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Posted on July 24, 2008June 27, 2018

DOL Proposes 401(k) Fee Disclosure Rules

Employers with 401(k) and other participant-directed individual account plans would have to disclose the fees and expenses of the investment options offered by the plans under rules proposed Tuesday, July 22, by the Labor Department.


Additionally, employers would have to disclose past-performance data on investment options, comparable benchmark returns and a Web address for each investment option.


Employers also would have to provide a description of fees and expenses charged to participants for plan administrative services, such as legal and accounting, as well as how those charges will be allocated to their individual accounts.


A description of charges for specific services provided to a participant, such as for processing loans, also would have to be provided.


Generally, the disclosures would have to be provided when an employee becomes eligible to participate in the plan and annually thereafter.

Posted on July 24, 2008June 27, 2018

California Employer Sues State Over Wage Claims for Illegal Workers

The owner of a downtown Los Angeles sushi restaurant facing wage payment claims by two alleged undocumented workers has launched a novel counterattack by filing a class-action lawsuit against the California labor commissioner for defying federal immigration law.


Masayoshi Kaji of Sushi Sharin argues that the commissioner’s policy of providing undocumented workers with an administrative forum in which to litigate wage claims and awarding them wages violates the Immigration Reform and Control Act. His attorney believes the case is one of first impression.


“The immigration policy of the United States is that people who are here illegally can’t work and should not be awarded wages,” says Ernest J. Franceschi of Los Angeles.


In April, the commissioner awarded Kaji’s two former employees—brothers Tranquilino Cruz Garcia and Rutilino Cruz Garcia—more than $35,000 in back wages plus penalties. The award covers unpaid overtime, missed rest periods and missed meal periods between February 2005 and December 2007.


The class action, filed in May, seeks an injunction against the commissioner on behalf of Kaji and “all California employers who are presently subject to or in the future may be subject to an administrative action before the California labor commissioner in which an award of wages is sought by a person not illegally authorized to work in the United States.”


Franceschi cites the precedent of Hoffman Plastics Compounds v. National Labor Relations Board, in which the U.S. Supreme Court overturned an award of back pay to an undocumented alien who sued an employer for violations of the National Labor Relations Act. “[A]warding back pay to illegal aliens runs counter to policies underlying IRCA, policies the board has no authority to enforce or administer,” it concluded.


Kaji also has requested a court order requiring the Cruz Garcias to reimburse him for all wages they received from him.


“I don’t really see any distinction” between Hoffman Plastics and Kaji’s case, Franceschi says.


But California Labor Code Section 1171.5 provides that “All protections, rights, and remedies available under state law … are available to all individuals regardless of immigration status who have applied for employment, or who are or who have been employed, in this state.”


According to Gladys Limon, an attorney with the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund who is representing the Cruz Garcias, Hoffman Plastics was a narrow ruling that has not been extended to state labor laws.


“One of the objectives of IRCA is to deter employers from hiring illegal workers,” she argues. “Enforcing wage and hour laws against employers who are exploiting illegal workers [achieves] the purposes of IRCA.”


Federal courts, moreover, have distinguished Hoffman, which applied to back pay for work that had not been performed, from cases involving awards for work actually performed.


“Nothing in Hoffman suggests that IRCA mandates that undocumented workers forfeit payments for work that they have already performed or that, by hiring undocumented workers, employers may evade their legal obligation to make wage payments for work that has actually been performed,” the New York state Attorney General’s Office has said in an advisory opinion.


In Franceschi’s view, that distinction is “without substance” when the worker’s act of working is illegal. “The Cruz Garcias were not allowed to be here, they were not allowed to work here,” he says. Therefore, the labor commissioner “has no jurisdiction … to give them wages, no matter how they are classified.”


—Matthew J. Heller

Posted on July 24, 2008June 27, 2018

A Flexible Force

A quick read of any newspaper reveals that the economy is down and many corporations are entering a cost-cutting cycle. It only makes sense that when a business is facing a downturn that all major cost centers contribute to containment efforts. While no one likes cost cutting, it’s important to realize that people costs are likely to be a major focus.


    In many industries, up to 60 percent of all variable costs are related to employee costs such as salaries, benefits and training. Unfortunately, HR has a bad habit of waiting until it is told to react and, as a result, is often forced to use the last-
resort tool of layoffs to adjust labor cost. Avoiding large-scale layoffs should be a key priority, because even when done correctly, layoffs can have legal implications as well as a dramatic impact on recruiting, morale, retention and overall workforce productivity. Fortunately, there is a workforce strategy that can significantly reduce people costs without much of the associated pain. That strategy is to develop a contingent workforce.


    Having a contingent staffing strategy helps HR avoid traditional (and flawed) approaches such as the freezing of hiring, promotions, pay or budgets. Each of those measures can have tremendous negative impacts on top performers. Nothing frustrates top performers and innovators more than freezing projects that excite them and that allow them to remain on the leading edge. In the same light, the common practice of freezing raises or promotions reduces their motivation. Such efforts cause retention problems among top performers because they can look outside the firm to organizations that would fully fund and reward their work even in the toughest of times.


    Contrast those painful choices with a contingent labor strategy, in which a portion of the workforce is easy to scale back (or ramp up). This allows organizations to shift resources rapidly from low-return to high-return areas. The concept is relatively simple. Instead of hiring everyone as permanent, HR develops an approach that designates a percentage of all positions to be contingent. When labor costs must be reduced, this more flexible percentage of the workforce can easily be manipulated.


    Because contingent workers are designated in advance as contract workers, part-timers or temps, their numbers can be reduced more easily by just not extending their contracts. While many firms currently use some form of contingent labor, few have developed a strategy to help ensure that such deployments maximize the organization’s return. Recent studies indicate that contingent labor utilization is so ad hoc that more than 70 percent of firms cannot accurately account for total spending on contingent labor despite the fact that it represents nearly 18 percent of the total workforce on average.


    There are many advantages related to hiring contingent workers. The first is that managers are more willing to release them. Contingent workers are more available during tough times, and because they don’t require pensions and sophisticated benefits, they’re cheaper. Hiring workers on a contingent basis also allows you to assess them as they work and to convert only the best to staff positions. Knowing that others are designated as contingent can also help ease the security fears of the remainder of the workforce. Leveraging a contingent workforce can also help you maintain a strong employment brand. Releasing them doesn’t garner as much press coverage as large-scale layoffs.


    The key element of a contingent workforce strategy is to mandate that a certain percentage of jobs must be contingent hires. The figure can be as low as 5 percent in growth times to a high of 25 percent in turbulent times. The high is based on the maximum conceivable percentage of the workforce that could become surplus in a worst-case situation. Another key step is to determine in advance which jobs will almost certainly be reduced during downturns. They might include call center positions, some sales positions, order fulfillment jobs and customer service positions. These “likely to be reduced” positions should be designated for a larger percentage of contingent hires. Other possible steps include increasing the use of vendors and outsourcers with contracts that allow you to quickly reduce their service levels. In highly volatile environments, managers should be rewarded for leveraging alternative labor types when the nature of the work is short term or directly related to sales volume.


    In tight times, HR must increase its workforce planning efforts. A contingent workforce strategy, if used correctly, can reduce labor costs and increase your firm’s flexibility. Now’s the time to start.


Workforce Management, July 14, 2008, p. 58 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on July 23, 2008June 27, 2018

House Commerce Panel OKs Health IT Legislation

Legislation that would set standards for a national health care information technology network got a major boost from a House committee on Wednesday, July 23. But its prospects for making it all the way to the president’s desk remain cloudy.


One of the goals of the bill, passed by a voice vote of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, is for every American to have an electronic health record by 2014. Supporters say that greater use of such technology will sharply reduce medical costs while improving the quality of care.


Unanimous approval by the House committee represents a significant achievement for a bill that has had to overcome much resistance. Patient advocates and interest groups have raised fears about privacy violations related to the electronic sharing of medical information.


Under the bill, an individual would have to be notified whenever their health information is compromised. Other provisions prohibit the sale of protected health information and give patients greater control over the use of their records.


A smiling Rep. John Dingell, chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, was happy to see the bill sail through the committee after years of work on the issue.


“We have squeezed all the controversy out of it,” he told reporters after the panel vote. But the bill has not overcome all the obstacles in its path to the House floor.


The House Ways & Means Committee also has jurisdiction over the privacy provisions of the bill and could offer its own legislation. A subcommittee is scheduled to hold a hearing on health information technology Thursday, July 24.


Beyond potential Ways & Means action, further negotiations remain on the House commerce bill. During the Wednesday, July 23, markup, several members of the committee expressed continuing concerns about privacy—from those who thought the bill didn’t go far enough and from members who worried that restrictive legislative language would discourage providers from implementing medical information technology.


Dingell assured his colleagues that he would work with them as the legislation moves on. The bill represents “a delicate balance between promoting and encouraging the electronic flow of health information and protecting that information from those who should not have it,” he said.


Now the bill must compete for time on a quickly dwindling congressional calendar. After a House vote occurs, negotiations with the Senate loom.


Both the Senate and House versions would make permanent the Office of the National Coordinator of Health Information Technology within the Department of Health and Human Services.


Originally created by a presidential executive order, the office would guide the development and adoption of health IT. In the Senate bill, a public-private partnership would make recommendations to HHS on interoperability and voluntary standards. The House bill would establish federal advisory committees.


The House and Senate bills also provide incentives for doctors and hospitals to buy health information technology. The House funding is $560 million, which is targeted mostly at small and rural providers. The House’s privacy protections are stronger than the Senate’s.


As is the case with all compromise legislation, no one is happy with every aspect of the bill. But Republicans and Democrats both urged their colleagues not seek major changes.


“We shouldn’t let the pursuit of the perfect be the enemy of the good,” said Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas and the highest-ranking Republican on the House commerce committee. “I truly believe that it will change the way health care is practiced in America for decades to come.”


A leading Democrat on the committee stressed that tinkering with the bill could be fatal at this stage of the process.


“One step in another direction could cause us to fall off course,” said Rep. Frank Pallone, D-New Jersey.


Health care technology advocates are urging Congress to get the bill done this year.


“America can’t afford coverage for all, if we don’t have health IT,” former Rep. Nancy Johnson, R-Connecticut and co-chair of the Health IT Now Coalition, said last month. “We must push the ball over the line this session or we will pay dearly.”


—Mark Schoeff Jr.


Posted on July 23, 2008June 27, 2018

3 Million DB Participants in Frozen Plans

More than 3 million people are enrolled in frozen single-employer defined-benefit plans, according to a new GAO report.


The most common reasons executives gave for freezing their plans included the impact of annual contributions on their firm’s cash flows and the unpredictability of plan funding, according to the Government Accountability Office.


Among pension plans surveyed, 23 percent involved a hard freeze, in which all future benefit accruals cease. Twenty-two percent involved a partial freeze.


Also, 83 percent of the companies with frozen plans offered alternative retirement savings arrangements.


“As businesses struggle in this economy to pony up more money than they’ve ever had to contribute before because of the [Pension Protection Act’s] stiffer funding requirements, I fear that the spike in pension freezes will rise even more,” Rep. Earl Pomeroy, D-North Dakota, who was among legislators who requested the GAO report, said in a news release. “Some argue that higher funding would be good for workers, but there is a hitch — private-sector pensions are voluntary.”


The GAO received responses from 48 DB plan officials of the 471 executives contacted.


This story was filed by Jennifer Byrd of Pensions & Investments, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.

Posted on July 22, 2008June 27, 2018

New York Times Co. Joins Forces With LinkedIn

In its latest effort to go digital, the New York Times Co. on Tuesday, July 22, announced a joint venture with networking site LinkedIn that aims to boost features available on NYTimes.com.


Under the partnership, LinkedIn members who visit the business or technology sections of The New York Times’ Web site will see a series of headlines tailored to aspects of their LinkedIn profile, including their industry of employment and job title. Advertisements on the Times’ page will be similarly tailored, factoring in LinkedIn profile information that includes seniority, company size, gender and geography. Readers are able to opt out of the ad service.


The changes won’t affect the Times’ home page.


“Working with LinkedIn, we have created a program that will provide readers with a more relevant and customized experience,” said Vivian Schiller, general manager of NYTimes.com, in a statement. “This relationship will further our engagement with our large audience of professionals, executive decision makers and small-business employees.”


NYTimes.com had 17.7 million unique visitors in June, according to Nielsen Online.


The deal marks the latest pairing of media outlets and networking Web sites. Monster Worldwide, a national provider of online job and recruiting services, last month announced the launch of co-branded recruitment sites with more than a dozen regional newspapers, including The Columbus Dispatch and the San Francisco Examiner. New York-based Monster also has a content agreement with cable network MSNBC.


Online headhunters and job sites continue to prosper, even in the face of a struggling economy and plunging classified ads at their print counterparts.


Filed by Kira Bindrim of Crain’s New York Business, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.

Posted on July 22, 2008June 29, 2023

Leadership Thats Made in China

It seems only logical for Agilent Technologies to apply rigorous metrics to a leader’s capabilities. The Santa Clara, California-based company is, after all, in the business of measurement.


Nowhere is the assessment of leaders more crucial than in China, which accounts for a growing portion of Agilent’s Asia Pacific market. China is poised to surpass the U.S. as Agilent’s chief growth engine during the next decade, says country HR manager Gordon Xing, who is based in Beijing.


There is a caveat, however.


“Without a strong leadership team, we will not be able to outpace market growth. That [realization] is the driving force for us to develop local leaders at a faster pace than ever before,” he says.


Agilent specializes in hardware and software tools that help organizations collect, analyze, interpret and integrate data into a useful system. The equipment is used across a spectrum of industries, including aerospace, electronics, defense, food safety, health care, nanotechnology and telecommunications.


The company operates in 110 countries in Asia, Europe and North America and employs 19,400 people around the world, including 8,500 workers in Asian Pacific Rim countries. Its Chinese workforce is at 1,500 people and counting. In one notable example of its Chinese presence, Agilent is providing a variety of products and services at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, including drug-testing equipment for athletes.


Like many other large companies, Agilent is looking to China’s booming economy to neutralize the effects of sluggishness in the U.S. Agilent recorded net revenue of $5.4 million in 2007, a 9 percent increase from 2006, according to its annual report in January. Roughly two-thirds of Agilent’s net revenue originates outside the U.S.


To guide its growing cohort of young Chinese professionals, Agilent needs managers who think globally and act locally, Xing says. In particular, they must be able to work across cultures, coach and motivate, identify top performers and recruit for critical positions—all while monitoring changing business conditions in local and global markets.


China-specific leadership training is geared toward improving three critical skills: strategic thinking, financial and business acumen, and “increasing their influential power” through coaching and communications, Xing says.


China’s challenge
Companies with aspirations in China are presented with a mixture of business opportunities and management challenges. On the one hand, growth seems assured. Some economists predict that China will knock the U.S. off its perch as the world’s leading economy during the next half-century.


A study released in June by researchers at Georgia Tech University in Atlanta found that China’s aggressive push to foster scientists and engineers puts it in position to leapfrog the U.S. as the world’s dominant innovator of products and services. Multinational companies, tempted by China’s still relatively cheap labor and an ascending middle class, are staking out territory there.


Despite foreign investment and a population of 1.3 billion people, China faces an acute shortage of managerial talent, according to two other reports.


McKinsey Global Institute predicts that companies in China will need 75,000 business leaders during the next decade. By contrast, McKinsey estimates that only 3,000 to 5,000 people possess the leadership skills needed to succeed in an increasingly complex global economy.


Although technical workers are abundant, homegrown leaders are in especially short supply and hard to retain in China, where managerial turnover is 25 percent greater than the global average, according to a 2007 report by Pittsburgh-based Development Dimensions International and the Society for Human Resources Development.


The survey of 215 global HR and business leaders found that the average multinational firm sees 30 percent to 40 percent of senior managers changing jobs in China every year. Lack of career development is cited as the primary reason.


Labor leader
Agilent is trying to go against that grain, and it has at least one advantage. Although it is less than a decade old, Agilent has a history in China, thanks to the fact that it was once part of computer giant Hewlett-Packard. H-P in 1985 became the first U.S. high-tech company to participate in a joint venture with the Chinese government.


Agilent was spun off from H-P in 1999, going public in a celebrated stock sale that netted $2.1 billion in proceeds.


Being an outgrowth of H-P gave Agilent mature products with market acceptance. More important, Agilent’s learning leaders in Asia—including Xing and James Cheng, the learning and development manager for China— started their careers with H-P.


Their move up the ranks underscores one of the values inherited from H-P.


    “When developing leaders, we definitely look from within first,” going outside only for skills that are “pretty unique and specific,” says Christopher Goh, who directs learning and development for Agilent’s Asia Pacific region. Goh also formerly worked at H-P.


Typical of organizations based in the West, Agilent’s on-the-ground leaders in China primarily gained experience in sales, marketing, engineering or other operational functions.


“Therefore, they know how to drive an order or execute a task, but in general, leaders lack an understanding of P&L issues” and often struggle when trying to coach others, Xing says. Those are skill gaps the company seeks to fill.


In addition to general leadership skills for China, individual business units are encouraged to propose customized leadership training that targets high-potential employees. All training is based on the Agilent Leadership Competency, a framework that is “embedded throughout our HR processes and systems, from onboarding to performance management,” Goh says.


It consists of roughly a dozen character traits that are common to successful leaders. To reinforce those values, core training programs are targeted to each level of leadership, from middle managers to general managers who run business units, Goh says.


For example, managers at all levels shoulder three broad responsibilities, regardless of location: assess and align strategies, mentor their people to grow and develop, and drive results in their respective local markets. The last item is heavily dependent on the first two.


The three dimensions of learning give top leaders a clear view of the organization’s skills, knowledge and areas of need, Goh says.


‘Ready now, ready later’
At Agilent, managers are responsible for employee professional development and craft learning agendas that help workers plot career milestones. They also provide performance support along the way, Xing says.


Aside from technical skills and knowledge, the career development reviews examine an individual’s capacity to assume roles of increased responsibility. Agilent’s most immediate need is to ensure that critical positions are filled by the best available candidates, but the succession plans create a pool of “ready now, ready later” workers to fill out the leadership depth chart, Xing says.


People with managerial potential have a chance to fortify skills gaps and mark their progress through periodic 360-degree assessments, Cheng says.


“Based on that, we fine-tune each learning program to address those areas of needs,” he says.


What Agilent does in China is but one demonstration of its almost obsessive attention to cultivating influential new leaders.


Every three months, all 19,400 employees worldwide are asked to participate in “leadership audits” that define the attributes of successful managers. Questions focus on “behaviors known to drive engagement and accountability,” says Teresa Roche, Agilent’s U.S.-based vice president of global learning and leadership development.


The quarterly audits were instituted shortly after William Sullivan took over as CEO in March 2005. Employees apparently welcome the chance to share their views, with 82 percent participating in the most recent survey, Roche says.


It’s more than merely a feel-good tool for employees, though. The results are compared with normative data compiled by groups such as Corporate Leadership Council and Gallup, she says.


This year, line managers began receiving individualized reports to compare their performance against industry norms as well as Agilent’s top 100 leaders. The reports provide a way “to measure progress and hold our leaders accountable for improvement in areas that we’ve deemed important in a given year,” Roche says.

Posted on July 22, 2008June 29, 2023

Training to Short-Circuit Wage Disputes

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is the latest high-profile employer to learn a rueful lesson: America’s frontline managers need a stronger grasp on the basics of wage and hour laws. In July, the Bentonville, Arkansas-based retailer was ordered to pay $6.5 million in compensatory damages to the 56,000 employees in Minnesota who won a class-action lawsuit alleging Wal-Mart failed to pay them for working overtime.


The company could end up paying more than $2 billion after a jury convenes in October to consider civil and punitive damages. Among the violations: Employees allege they were directed by Wal-Mart superiors to work off the clock and frequently were denied breaks.


Wal-Mart has been punished for allegations of violating federal wage laws before. A Pennsylvania jury in 2006 awarded $78 million to Wal-Mart workers who said they worked off the clock and through breaks. That followed a $172 million verdict against Wal-Mart in California in 2005.


Wal-Mart is said to be appealing the judgments. The company declined to comment on the matter when contacted by Workforce Management.


Meanwhile, the retailer reportedly is embroiled in about 70 similar employee wage disputes nationwide.


Wal-Mart is hardly the lone major U.S. employer to face a large settlement. Other noteworthy payouts: UBS Financial Services Inc. is compensating retail brokers for unpaid overtime in a settlement potentially worth $89 million. United Parcel Service Inc. has agreed to pay $87 million to settle a class-action lawsuit brought by 20,000 of its drivers. IBM in 2006 settled similar litigation to the tune of $65 million, but has at least two other wage suits making their way through the courts.


Wage and hour lawsuits are widespread for a simple reason: Seven in 10 U.S. employers are failing to comply with wage and hour regulations, according to a recent study by the U.S. Department of Labor.


Some experts say that estimate is too conservative, suggesting the actual number is between 95 percent and 100 percent.


“You could go into virtually any company and probably find a technical violation of wage and hour law,” says Shanti Atkins, the president of ELT Inc., a San Francisco company that provides online legal and compliance training to corporations.


Failing to equip managers with at least rudimentary knowledge of labor laws comes with a steep cost. Companies found in violation of the federal Fair Labor Standards Act—the law that governs job classification, overtime pay, and record keeping—pay an average of $23.5 million to resolve claims of unpaid overtime and other FLSA-related allegations, according to a 2007 study by New York University School of Law professor Samuel Estreicher.


Experts say companies can sidestep some of the liability by making sure supervisors are conversant with basic dos and don’ts, such as instructing employees not to work through break times and not to volunteer their time after hours and requiring that they receive approval in advance for any overtime they put in.


“A manager should be trained to know what constitutes work and what doesn’t. It sounds like an easy concept, but often it’s not,” says Tammy McCutchen, a Washington attorney with Littler Mendelson and former administrator of the U.S. Labor Department’s wage and hour division.


Disputes about employee wages have been on the rise since the start of the decade, but have skyrocketed in the past few years. The number of wage complaints filed under the FLSA soared from 4,207 in 2006 to more than 7,300 in 2007.


Unlike allegations of discrimination or harassment, in which accusers must prove they were harmed, the burden of proof in wage disputes rests upon the employer. That means companies have to disprove claims that they failed to compensate someone for time worked.


An understanding of work laws isn’t usually considered a training issue—though perhaps it ought to be, given the spike in class-action wage and hour suits. Frontline managers need to understand the “definition of work” for each employee they supervise, as well as explain rules that prohibit employees from volunteering their time or pulling overtime without prior approval, Atkins says.


“Training managers on this can eliminate some very basic errors that people make completely inadvertently, which frankly are fueling most of the lawsuits in this area,” Atkins says.


The managers often commit some of the biggest blunders, such as suggesting that employees work overtime but not record it. They are also the ones who are likely to receive complaints from employees who think something is wrong with their pay or hours, so training is crucial in helping them defuse controversies, Atkins says.


Wage laws are painstaking, forcing companies to know precisely what constitutes typical workday activities. McCutchen predicts that future controversies will erupt because of the profusion of company-provided electronic devices that employees use to carry out their duties, especially with regard to nonexempt workers.


“If you’re giving them a BlackBerry or cell phone, and they use it at home to check their work-related e-mail, that’s [classified as] work time,” putting companies at risk if they fail to have written policies in place governing their use outside the workplace, McCutchen says.


Having accurate job descriptions and written policies also helps, but many organizations are using performance reviews to make managers accountable for ensuring that state and federal employment laws are rigidly followed. Some are even instituting policies that allow managers to be terminated if they purposefully or intentionally take some action that violates the law,” McCutchen says.


It’s never too late to attack the problem, even in the midst of litigation. Implementing wage and hour training initiatives during the course of a lawsuit can help companies reduce financial penalties, Atkins says.



Posted on July 21, 2008June 27, 2018

Comp-Benefit Surveys Gauge What Workers Might Trade Away

Most employers have run on the assumption that the more benefits they offered to employees, the happier their workers would be.


But in light of increasing health care costs and shrinking profit margins, a growing number of companies are rethinking that assumption. As a result, employers are surveying employees to discover what trade-offs in benefits and compensation they would be willing to make.

There is increasing pressure on HR executives and benefits managers to prove to CEOs and CFOs that the money they are spending on benefits is worth it, says Tim Glowa, a consultant with Hewitt Associates.

“Benefits costs are about to eclipse profits at many Fortune 500 companies,” Glowa says.


At the same time, companies are starting to realize that in many cases, there is a huge gap between how much employees value certain benefits and the amount of money companies spend on those benefits, he says.


Hewitt estimates that typically $1,200 is spent per employee on undervalued benefits. The Lincolnshire, Illinois-based consulting firm, which has an online tool for clients to help survey employees, has seen interest in its product double every year for the past five years, Glowa says.

American Express is among the companies surveying for potential trade-offs. The New York-based company has conducted employee engagement surveys but noticed that compared with other areas, the company received lower rankings on compensation issues, says Timothy Nice, vice president of compensation at American Express.

“The questions we were asking were too general,” Nice says.


For example, employees may indicate they want more compensation, but not what kinds of compensation they prefer. “So we decided to dig in deeper and see what employees wanted,” Nice says.


American Express is surveying employees in the U.S., the U.K., Australia, Spain and Mexico, asking whether they prefer restricted stock or cash bonuses, Nice says.


Companies asking employees about trade-offs need to be prepared to make changes to their benefits and compensation plans to accommodate employees’ preferences, says Steven Gross, worldwide partner at Mercer.

“You are creating the expectation that you are going to change something,” he says.


The next step could be that employers will take their set allocation of money for benefits and allow employees to choose which ones they want, Glowa says.

This could save employers a large sum of money in benefits expenditures, says Neil Crawford, a consultant at Hewitt Associates.


The money could be spent on HR services such as training, which actually contributes to greater productivity among employees, he says.


“It’s about using your budgets more effectively and giving employees what they want,” he says.


—Jessica Marquez


Posted on July 21, 2008June 27, 2018

Ford Offering More Buyouts to Hourly Workers

Ford Motor Co. is extending another round of buyout offers to its hourly workers at more than a dozen U.S. plants as the company aligns production with weakening demand.


The company said Monday, July 21, that it would start making plant-by-plant offers on Monday, July 28, to workers at sites in Michigan and Ohio.


In the fall, the buyout program will expand to include staggered offers to employees at other locations, such as Louisville, Kentucky, said Ford spokeswoman Angie Kozleski.
 
The targeted plants will include truck and SUV plants in which Ford has cut shifts or those it has shut down temporarily.


In June, Ford made buyout offers to some of its hourly workers at Kentucky and Ohio plants.


The company plans to retool some of its U.S. plants to produce small cars, The Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday, July 19. Ford is scheduled to release second-quarter financial results Thursday, July 24.


In April, Ford said it fell short of meeting a buyout target for U.S. hourly jobs in a companywide offer made earlier this year. Ford said 4,200 workers had signed up for buyouts, but it had sought about 8,000.


Ford is offering buyouts to hourly workers at the following plants:


• The Kentucky truck plant in Louisville, which makes F-series Super Duty trucks.


• The Louisville plant that assembles the Ford Explorer and Mercury Mountaineer SUVs.


• The Michigan truck plant in Wayne, which makes the Ford Expedition and Lincoln Navigator SUVs.


• The Wayne assembly plant, which makes the Ford Focus small car.


• The Ohio assembly plant in Avon Lake, which makes Ford’s E-series vans.


• The Dearborn, Michigan, truck plant, which makes the Ford F-150 and the Lincoln Mark LT.


Filed by Craig Trudell of Automotive News, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.



 

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