A Field Study Of Early Organizational Outcomes From The Introduction Of A Skill Based Pay Program
- Topics:
- Compensation Guide
- Tags:
- Benefits,
- Strategy,
- Skill,
- Recruitment & Selection,
- Payroll Solutions,
- Outcome,
- Management,
- Injury Frequency Outcome,
- Human Resources,
- Workforce Management
- Source:
- Cornell University
FREE Registration is required
Overview: Despite the documented increased use of skill or knowledge based pay programs in organizations, little evidence exists to demonstrate whether these plans achieve the results that are intended. This study, a quasi-experimental, empirical test of the organizational outcomes from the introduction of a skill based pay program, addresses this need. The results support greater potential workforce flexibility, greater productivity (48$), and lower labor cost per part. Compared to a control group, experimental group data also demonstrate more favorable quality outcomes. Injury frequency outcomes are not supported by the data, and in fact suggest that injuries may increase with the introduction of skill based pay. These results support both the behavioral and operations theories underlying skill based pay and add significantly to the knowledge regarding compensation interventions in general.
(Is this item miscategorized? Does it need more tags? Let us know.)
Format: PDF | Size: 236KB | Pages: 33
People who downloaded this item also downloaded
![]() |
Outsourcing Peter To Pay Paul: High Skill Expectations And Low-Skill Wages |
![]() |
Whatever Happened to Skill-Based Pay? |



