Compensation:
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , , |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York, NY
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
2014
|
Ausgabe: | 11. ed., internat. stud. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XVIII, 718 S. graf. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9781259010804 |
Internformat
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100 | 1 | |a Milkovich, George T. |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Compensation |c George T. Milkovich ; Jerry M. Newman ; Barry Gerhart |
250 | |a 11. ed., internat. stud. ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a New York, NY |b McGraw-Hill/Irwin |c 2014 | |
300 | |a XVIII, 718 S. |b graf. Darst. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804150318619951104 |
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adam_text | Table
of
Contents
Preface
xiii
PART
ONE
INTRODUCING THE PAY MODEL
AND PAY STRATEGY
Chapter
1
The Pay Model
3
Compensation: Does It Matter? (or, So What? )
4
Compensation: Definition, Please
5
Society
5
Stockholders
7
Managers
9
Employees
11
Incentive and Sorting Effects of Pay on Employer s
Behaviors
11
Global Views
—
Vive la Différence
12
Forms of Pay
13
Cash Compensation: Base
14
Cash Compensation: Merit Pay/Cost-of-Living
Adjustments
14
Cash Compensation: Incentives
15
Long-Term Incentives
15
Benefits: Income Protection
Њ
Benefits: Work/Life Balance
16
Benefits: Allowances
16
Total Earnings Opportunities: Present Value of a
Stream of Earnings
17
Relational Returns from Work
17
A Pay Model
18
Compensation Objectives
19
Four Policy Choices
21
Pay Techniques
23
Book Plan
24
Caveat Emptor
—
Be an Informed Consumer
25
1.
Is the Research Useful?
25
2.
Does the Study Separate Correlation from
Causation
? 26
3.
Are There Alternative Explanations?
26
Your Turn: The Role of Labor Costs in the Retail
Electronics and Airline Industries
27
Chapter
2
Strategy: The Totality of Decisions
38
Similarities and Differences in Strategies
38
Different Strategies within the Same Industry
41
Different Strategies within the Same Company
41
Strategic Choices
42
Support Business Strategy
43
Support HR Strategy
45
The Pay Model Guides Strategic Pay Decisions
46
Stated versus Unstated Strategies
47
Developing a Total Compensation Strategy:
Four Steps
48
Step I: Assess Total Compensation Implications
49
HR Strategy: Pay as a Supporting Player or
Catalyst for Change?
49
Step
2:
Map a Total Compensation Strategy
52
Steps
3
and
4:
Implement and Reassess
55
Source of Competitive Advantage: Three Tests
55
Align
55
Differentiate
55
Add Value
56
Best Practices versus Best Fit ?
57
Guidance from the Evidence
57
Virtuous and Vicious Circles
58
Your Turn: Merrill Lynch
59
Still Your Turn: Mapping Compensation
Strategies
61
PART TWO
INTERNAL ALIGNMENT:
DETERMINING THE STRUCTURE
Chapter
3
Defining Internal Alignment
Jobs and Compensation
72
71
iv
Table
of Contents
Compensation Strategy. Internal Alignment
72
Supports Organization Strategy
73
Supports Work Flow
73
Motivates Behavior
74
Structures Vary among Organizations
74
Number of Levels
75
Differentials
75
Criteria: Content and Value
75
What Shapes Internal Structures?
78
Economic Pressures
78
Government Policies, Laws, and Regulations
79
External Stakeholders
79
Cultures and Customs
80
Organization Strategy
80
Organization Human Capital
81
Organization Work Design
81
Overall HR Policies
81
Internal Labor Markets: Combining External and
Organization Factors
82
Employee Acceptance: A Key Factor
83
Pay Structures Change
83
Strategic Choices in Designing Internal
Structures
84
Tailored versus Loosely Coupled
84
Hierarchical versus Egalitarian
84
Guidance from the Evidence
86
Equity Theory: Fairness
86
Tournament Theory: Motivation and
Performance
88
Institutional Model: Copy Others
89
(More) Guidance from the Evidence
90
Consequences of Structures
91
Efficiency
91
Fairness
91
Compliance
91
Your Turn: So You Want to Lead an
Orchestra!
92
Still Your Turn: (If You Don t Want to Lead the
Orchestra
...) 93
Chapter
4
Job Analysis
100
Structures Based on Jobs, People, or Both
101
Job-Based Approach: Most Common
103
Why Perform Job Analysis?
103
Job Analysis Procedures
104
What Information Should Be Collected?
105
Job Data: Identification
105
Job Data: Content
105
Employee Data
107
Essential Elements and the Americans With
Disabilities Act
110
Level of Analysis 111
How Can the Information Be Collected?
112
Conventional Methods
112
Quantitative Methods
112
Who Collects the Information?
114
Who Provides the Information
? 114
What about Discrepancies
? 115
Job Descriptions Summarize the Data
1 16
Using Generic Job Descriptions
116
Describing Managerial/Professional Jobs I
16
Verify the Description
117
Job Analysis: Bedrock or Bureaucracy?
119
Job Analysis and Globalization
120
Job Analysis and Susceptibility to
Off shoring
120
Job Analysis Information and Comparability
across Borders
122
Judging Job Analysis
122
Reliability
122
Validity
123
Acceptability
123
Currency
123
Usefulness
123
A Judgment Call
124
Your Turn: The Customer-Service Agent
125
Chapter
5
Job-Based Structures and Job
Evaluation
134
Job-Based Structures: Job Evaluation
135
Defining Job Evaluation: Content, Value, and
External Market Links
136
Content and Value
136
Linking Content with the External Market
136
Technical and Process Dimensions
137
How-To : Major Decisions
137
Establish the Purpose
138
Single versus Multiple Plans
138
Table
of Contents v
Choose among Job Evaluation Methods
140
Job Evaluation Methods
141
Ranking
141
Classification
142
Point Method
144
Who Should Be Involved?
155
The Design Process Matters
156
The Final Result: Structure
157
Balancing Chaos and Control
158
Your Turn: Job Evaluation at
Whole Foods
159
The Perfect Structure
194
Your Turn: Climb the Legal Ladder
195
Chapter
6
Person-Based Structures
167
Person-Based Structures: Skill Plans
168
Types of Skill Plans
168
Purpose of the Skill-Based Structure
171
How-To : Skill Analysis
172
What Information to Collect?
172
Whom to Involve?
173
Establish Certification Methods
173
Outcomes of Skill-Based Pay Plans: Guidance from
Research and Experience
175
Person-Based Structures: Competencies
176
Defining Competencies
179
Purpose of the Competency-Based
Structure
180
How
-То :
Competency Analysis
181
Objective
182
What Information to Collect?
182
Whom to Involve?
184
Establish Certification Methods
185
Resulting Structure
185
Competencies and Employee Selection and
Training/Development
185
Guidance from the Research on
Competencies
187
One More Time: Internal Alignment Reflected in
Structures (Person-Based or Job-Based)
187
Administering and Evaluating the Plan
189
Reliability of Job Evaluation Techniques
189
Validity
191
Acceptability
192
Bias in Internal Structures
192
Wages Criteria Bias
193
PART THREE
EXTERNAL COMPETITIVENESS:
DETERMINING THE PAY LEVEL
Chapter
7
Defining Competitiveness
207
Compensation Strategy: External
Competitiveness
208
Control Costs and Increase Revenues
208
Attract and Retain the Right Employees
210
What Shapes External Competitiveness?
213
Labor Market Factors
213
How Labor Markets Work
215
Labor Demand
216
Marginal Product
216
Marginal Revenue
217
Labor Supply
218
Modifications to the Demand Side
218
Compensating Differentials
219
Efficiency Wage
220
Sorting and Signaling
221
Modifications to the Supply Side (Only Two
More Theories to Go)
222
Reservation Wage
222
Human Capital
223
Product Market Factors and Ability
to Pay
223
Product Demand
223
Degree of Competition
224
A Different View: What Managers Say
224
Segmented Supplies of Labor and (Different)
Going Rates
225
Organization Factors
226
Industry and Technology
226
Employer Size
226
People s Preferences
227
Organization Strategy
227
Relevant Markets
228
Defining the Relevant Market
228
Globalization of Relevant Labor Markets:
Offshoring and Outsourcing
229
vi
Table of Contents
Competitive Pay Policy Alternatives
232
What Difference Does the Pay-Level Policy
Make?
232
Pay with Competition (Match)
232
Lead Pay-Level Policy
234
Lag Pay-Level Policy
234
Different Policies for Different Employee Groups
235
Not by Pay Level Alone: Pay-Mix Strategies
235
Consequences of Pay-Level and -Mix Decisions:
Guidance from the Research
240
Efficiency
240
Fairness
241
Compliance
241
Your Turn: Two-Tier Wages
242
Appendix
7-А:
Utility Analysis
244
Chapter
8
Designing Pay Levels, Mix, and Pay
Structures
252
Major Decisions
253
Specify Competitive Pay Policy
253
The Purpose of a Survey
254
Adjust Pay Level
—
How Much to Pay?
254
Adjust Pay Mix—What Forms
? 254
Adjust Pay Structure
? 254
Study Special Situations
255
Estimate Competitors
Labor Costs
255
Select Relevant Market Competitors
255
Fuzzy Markets
259
Design the Survey
260
Who Should Be Involved?
260
How Many Employers?
260
Which Jobs to Include
? 263
What Information to Collect?
265
Interpret Survey Results and Construct a Market
Line
268
Verify Data
269
Statistical Analysis
274
Update the Survey Data
276
Construct a Market Pay Line
276
Setting Pay for Benchmark and Non-Benchmark
Jobs
278
Combine Internal Structure and External Market
Rates
280
From Policy to Practice: The Pay-Policy
Line
281
Choice of Measure
281
Updating
281
Policy Line as Percent of Market Line
282
From Policy to Practice: Grades and Ranges
282
Why Bother with Grades and Ranges
? 282
Develop Grades
283
Establish Range Midpoints,
Minimums,
and
Maximums
283
Overlap
284
From Policy to Practice: Broad Banding
285
Flexibility-Control
287
Balancing Internal and External Pressures:
Adjusting the Pay Structure
288
Reconciling Differences
288
Market Pricing
288
Business Strategy (More Than Follow the
Leader )
289
Review
290
Your Turn: Google Evolving Pay Strategy
291
Still Your Turn: Word-of-Mouse: Dot-Com
Comparisons
292
PART FOUR
EMPLOYEE CONTRIBUTIONS:
DETERMINING INDIVIDUAL PAY
Chapter
9
Pay-for-Performance: The Evidence
302
What Behaviors Do Employers Care About?
Linking Organization Strategy to Compensation
and Performance Management
303
What Does It Take to Get These Behaviors? What
Theory Says
308
What Does It Take to Get These Behaviors?
What Practitioners Say
312
Does Compensation Motivate Behavior?
317
Do People Join a Firm Because of Pay?
317
Do People Stay in a Finn (or Leave) Because
ofPay?
318
Do Employees More Readily Agree to Develop Job
Skills Because of Pay
? 319
Do Employees Perform Better on Their Jobs
Because of Pay?
319
Table of
Contents
vii
Designing a Pay-for-Performance Plan
Efficiency
323
Equity/Fairness
324
Compliance
325
Your Turn: Burger Boy
325
323
Chapter
11
Performance Appraisals
371
Chapter
10
Pay-for-Performance Plans
335
What Is a Pay-for-Performance Plan?
335
Does Variable Pay Improve Performance Results?
The General Evidence
337
Specific Pay-for-Performance Plans:
Short Term
337
Merit Pay
337
Lump-Sum Bonuses
338
Individual Spot Awards
340
Individual Incentive Plans
340
Individual Incentive Plans: Advantages and
Disadvantages
343
Individual Incentive Plans: Examples
344
Team Incentive Plans: Types
345
Comparing Group and Individual Incentive
Plans
351
Large Group Incentive Plans
352
Gain-Sharing Plans
352
Profit-Sharing
Plans
357
Eamings-at-Risk Plans
358
Group Incentive Plans: Advantages and
Disadvantages
359
Group Incentive Plans: Examples
360
Explosive Interest in Long-Term Incentive
Plans
360
Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs)
362
Performance Plans (Performance Share and
Performance Unit)
363
Broad-Based Option Plans (BBOPs)
363
Combination Plans: Mixing Individual and
Group
363
Your Turn: Incentives Can Be too
Powerful
364
Appendix
10-A:
Profit-Sharing (401K)
at
Walgreens
366
The Role of Performance Appraisals in
Compensation Decisions
372
Performance Metrics
373
Strategies for Better Understanding and
Measuring Job Performance
374
The Balanced Scorecard Approach
375
Strategy
1:
Improve Appraisal Formats
375
Strategy
2:
Select the Right Raters
384
Strategy
3:
Understand How Raters Process
Information
386
Strategy
4:
Training Raters to Rate More
Accurately
390
Putting It All Together: The Performance
Evaluation Process
391
Equal Employment Opportunity and Performance
Evaluation
392
Tying Pay to Subjectively Appraised
Performance
396
Competency: Customer Care
397
Performance- and Position-Based Guidelines
398
Designing Merit Guidelines
398
Promotional Increases as a Pay-for-Performance
Tool
401
Your Turn: Performance Appraisal at
Burger King
401
Appendix
ll-A: Balanced Scorecard Example:
Department of Energy (Federal
Personal Property Management
Program)
405
11-B: Sample Appraisal Form for Leadership
Dimension: Pfizer Pharmaceutical
408
PART FIVE
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS
Chapter
12
The Benefit Determination Process
428
Why the Growth in Employee Benefits?
430
Wage and Price Controls
430
viii Table of
Contents
Unions
430
Employer
Impetus 430
Cost Effectiveness of Benefits
431
Government Impetus
431
The Value of Employee Benefits
431
Key Issues in Benefit Planning, Design, and
Administration
433
Benefits Planning and Design Issues
433
Benefit Administration Issues
434
Components of a Benefit Plan
437
Employer Preferences
437
Employee Preferences
440
Administering the Benefit Program
443
Employee Benefit Communication
443
Claims Processing
446
Cost Containment
446
Your Turn: World Measurement
447
Chapter
13
Benefit Options
455
Legally Required Benefits
458
Workers
Compensation
459
Social Security
460
Unemployment Insurance
463
Family and Medical Leave Act
(FMLA)
465
Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
(COBRA)
465
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
(HIPAA)
465
Retirement and Savings Plan Payments
465
Defined Benefit Plans
466
Defined Contribution Plans
466
Individual Retirement Accounts
(IRAs)
468
Employee Retirement Income Security Act
(ERIS
A)
468
How Much Retirement Income to
Provide?
470
Life Insurance
471
Medical and Medically Related Payments
471
General Health Care
471
Health Care: Cost Control Strategies
475
Short- and
Long-Term
Disability
476
Dental Insurance
477
Vision Care
477
Miscellaneous Benefits
478
Paid Time Off During Working Hours
478
Payment for Time Not Worked
478
Child Care
479
Elder Care
479
Domestic Partner Benefits
479
Legal Insurance
479
Benefits for Contingent Workers
480
Your Turn: Adapting Benefits to a Changing
Strategy
480
PART SIX
EXTENDING THE SYSTEM
Chapter
14
Compensation of Special Groups
487
Who Are Special Groups?
488
Compensation Strategy for Special Groups
488
Supervisors
488
Corporate Directors
489
Executives
490
What s All the Furor over Executive Compensation.
What the Critics and Press Say
495
What s All the Furor over Executive Compensation?
What Academics Say
499
Scientists and Engineers in High-Technology
Industries
501
Sales Forces
505
Contingent Workers
509
Your Turn: A Sports Sales Plan
510
Chapter
15
Union Role in Wage and Salary
Administration
517
The Impact of Unions in Wage
Determination
518
Union Impact on General Wage Levels
519
The Structure of Wage Packages
521
Union Impact: The Spillover Effect
522
Role of Unions in Wage and Salary Policies and
Practices
522
Table
of Contents
ix
Unions and Alternative Reward Systems
527
Lump-Sum Awards
527
Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs)
527
Pay-for-Knowledge Plans
527
Gain-Sharing Plans
528
Profit-Sharing
Plans
528
Your Turn: Predicting a Contract s
Clauses
529
Chapter
16
International Pay Systems
534
The Global Context
536
The Social Contract
538
Centralized or Decentralized
Pay-Setting
539
Regulation
540
Culture
543
Culture Matters, but So Does Cultural
Diversity
545
Trade Unions and Employee Involvement
547
Ownership and Financial Markets
547
Managerial Autonomy
548
Comparing Costs
549
Labor Costs and Productivity
549
Cost of Living and Purchasing Power
552
Comparing Systems
555
The Total Pay Model: Strategic Choices
555
National Systems: Comparative Mind-Set
555
Japanese Traditional National System
555
German Traditional National System
559
Strategic Comparisons: Traditional Systems in
Japan, Germany, United States
560
Evolution and Change in the
Traditional
Japanese
and German Models
562
Strategic Market Mind-Set
564
Localizer: Think Global, Act Local
564
Exporter: Headquarters Knows Best
564
Globalizer: Think and Act Globally and
Locally
565
Expatriate Pay
565
Elements of Expatriate Compensation
567
The Balance Sheet Approach
569
Expatriate Systems
—>
Objectives?
Quel
dommage/
573
Borderless World
->
Borderless Pay?
Globalists
574
Your Turn: IBM s Worldwide Business and
Employment Strategies and Compensation
574
PART SEVEN
MANAGING THE SYSTEM
Chapter
17
Government and Legal Issues in
Compensation
591
Government as Part of the Employment
Relationship
593
Demand
593
Supply
593
Fair Labor Standards Act of
1938 596
Minimum Wage
597
Overtime and Hours of Work
599
Child Labor
604
Living Wage
604
Employee or Independent Contractor?
605
Prevailing Wage Laws
608
Pay Discrimination: What Is It?
608
The Equal Pay Act
610
Definition of Equal
611
Definitions of Skill, Effort, Responsibility, Working
Conditions
611
Factors Other Than Sex
612
Reverse Discrimination
612
Title
VII
of the Civil Rights Act of
1964
and
Related Laws
613
Disparate Treatment
614
Disparate Impact
614
Executive Order
11246 614
Pay Discrimination and Dissimilar Jobs
617
Evidence of Discrimination: Use of
Market Data
617
Evidence of Discrimination: Jobs of Comparable
Worth
618
Earnings Gaps
618
Sources of the Earnings Gaps
620
Differences in Occupations and
Qualifications
620
χ
Table of Contents
Differences in Industries and Firms
623
Union Membership
624
Presence of Discrimination
624
Gaps Are Global
625
Comparable Worth
625
The Mechanics
626
Union Developments
627
Compliance: A Proactive Approach
628
Your Turn: Self-Evaluation and Pay
Discrimination
628
Still Your Turn: From
Barista
to Manager
629
Still (yes, still) Your Turn: I Was Gaga s Slave
630
Chapter
18
Management: Making It Work
640
Managing, Controlling (and Sometimes
Reducing) Labor Costs
641
Number of Employees (a.k.a.
:
Staffing Levels or
Headcount)
642
Hours
646
Controlling Benefits
646
Controlling Average Cash Compensation
647
Control Salary Level: Top Down
648
Current Year s Rise
648
Ability to Pay
648
Competitive Market Pressures
649
Turnover Effects
649
Cost of Living
649
Rolling It All Together
651
Control Salary Level: Bottom Up
652
Ethics: Managing or Manipulating?
653
Where Is the Compensation Professional?
654
Embedded Controls
654
Range
Maximums
and
Minimums 654
Promotions and External versus Internal Hires
655
Compa-Ratios
655
Variable Pay
656
Analyzing Costs
656
Analyzing Value Added
657
Communication: Managing the Message
659
Say What? (Or, What to Say?)
664
Pay as Change Agent
665
Structuring the Compensation Function
666
Centralization
—
Decentralization
666
Flexibility within Corporatewide
Principles
667
Reengineering
and Outsourcing
667
Balancing Flexibility and Control 66H
Your Turn: Communication by Copier
669
Still Your Turn: Managing Compensation Costs,
Headcount, and Participation/Communication
Issues
669
Glossary
675
Name Index
694
Subject Index
706
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Milkovich, George T. Newman, Jerry M. Gerhart, Barry A. |
author_GND | (DE-588)136727115 |
author_facet | Milkovich, George T. Newman, Jerry M. Gerhart, Barry A. |
author_role | aut aut aut |
author_sort | Milkovich, George T. |
author_variant | g t m gt gtm j m n jm jmn b a g ba bag |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV040994443 |
classification_rvk | QP 416 QV 300 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)844106618 (DE-599)GBV727351087 |
dewey-full | 658.32 |
dewey-hundreds | 600 - Technology (Applied sciences) |
dewey-ones | 658 - General management |
dewey-raw | 658.32 |
dewey-search | 658.32 |
dewey-sort | 3658.32 |
dewey-tens | 650 - Management and auxiliary services |
discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
edition | 11. ed., internat. stud. ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV040994443 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T00:37:01Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781259010804 |
language | English |
lccn | 2012040180 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-025972173 |
oclc_num | 844106618 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG |
owner_facet | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG |
physical | XVIII, 718 S. graf. Darst. |
publishDate | 2014 |
publishDateSearch | 2014 |
publishDateSort | 2014 |
publisher | McGraw-Hill/Irwin |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Milkovich, George T. Verfasser aut Compensation George T. Milkovich ; Jerry M. Newman ; Barry Gerhart 11. ed., internat. stud. ed. New York, NY McGraw-Hill/Irwin 2014 XVIII, 718 S. graf. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Compensation management Unternehmen (DE-588)4061963-1 gnd rswk-swf Lohn (DE-588)4036229-2 gnd rswk-swf Lohnpolitik (DE-588)4036241-3 gnd rswk-swf Lohnpolitik (DE-588)4036241-3 s Unternehmen (DE-588)4061963-1 s 1\p DE-604 Lohn (DE-588)4036229-2 s 2\p DE-604 Newman, Jerry M. Verfasser (DE-588)136727115 aut Gerhart, Barry A. Verfasser aut Digitalisierung UB Bamberg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025972173&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 2\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Milkovich, George T. Newman, Jerry M. Gerhart, Barry A. Compensation Compensation management Unternehmen (DE-588)4061963-1 gnd Lohn (DE-588)4036229-2 gnd Lohnpolitik (DE-588)4036241-3 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4061963-1 (DE-588)4036229-2 (DE-588)4036241-3 |
title | Compensation |
title_auth | Compensation |
title_exact_search | Compensation |
title_full | Compensation George T. Milkovich ; Jerry M. Newman ; Barry Gerhart |
title_fullStr | Compensation George T. Milkovich ; Jerry M. Newman ; Barry Gerhart |
title_full_unstemmed | Compensation George T. Milkovich ; Jerry M. Newman ; Barry Gerhart |
title_short | Compensation |
title_sort | compensation |
topic | Compensation management Unternehmen (DE-588)4061963-1 gnd Lohn (DE-588)4036229-2 gnd Lohnpolitik (DE-588)4036241-3 gnd |
topic_facet | Compensation management Unternehmen Lohn Lohnpolitik |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025972173&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT milkovichgeorget compensation AT newmanjerrym compensation AT gerhartbarrya compensation |