“The bottom line is firms must show any discretionary pay is not discriminatory, particularly to women, as that’s at the heart of the EU directive,” Furey says.
Step 5: Document the Performance Management Process
Documenting and disclosing the rationale behind talent management decisions is important for all pay transparency regulations. Performance is an objective criterion for making compensation decisions, but if companies don’t have a robust, transparent and fair process for evaluating performance throughout their organization, they are exposing themselves to potential litigation.
“Under the directive, criteria related to pay progression can include individual performance, so ensuring that your organization has a best-in-class process is critical and a key differentiator,” says Voss.
All companies should look at what their performance management process is and ensure it is thorough and properly documented internally so all employees know and understand it. The directive is not prescriptive in what a performance management process should look like, so companies should ensure they have a well-reasoned approach they can defend.