| Could an employee
get a promotion without a raise?
Q. Would you discuss the risks of promoting a deserving
employee (title change) but not increasing salary due to current economic
conditions?
A. A promotion is when an employee is moved into a job with
greater scope and responsibility than his or her current job. Promotions in and
of themselves do not mean a monetary increase in salary. But in general,
companies adjust salaries with promotions when the monetary value of the new job
is higher than the value of the job the incumbent currently holds.
It is
understandable that a company might not be able to afford to offer an employee
more money in the current economic conditions. If the employee's current salary
without an adjustment is competitive with the market rate of the new job, you
don't need to offer an increase. However, if the employee's
salary is below the market value of the job to which he or she is being
promoted, I would offer an adjustment to make the employee's pay
competitive.
Ask yourself how
much it would cost to replace the incumbent if he or she left the company to
take the same promotion somewhere else. Look at the implications of not
rewarding the employee for doing a job you concede is beyond his or her current
classification.
As an alternative,
consider whether a bonus is appropriate until you can give the job title and
monetary increase the employee deserves.
Good
luck.
- Erisa Ojimba, Certified
Compensation Professional
|