Are Total Compensation Statements (TCS) a part of your regular communications with your employees? Are they even on your radar?
The Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) suggests that one of the best ways an employer can show their employees the total value of their benefits and compensation is by providing an annual report identifying all of their direct and indirect compensation.
Direct compensation includes all base pay and/or incentive pay that is paid directly to an employee. Indirect compensation is value provided to the employee indirectly, such as through employer-paid portions of health, dental, vision and life insurance, retirement benefits, educational benefits, training and development, wellness programs, employee assistance plans, relocation assistance, etc.
Why should you consider calculating and providing total comp statements?
1.Education
People don’t value what they don’t know. Everyone knows their hourly rate or their salary, but they don’t know the value of all of the benefits you provide unless you educate them. Their paystub, if they look at it, shows what’s left after taxes and deductions, but it doesn’t show what you invest in them, or the true cost of having them on board.
2.Motivate/Engage/Retain
Employers who are open and transparent about their money, tend to have employees who appreciate that openness. Employers who share some of their employee-related costs and financial burdens, tend to see a greater return on investment through employees who are more highly motivated and more inclined to stay put.
3.Reinforces the employee's value
When employees see the full
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