Pay Band Manager, a first-of-its-kind HR solution, has launched!

Learn more
LaborIQ

Featured | Hiring | June 26, 2024

Simplifying Pay Bands with LaborIQ: A Step-by-Step Guide

Navigating the complexities of establishing pay bands can be overwhelming, especially if you’re just starting out. The are many factors involved, but it doesn’t have to be difficult. Starting simple is key especially for those HR teams that are building formal pay bands or establishing structures for the first time.  

The best way to keep things straightforward is by using a reliable data provider. If you trust your data provider, then the rest of the work is so much easier. Enter LaborIQ, the most trusted and user-friendly source for real-time market compensation data.  Here we will show you what it looks like to build a pay band using LaborIQ, illustrated with an example for an accountant in the Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington (DFW) metro area in Texas. 

Start Simple: Conduct a Job Analysis and Define Your Criteria  

When creating pay bands, begin by conducting a job analysis and defining the basic criteria for the role. This will start with the job title. Then, you’ll need to know the location (or locations) where your company may be hiring and employing people in the role.

Finally, you’ll define the desired qualifications for individuals in that role – the minimum and maximum levels of education and experience. These parameters are the foundation of your pay band and are relatively simple to determine as you build out the hiring needs for your organization.  

Let’s consider the accountant in the DFW area. You might start with:

  • Minimum Criteria: Associate’s degree in accounting or related field, 6 months to 1 year of experience in an accounting role.
  • Maximum Criteria: Bachelor’s degree in accounting or related field, 4 to 6 years of experience in an accounting role.

These criteria are straightforward and provide a clear starting point. Using the minimum and maximum criteria, you can now build your pay band in LaborIQ. Here’s how to do it step by step: 

1. Log in to LaborIQ and navigate to Salary Answers

2. Enter the job title (Accountant) and location (Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX) of the role for which you’re creating the pay band. LaborIQ will immediately provide you with a recommended salary for the role.  

Tip : The education and experience initially displayed following a salary search represent the most common for individuals in the job title selected. Adjust education and experience to meet your criteria. 

3. Determine Pay Band Minimum Salary: Set the education level to Associate’s degree and experience to 6 months to 1 year. Make a note of the recommended salary on the left-hand side of the dashboard. This will be the minimum salary for your pay band.  

Recommended Salary 83k

4. Determine Pay Band Maximum Salary: Set the education level to Bachelor’s degree and experience to 4 to 6 years. Make a note of the recommended salary on the left-hand side of the dashboard. This will be the maximum salary for your pay band. 

Recommended Salary 106k

Tip : The Salary Answers bell curve provides valuable data on how competitive your pay band will be for attracting and retaining talent in today’s market. For example, you may have a policy to lead the market by offering competitive pay. In this case, you could choose to start your pay bands for entry-level or early career employees at the median. With this policy, employees will have higher salaries than most in the market. 

These two outputs from LaborIQ – the pay band minimum and maximum salaries from steps 3 and 4 – represent the recommended pay band for the role. For our accountant in DFW, this results in a pay range of $83,118 to $106,167. You may want to round up or down, so the pay band values are even numbers. For example, based on the job criteria above, you may choose to set the pay band for an accountant in DFW to $83,000 to $106,000 or $80,000 to $105,000. 

You just built a data-backed, accurate pay band for a role in less than 5 minutes, congrats! 

Adjusting Based on Budget and Market Rates 

With your initial pay band based on market rates, you can now make adjustments according to your budget. This is crucial to ensuring that your pay band aligns with financial constraints and competitive hiring strategies. 

Suppose your budget allows for a maximum salary of $100,000. You can adjust your band maximum salary accordingly, knowing that this might slightly reduce the competitiveness of your offer but will keep you within budget. 

Layering Additional Details for Market Competitiveness and Precision 

As you become more comfortable with creating pay bands, you can layer on additional details to fine-tune the salary range. These details can include industry specifics, company size, and the exact skills required for the role. This helps in getting a closer match to the actual job description and ensures equity and competitiveness. 

For instance, you might want to ensure the salaries are competitive with your industry, Consumer Lending. You can also adjust for company size by inputting your company’s revenue and employee count directly into LaborIQ. Let’s do that for our role, assuming we’re in the consumer lending space working for a small-to-medium-sized business.  

Industry: Consumer Lending 

Company Size: Small-to-Medium-sized business (100-249 employees) 

 Adding Additional Role Details

With these adjustments,  our pay band reflects the additional parameters. LaborIQ gives a pay band of $86,0000-$110,000. It looks like the consumer lending space is willing to pay a slightly higher premium for accounting talent. But again, because our budget is restrained at $100,000 our pay band now looks like this: $86,000-$100,000. 

Recommended Salary 109k

Ensuring Compliance and Competitiveness 

By following these steps, you’re now ready to include pay ranges in your job descriptions or establish pay bands for your internal compensation structure. You ensure that your pay band is compliant with regulations and competitive within the market. LaborIQ’s market-competitive salary data makes it easy to compare pay and make informed decisions. 

In our example, you now have a refined pay band for an accountant in DFW, considering both market rates and your specific requirements. You can adjust job postings and internal salary structures accordingly to attract the right talent. 

LaborIQ is the most seamless solution to building pay bands 

Creating pay bands doesn’t have to be a daunting task. By starting simple and using a trusted data provider like LaborIQ, you can establish accurate and competitive pay bands with ease. Begin with basic education and experience parameters, use LaborIQ to set your initial pay band, and then fine-tune it with additional details as needed. 

With LaborIQ, even complex factors become manageable, allowing you to focus on hiring the best talent within your budget. Whether you’re hiring an accountant in the DFW area or any other role, LaborIQ provides the data and tools you need to simplify and streamline your pay band creation process. 

 

Mallory Author Image - Chief Economist

 

Related Posts

Explore The Latest With Labor IQ

December 12, 2024

What Lies Ahead for Hiring and the Labor Market in 2025

Hiring

October 17, 2024

The Ripple Effect of Pay Transparency on Hiring Strategies

Hiring

September 20, 2024

Pay transparency has arrived. Here’s how to respond.

Hiring

August 5, 2024

New Features: Smart SearchTM, Smart CompareTM, and AI-Powered Search

Hiring

August 2, 2024

July Jobs Report Hiring slowdown, here’s what that means for employers

Featured Hiring Labor Market Reports

July 24, 2024

Why Finding A New Job Is So Hard Right Now

Featured Hiring Labor Market Reports

July 9, 2024

June Jobs Report Is the jobs report finally catching up to reality?

Featured Hiring Labor Market Reports

June 26, 2024

Simplifying Pay Bands with LaborIQ: A Step-by-Step Guide

Featured Hiring

June 17, 2024

Crafting Compliant Pay Bands: A Strategic Approach

Hiring

June 17, 2024

Understanding Pay Bands in Compensation Structures

Hiring

June 7, 2024

May Jobs Report Is the labor market as strong as headline numbers suggest?

Featured Hiring Labor Market Reports

May 6, 2024

Hiring slows in April, healthcare dominates

Featured Hiring Labor Market Reports

April 24, 2024

What are recession chances in 2024?

Featured Human Resources

April 8, 2024

March 2024 Jobs Report: U.S. Employment Boom Continues… for Most Sectors

Hiring Labor Market Reports

March 28, 2024

Keys to a Winning Compensation Strategy

Compensation Featured Human Resources

March 1, 2024

February 2024 Jobs Report: Above expectations, but there’s more to the story

Hiring Labor Market Reports

February 19, 2024

What makes a good job description?✍️

Compensation Featured Human Resources

February 2, 2024

January 2024 Jobs Report: January jobs on fire

Hiring Labor Market Reports

January 26, 2024

Understanding pay for in-demand jobs

Compensation Featured Human Resources

January 5, 2024

December 2023 Jobs Report: Strong start to 2024

Hiring Labor Market Reports

December 22, 2023

2023 Year in Review

Compensation Featured Human Resources

December 8, 2023

November 2023 Jobs Report: November’s 199K job gains misleading for most businesses

Hiring Labor Market Reports

November 17, 2023

Pay Bumps for New Hires

Compensation Featured Human Resources

November 3, 2023

Hiring Cools in October

Hiring Labor Market Reports

November 1, 2023

Setting Salary Ranges in a Changing Labor Market

Compensation Featured Human Resources Salary Benchmarking

October 6, 2023

Hiring Accelerates in September

Hiring Labor Market Reports

September 14, 2023

LaborIQ Announces Referral Partnership with Paycor

Featured

September 1, 2023

U.S. Job Growth Continues to Cool

Hiring Labor Market Reports

August 18, 2023

Not All Compensation Data Is Equal

Compensation Featured

August 11, 2023

Know Your Company’s Compensation Health Score?

Compensation Featured Human Resources

August 4, 2023

Job Growth Has Normalized and That’s Okay

Hiring Labor Market Reports

July 7, 2023

Economy Added a Solid 209,000 Jobs in June

Hiring Labor Market Reports

June 20, 2023

How to Calculate a Market-Based Salary to Attract Top Talent

Compensation Featured Hiring

June 19, 2023

A Boomer’s Reflections on the Business Impact of Remote Work

Compensation Featured Hiring

June 2, 2023

Businesses Are Hiring: Robust Job Gains in May

Hiring Labor Market Reports

April 18, 2023

Circa Announces LaborIQ Compensation Solution

Compensation Featured

April 7, 2023

More than 1 Million Jobs Added in 2023

Featured Labor Market Reports

March 22, 2023

Job Spotlight: Administrative Assistant

Hiring

March 20, 2023

How Does The Unemployment Rate Affect Hiring?

Hiring Human Resources

March 10, 2023

Labor Market Momentum Continued in February with 311,000 Added Jobs

Hiring Labor Market Reports

March 8, 2023

Inflation: What Does It Mean for the Job Market?

Featured Labor Market Reports

February 22, 2023

Why Backfilling Roles Will Be Necessary in 2023

Hiring

February 9, 2023

2023 Hiring Trends

Hiring

January 31, 2023

What’s Happening to Remote Work

Hiring Labor Market Reports

December 7, 2022

Webinar Replay: 2023 Hiring Outlook

Compensation Hiring

November 29, 2022

7 of 10 Workers Likely to Demand the Top of the Salary Range

Compensation Hiring

October 24, 2022

Do You Trust Your Compensation Data?

Compensation Employee Retention Hiring

October 18, 2022

The Boomerang Employee: Rehiring Former Talent

Hiring Human Resources

September 16, 2022

Job Swimming: Meeting Expectations

Compensation Hiring

September 16, 2022

Do you need a compensation solution?

Compensation Employee Retention Hiring

July 20, 2022

Recruiting for Transferable Skills

Hiring

July 7, 2022

Recruiting Firms: How to Remain In Demand

Hiring

June 6, 2022

Bidding for Interns: A Quick Run-Down

Hiring

June 3, 2022

The Need For Speed: Being Quick & Proactive in the Hiring Game

Hiring

June 1, 2022

The New Relocation Game

Hiring

May 12, 2022

Navigating The Competitive Labor Market Post-Great Resignation

Hiring

April 7, 2022

Opportunities uring the “Great ReAssignment “

Employee Retention Hiring

April 5, 2022

Counter Offering the Counteroffer

Compensation Hiring

March 25, 2022

Market Intelligence to Fuel Your Hiring Strategy

Hiring

February 22, 2022

Diversity Recruiting in 2023

Hiring

February 15, 2022

Competing Against More Than Pay

Hiring Human Resources

January 28, 2022

A Simple Plan for Sustaining a Quality Candidate Journey

Hiring

January 24, 2022

2022 Hiring Trends

Hiring

January 19, 2022

Hot Job Spotlight: Digital Marketing Manager

Hiring

January 18, 2022

Resolutions for Recruiters and Talent Acquisition Leaders

Hiring

February 9, 2021

What Makes a Location Ideal for Talent Acquisition?

Hiring