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International Comparisons Can Get You Into Trouble

Posted by Chuck Csizmar | Posted in Articles, International Compensation | Posted on 16-05-2010

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In recent months several of my US-based clients faced challenges overseas regarding high employee separations coupled with difficulty in recruiting qualified staff.   These companies were at a loss to understand the cause of their problems, as each felt that they were already providing a more generous reward package for employees then was normal practice in the US.

A quick study revealed that the clients’ international employees were indeed receiving a great deal more than their American counterparts.  However, in many areas they were in fact being given no more than the minimum benefit provisions mandated by statutory requirement.  They were receiving only what the company was compelled to grant.  How do you attract, motivate and retain quality staff when the message of your actions is that you are only willing to offer what government regulations say you must?

One client bemoaned having to grant four weeks of vacation upon hire, because it was the law, only to find out later that common practice indicated five or more weeks were the norm.   To employees and candidates they offered no more than what they were required.  By ignoring competitive practice they were now paying the price by struggling to build and keep a quality staff.  They had earned a reputation in the local market as a “minimalist employer.”

When American companies first establish operations overseas Human Resources faces a number of challenges that they are unaccustomed to dealing with at home.  Every country is a separate and unique entity, with differences in HR policies, practices, and statutory requirements, each of which must be acknowledged and addressed in order to develop and maintain a successful operation.  On top of that are the vagaries of the competitive marketplace, where the same job is paid differently from Rome to Oslo to Buenos Aires – usually coupled with differing social charges and benefit coverage.

Choosing to operate under the guidance of U.S employment law and US-based corporate practices is a failed strategy.  Maintaining such a US focus (usually for ease of administration) will bring you grief; grief from your employees, from those you hope to hire, and most of all from local governments whose laws you have ignored or bypassed.

Think how you would feel if elements of your own reward package, policies or procedures were based on European or Asian common practice.   Wouldn’t go over well, would it?

If you decide that your business strategy requires you to maintain a staff presence in a particular country, then I would advise you to treat that operation the way you would its US counterpart; provide competitive terms and conditions that will attract and retain the right caliber of employee in that country – and ignore how their packages might compare with US or other country counterparts.  If you are not willing to make that commitment, from an HR perspective you would be better off not to engage employees in that country.

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