
equity in line management reward decision-making
Avoids bias
Decisions about non-financial rewards such as work-life balance, working
conditions, work itself, job enrichment, development
Rewards are in line with industry norms and are seen as competitive

78
WHAT CHECKS MIGHT THE ORGANISATION USE
TO ENSURE FAIRNESS AND EQUITY IN LINE MANAGEMENT
REWARD DECISION MAKING?
Regular compensation reviews
Peer Reviews
Surveys
Audits
Training and resources for line managers to make informed and equitable
decisions.
Check for gender bias
Check for cultural bias
Review the relative impact on your employees
Understand industry compensation norms
Factor in cost-of-living differences
79
A.C.3.3 – PRACTICAL – MULTIPLE CHOICE
Fairness and equity in reward mean all employees are paid. Discuss.
Checks and balances in reward decisions. Discuss.
What approach can line managers use in reward decisions. Justify.
BEING PAID THE SAME BEING PAID ON WASTA
PERFORMANCE
BASED ON LENGTH OF
SERVICE
ARE
UNNECESSARY OPTIONAL CRUCIAL OVER-RATED
MICRO
MANAGEMENT EVIDENCE BASED JUDGEMENT SUBJECTIVITY LET PEOPLE FUNCTION DECIDE
80
RECAP OF DAY 2
How does the PESTLE analysis relate to the reward environment?
What does the UK Equality Act 2010 discuss?
What’s benchmarking and why is it important?
How is a reward package built based on the PESTLE analysis?
How does legislation impact organisational reward practice?
Discuss 5 performance management approaches?
Why and how do people management professionals need to support line managers with
reward related decisions?
Why is consistency and appropriateness important in reward related decisions?
What approaches do line managers use to reward performance? How do they help make
consistent and fair reward judgements?
What are some checks the organisation could use to ensure fairness and equity in line
management reward decision making?
Look at the assignment writing guide on the HUB. Against each AC, put a tick on any task that
you can answer, and highlight the ones you need clarity on
There are additional resources on the HUB can help you with that
81
QUESTIONS?
82
ASSESSMENT BRIEF
Pre-assignment activities
Assignment template
Explain theory and practical application
Research
‘Assessment Guidance’ document
‘Materials’
Harvard Referencing – minimum of 1/question
Structure
Spelling and grammar
Wordcount (+/- 10%)
Assignment writing guide on the HUB
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FINAL CHECKS
You must submit your assessments as a Word document. The Learner Assessment Brief will clearly explain the format you need to use. Is the
correct format used?
You should use black font for submission 1, red for new narrative in submission 2 and blue for new narrative in submission 3.
The CIPD Membership Number must be completed and included in the Learner Assessment Brief together with your name and Cohort
Number.
The ‘wet’ signature and date of submission must be included in every Learner Assessment Brief – you MUST add a new date for each
submission
Assessment Criteria Evidence Checklists should ideally be completed for every Learner Assessment Brief – just repeat the example already
given (do not put long references here)
Have you included both your long and short references? Are these in the right place? Please check the guidance on the learner platform as to
how to do Harvard referencing.
Have you checked your word count? You are allowed 10% + or 10% – the indicative word count.
Have you recorded your wordcount in the correct place in the LAB?
Have you made reference to the Case study if stated in the Learner Assessment brief? You should also try to use examples from your own
organisation to support your points where possible.
Have you shown wider reading, use of sources in each of your answers?
Have you used clear sub-headings linked to the elements of the task to help structure your work?
Have you added your submission dates to page 2? A new date should be added for each submission.

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