When you first look to purchase compensation surveys for your international population, it’s going to be a real wake-up call. For those accustomed to only US surveys you will find that the available data in many countries is more limited than what you’re accustomed to seeing, as are the number of companies involved. What won’t be reduced though is the expense. Quite the opposite. If you have multiple countries to deal with, your budget for credible compensation data will likely become a multiple of your US experience.
When I worked overseas my budget for compensation surveys was 3-4 times my previous US budget – and I only had to worry about Europe. What a shock that was – spending much more while receiving less.
Each country is a separate USA, a unique national entity having country-specific labor laws, employment regulations, tax structure, competitiveness challenges and variations of economic strength. For each you will need a country-specific survey to assess the local competitiveness of your employees.
International HR practitioners will need to adjust their thinking to react effectively in smaller countries, where the working population is limited and so is the number of survey participants. It will be difficult to slice data by geography, industry or employee segment, as the data points grow smaller and smaller with each criteria. For example, a well-regarded Mercer survey for the Netherlands showed 81 participating companies, while the US survey totaled 500.
Availability of locally-grown survey data is another challenge. I have tried to locate such sources, even those provided only in the local language, in order to create a greater “buy-in” sense from management, but with limited success. As a result even global companies with non-US headquarters tend to use the multi-national consulting firms.
Accessing International Resources
Should you require information for international compensation practices, below are a number of useful sources, each of which can be tapped via a Google search. Note: many of the non-US sources focus on limited employee segments or functional areas, which may limit their usefulness during a general search.
Should you only have a few positions (2-3) in a given country you can reduce costs through individual pricing, vs. the purchase of an entire survey. Having more than a few positions though, would render this tactic economically unfeasible. A few notable sources (though others from the above list may also be able to help):
- Birches Group
- ORC
- ER Limited
Another effective strategy for reducing costs is to age current survey data forward, coupled with the use of biennial purchasing. However, when using this strategy have a care to limit its use to countries with stable economies. Using such standard growth figures would miss the mark in countries showing greater volatility.
The Cost of International Operations
Too many HR practitioners and their Managers fail to take into account the expenses involved in keeping their international compensation programs competitive, especially where the organization has a small employee footprint. For companies new to the international scene, and for those with small populations in several countries, the shock of survey costs could be daunting. Many times the result is a reluctance to purchase the data, in some cases letting matters on the ground continue to fester – potentially overspending and / or creating debilitating equity problems for themselves.
Call it the cost of doing business, but if you’re going to maintain effective operations overseas, and you want to provide a competitive reward package (of course you do), it would be unwise to shortchange the process by guesstimating or otherwise trying to make-do without credible information.
The cost of surveys is a fraction of the possible financial impact that could result from retaining non-competitive reward programs.
Chuck Csizmar CCP is founder and Principal of CMC Compensation Group, providing global compensation consulting services to a wide variety of industries and non-profit organizations. He is also associated with several HR Consulting firms as a contributing consultant. With over 30 years Rewards experience Chuck is a broad based subject matter expert with a specialty in international and expatriate compensation. He lives in Central Florida (near The Mouse) and enjoys growing fruit and managing (?) a brood of cats.
Image: Creative Commons photo by alex schweigert
Thanks Chuck,
Too often people tend to look at other countries like additional US states, or worse, after-thoughts. The complexities are enormous, but the ability to navigate these complex waters is what makes successful multi-national companies successful.
Posted by: Dan Walter | 02/22/2011 at 10:01 AM
This is a really useful summary and resources!
Posted by: Laura Schroeder | 02/23/2011 at 03:13 AM