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Balancing salary attraction, affordability, sustainability

Opinion
Conversely, employees who perceive their pay as below market may disengage, impacting their performance and overall team dynamics.

Salary competitiveness plays a critical role in an organisation's ability to attract, retain, and motivate top talent. The compensation offered by a company is often the first tangible indicator of its value proposition to prospective employees. However, achieving salary competitiveness requires a balance between offering attractive pay rates and ensuring the company's financial health and long-term sustainability. This article explores why salary competitiveness is essential and how organisations can strike an optimal balance between competitiveness, affordability, and sustainability.

Importance of competitiveness

Attracting top talent: In many industries, highly-skilled professionals are increasingly in demand, and candidates often have multiple job offers to consider. Competitive salaries serve as a compelling differentiator, signaling that an organisation values its people and is willing to invest in them. Without competitive salaries, companies risk losing top talent to competitors that are willing to pay more.

Retention of high performers: Offering market-competitive salaries is not just about recruitment—it is about retention. Employee turnover due to dissatisfaction with pay can disrupt workflows, decrease team morale, and cost the company in recruitment, training, and lost productivity. Employees who feel adequately compensated are generally more motivated and less likely to seek opportunities elsewhere.

Employee motivation and productivity: A fair and competitive salary can significantly impact an employee’s motivation. When employees feel they are being compensated in line with their skills, experience, and contributions, it boosts their sense of worth, leading to higher productivity. Conversely, employees who perceive their pay as below market may disengage, impacting their performance and overall team dynamics.

Company reputation and employer brand: A reputation for offering competitive salaries enhances an organisation’s employer brand, making it easier to attract skilled professionals. Companies that are known for fair compensation are more likely to be perceived as desirable employers, even by passive candidates who may be open to joining if approached.

Balancing salary competitiveness with affordability: While competitive salaries are essential, affordability is a crucial aspect that companies cannot ignore. Offering unsustainable salary levels may lead to short-term gains in talent acquisition but can place significant strain on an organisation’s financial resources over time. This balance can be achieved through a few strategies:

Salary benchmarking and market analysis: Regularly benchmarking salaries against industry standards helps organisations stay competitive without overpaying. By analysing market data, companies can offer attractive salaries that align with their industry, ensuring they are neither undercutting nor excessively outspending competitors.

Variable pay components: Introducing performance-based pay elements, such as bonuses or commissions, allows organisations to reward high-performing employees without significantly impacting fixed costs. Variable pay ensures that salary levels are aligned with individual performance and company success, offering financial flexibility.

Tiered compensation models: Not all roles within an organisation carry the same market value. A tiered approach allows companies to allocate higher compensation budgets to critical roles while keeping others at market-appropriate levels. This approach maintains overall competitiveness without placing undue financial strain on the organisation.

Cost of living and local market adjustments: Compensation should be adjusted according to the cost of living and prevailing wage levels in various sectors. By tailoring salaries based on sectors, companies can offer competitive packages that are both fair and financially viable.

Ensuring long-term salary sustainability: The final layer of salary competitiveness is sustainability, which ensures that compensation practices can be maintained in the long run without jeopardising the organisation’s financial stability.

Strategies for achieving

Many employees value non-monetary benefits as much as if not more than, their base salary. Benefits such as healthcare, retirement plans, professional development, and flexible work arrangements can enhance the overall compensation package, allowing companies to remain competitive while managing salary costs.

Internal salary bands and pay equity: Developing clear internal salary bands based on role, experience, and performance level helps ensure pay consistency and equity across the organisation. Transparency in pay bands not only improves employee satisfaction but also prevents “pay creep,” where salaries become disproportionately high due to inconsistent raises or recruitment pressures.

Regular reviews and adjustments: Salary competitiveness is not a “set it and forget it” endeavour. Organisations must regularly review compensation data and adjust pay scales to remain in line with market changes, inflation, and the company’s financial performance. Proactive adjustments help manage salary costs over time, allowing for smooth scaling of compensation in line with growth.

Employee engagement and retention strategies: Investing in employee engagement, career growth, and development can enhance retention without solely relying on high salaries. Engaged employees who see a future with the company may place less emphasis on salary alone, allowing organisations to maintain manageable salary levels without sacrificing talent retention.

The intersection

While it may seem challenging to strike a balance between salary competitiveness, affordability, and sustainability, a strategic approach allows organisations to align all three. 

Thoughtful compensation practices, combined with transparent communication about company values, performance expectations, and growth opportunities, can reinforce a competitive salary strategy that remains affordable and sustainable.

Organisations that successfully balance these elements create a virtuous cycle: competitive salaries attract top talent, strong performance drives profitability, and sustainable financial practices ensure the longevity of competitive compensation. By thoughtfully addressing salary competitiveness, organisations can foster a resilient workforce and achieve sustainable growth.

Nguwi is an occupational psychologist, data scientist, speaker and managing consultant at Industrial Psychology Consultants (Pvt) Ltd, a management and HR consulting firm. https://www.linkedin.com/in/memorynguwi/ Phone +263 24 248 1 946-48/ 2290 0276, cell number +263 772 356 361 or e-mail: mnguwi@ipcconsultants.com or visit ipcconsultants.com.

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