APPENDICES TO THE STUDY OF TOTAL COMPENSATION IN THE FEDERAL, STATE AND PRIVATE SECTORS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
104
Document Creation Date: 
December 23, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 21, 2012
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 4, 1984
Content Type: 
REPORT
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3.pdf3.36 MB
Body: 
Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 COMMITTEE ON POST OFFICE AND CIVIL SERVICE US. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Appendices to the Study of Total Compensation In the Federal, State and Private Sectors December 4, 1984 Prepared by Hay/Huggins Company and Hay Management Consultants Atlanta ? Boston ? Charlotte ? Chicago ? Cincinnati ? Dallas ? Houston ? Kansas City ? Los Angeles ? Minneapolis ? New York ? Philadelphia ? Phoenix ? Pittsburgh ? St. Louis ? San Francisco ? San Jose ? Seattle ? Stamford ? Walnut Creek ? Washington, D.C. HAY Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 COMMITTEE ON POST OFFICE AND CIVIL SERVICE US. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Appendices to the Study of Total Compensation in the Federal, State and Private Sectors December 4, 1984 Prepared by Hay/Huggins Company and Hay Management Consultants Atlanta ? Boston ? Charlotte ? Chicago ? Cincinnati ? Dallas ? Houston ? Kansas City ? Los Angeles ? Minneapolis ? New York ? Philadelphia ? Phoenix ? Pittsburgh ? St. Louis ? San Francisco ? San Jose ? Seattle ? Stamford ? Walnut Creek ? Washington, D.C. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 APPENDIX A: APPENDIX B: APPENDIX C: APPENDIX D: APPENDIX E: APPENDIX F: APPENDIX G: APPENDIX H: APPENDIX I: APPENDIX J: APPENDIX K: TABLE OF APPENDICES Hay Cash Compensation Comparison Participant List Hay/Huggins Benefits Comparison Participant List Detailed Description of Hay Job Evaluation Methodology List of 392 GS and Equivalent Positions Selected by Grade and Series, Including Population List of 38 SES Jobs Evaluated List of 24 Bureau of Labor Statistics Positions Included Matrix of Jobs Matched by State Prevalence of Benefit Practices Characteristics of Participating Firms Regression Statistics for Federal Cash Compensation Practice Base Salary Comparisons Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 APPENDIX A Hay Cash Compensentation Comparison Participant List Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 INDUSTRIAL - 1983 HAY COMPENSATION COMPARISON AEL Industries AMAX AMAX Base Metals R & D AMAX Chemicals AMAX Coal AMAX Copper AMAX Environmental Services AMAX Exploration AMAX Extractive R & D AMAX Lead & Zinc AMAX Molybdenum AMAX Nickel AMAX Petroleum AMAX Phosphate AMAX Special Metals AMF Abitibi Price Air Products and Chemicals Chemical Group Industrial Gases Group Process Systems Group Alcan Aluminum ALCOA Alexander & Baldwin Allen-Bradley Allergan Pharmaceuticals Allis-Chalmers AMCA International Cherry-Burrell Consumer Products Varco-Pru den Amerada Hess American Crystal Sugar American Hospital Supply American Maize Products - Corn Process. Division Anaconda Ericsson Communications Division Anamax Mining Anchor Hocking Andersons, The Anderson-Clayton Igloo Arcata Graphics Arcata Graphics Buffalo Baird Ward Fairfield Graphics Halliday Lithograph Kingsport Press San Jose Graphics Armco National Supply Armstrong World Industries ASEA Ashland Oil Ashland Chemical Ashland Coal Ashland Exploration Ashland Petroleum Atlantic Steel Atlas Minerals BW Steel Calumet Steel Franklin Steel Badische Barber-Greene Barden Barry Wright 1983 HCC INDUSTRIAL MANUFACTURING BATUS Brown & Williamson Tobacco Bell Helicopter Textron Berol Berol USA Fairlawn Hudson Lumber Binney & Smith Boehringer Ingelheim Ltd. U.S.A. Borg-Warner Air Conditioning Group Chemicals and Plastics Group Energy Equipment Group Transportation Equipment Group Braden Steel Bridgestone Tire Brown & Sharpe Manufacturing Bucyrus-Erie Construction Machinery Mining Machinery Western Gear Burmah Castrol Burry-Lu CFS Continental CWC Castings California & Hawaiian Sugar C.amcar Cameron Iron Works Canteen Cargill Carrier Case (J.1.) Castle (A.M.) Caterpillar Ceco Celanese Virginia Chemicals Central Soya Chef Francisco Chemplex Chesebrough-Pond's Bass (G.H.) Health-Tex Prince Manufacturing Chipman-Union Chloride Ciba-Geigy Agricultural Ainvick Industries Dyestuffs and Chemicals Ilford Pharmaceuticals Plastics and Additives Clark Equipment Clevepak aow Coca-Cola Bottling Co. United Codex Collins & Aikman Columbia Nitrogen Commercial Shearing Computervision ConAgra Banquet Foods Consolidated Metco Consolidated Packaging Contraves Goerz Cooling Lindsay RIS Cooper Industries Apex Machine & Tool Cooper Air Compressors Cooper Air Tools Cooper Electronics Cooper Energy Services Cooper Hand Tools Cooper Petroleum Equipment Crouse-Hinds Belden Electrical Wire Products Demco Distribution Equipment Funk Manufacturing Kirsh Martin-Decker Portable Rig Copeland Copperweld Copperweld Bimetallics Group ' Copperweld Energy Group Copperweld Robotics Cooperweld Steel Copperweld Tubing Group Information Systems Core Laboratories Coulter Electronics Curtin-Matheson Scientific Crane Crane U.S.A. Current Cutter Laboratories Cyclops Dairy Equipment Dallas Morning News Dan River Danis Industries Waste Services Deluxe Check Printers Dennison Manufacturing Dennison National Dentsply International Dexter C.H. Dexter Gibco Howe & Bainbridge Hysol Midland Mogul Diamond Shamrock Chemical Coal Exploration & Production Refining & Marketing Dick (A.B.) Dietrich Industries Diversey Wyandotte Dixie Yarns Donnelley (R.R.) Dow Chemical Dow Corning Duriron E.I. DuPont de Nemours Conoco Coal & Minerals Concarb Petroleum Operations E-Z-Em Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 HA COMPENSATION COMPARISON INDUSTRIAL ? 1983 Eaton Industrial Products Group Transportation Products Group Economics Laboratory Energy Reserves Engelhard Industries Division Ensign-Bickford Industries Essex Chemical Euclid Everest & Jennings Exxon Company U.S.A. FMC-Ordnance Div. Ferrero U.S.A. Firestone Tire & Rubber Flinchbaugh Products Florida Steel Foote Mineral Franklin Mint Freeport Mc Mo Ran Freightliner French (R.T.) Grocery Potato Fruit Growers Express G.A. Technologies GATX-Fuller General American Transportation Tank Erection/Pollock GCO Minerals General Electric General Foods General Mills General Shale Products General Signal DeZurik General Railway Leeds and Northrup Getty Oil Gifford Hill Gilbarco Global Marine Glynwed Goldkist Goodrich (B.F.) Goodyear Tire & Rubber Great Northern Nekoosa Great Northern Paper Great Southern Paper Nekoosa Papers Griffin Pipe Products Gulf Oil Harshaw Chemical Hallmark Cards Hamilton Glass Products Hammermill Paper Beckett Paper Northern Operations Hanes Healthdyne Air Shields Bio Systems Pilling Co. Product Service Heinz (1-i.l.) Heinz U.S.A. Hubinger Ore-Ida Foods 1983 HCC INDUSTRIAL (Continued) MANUFACTURING Hc ' Amchem Hercules Hich Industries Hilti Hill Steel Industries Products Honeywell Building Services Information Systems MicroSw itch Process Control Residential Hormel (Geo. A.) Houghton Mifflin Ho,.. met Huber (LW Huffy Bike Assembly Frabill Bics cle Ohio Bicycle Ojklahoma Bicycle Hunt Manufacturing Hunt-Wesson Foods Hydril Hygeia Coca-Cola Bottling Hyster IC Industries Abex Midas International Pepsi-Cola General Bottlers Pet Pet Dairy ICI Americas/U.S.A. Illinois Tool Works Industrial Paper Distributors Ingersoll-Rand Inmont Intecom Intercraft Industries International Harvester Agricultural Equipment Group Truck Group International Multifoods International Packings International Paper Inter Royal Itek Applied Technology Graphic Systems and Communication Industries Optical Systems Johnson (S.C.) & Son Johnson Matthey Joy Manufacturing Kal Kan Kellogg Kendall Kennametal Kent-Moore Kerr-McGee Chemical Forest Products Mining Petroleum Keyes Fibre Kimberly-Clark La Barge Electronics Division Tubular Division La Maur Lamb-Weston Leggett & Platt L EGG S stems Levi-Strauss Childrenswear Menswear Womens% ear Leybold Heraeus Vacuum Products Libbey-Owens?Ford Lithium Corporation Lord Louisiana Land & Exploration Lufkin Industries M & M Mars MCC Powers MPB Mack Printing Mack Trucks Macmillan Magnetic Controls MAPCO Mary Kay Cosmetics Matthews International Maytag McGraw-Edison Bussmann Campbell Chain aarke Lighting Products Masoneilan Onan Power Systems Service Wagner Worthington Group McGraw-Hill McQuay Berlin Foundry Energy Systems & Service HVAC OEM Perfex Specialty Products Mead Media General Merck Microdot Fastening Systems Miles Laboratories Mine Safety Minneapolis Electric Steel Castings MITRE Mod inc Morgan Corporation Morrison Murphy Oil NCR Nalco Chemical Nashua National Gypsum American Olean Tile Binswanger Glass Cement Gold Bond Building Products National Sea Products National Valve and Manufacturing Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 INDUSTRIAL ? 1983 HAY COMPENSATION COMPARISON 1983 HCC INDUSTRIAL (Continued) Natomas Natomas Coal Natomas North American Natomas Petroleum International Thermal Power Newport News Shipbuilding Newsweek Nippondenso of Los Angeles Nissan Motor Manufacturing U.S.A. Noranda Aluminum Norgren (C.A.) North American Philips Philips Medical Systems North Star Steel Northrop - Defense Systems Division Northrop ? Electronics Division Northwest Energy Northwest Marine Iron Works Norton Nortronics O'Sullivan Industries Occidental Chemical Agricultural Products Group Feed Fertilizer Energy-for-Waste Industrial Chemicals Group International Group - Headquarters Division Plastic & Chemical Specialities Group Durez Plastic Occidental Oil Shale Ok idata Olin Brass Chemicals Consumer Products Ecu sta Winchester Otis Elevator, NAO Otis Engineering Owens-Corning Fiberglas Owens-Illinois PPG Industries Chemicals Coatings and Resins Fiberglas Glass Pako PALCO Industries Paper Converting Peabody Coal Pendleton Woolen Mills Penn Dairies Penn field Pennwalt Pepsico Frito-Lay Pepsi-Cola U.S.A. Pepsi-Cola Bottling Group Wilson Sporting Goods Perkin-Elmer Philip Morris International Philip Morris U.S.A. Pillsbury Pitney Bowes Dictaphone Monarch Marking Pitney Bowes Business Systems Wheeler Group MANUFACTURING Pittsburgh Corning Pittsburgh ? Des Moines Steel Plexco Polk (R.L.) Price Brothers Puritan-Bennett Quaker Oats Racal-Milgo Racine Steel Castings Railcar Real Estate Data Recognition Equipment Reichhold Chemicals Rex nord Reynolds (R.J.) Industries Arninoil Archer Del Monte Tobacco Reynolds Metals Robbins & Myers Comfort Conditioning Electric Motor Fluids Handling Materials Handling Robins (A.H.) Rockwell International Rogers Interconnection Products Group Rolls Royce Royster Rust?Oleum SCM Allied Paper Paper Converting Pulp & Paper Chemicals Organic Chemicals Pigments, Metals & Equipment Consumer Products Durkee Famous Foods Proctor-Silex Smith-Corona Durkee Foods Glidden Coatings and Resins Kleinschmidt SPS Technologies Sandia National Laboratories Sandvik Scott Paper Sentry Enterprise Group Reed Industries SNE Corporation Sherex Chemical Siemens Signode Sii McEvoy Soltex Polymer Salsbury Laboratories Sonat Exploration Sonat Offshore Drilling Sonoco Products Sony Magnetic Products Speed Queen Sperry Sperry and Hutchinson Staley (A.E.) Manufacturing Standard Oil (Indiana) Standard Oil (Ohio) Chemicals & Industrial Products Kennecott Oil Old Ben Coal Petroleum Standard Register Steiger Tractor Stepan Chemical Suburban Propane Gas. Plateau SPG Energy Exploration Sun Company Superior Electric Susquehanna R & G Sloane Manufacturing Rockwool Industries Syntex Syntex Dental Products Syntex Opthalmics Syva TRW Mission Technicon Instruments Tenneco Oil ? Processing and Marketing Tetley Texas Instruments Texas Gulf Thermo-Electron Timken Tonka Triad Chemical UARCO Union Carbide Union Pacific Champlin Petroleum Rocky Mountain Energy Upland Industries Union Special Union Tank Car UNIROYAL US. Gypsum U.S. Steel U.S. Tobacco Upjohn Asgrow Seed Chemical Pharmaceutical Vallen Valmont Industries Vero Electron Devices Integrated Systems Power Systems Semi Conductor Walbro Wallace Silversmiths Waterbury Farrel Western Electric Western Publishing Westinghouse Electric White Castle System Williams Companies Agrico Chemical Edgcomb Metals Williams Exploration Williams National Gas Williams Pipe Line Wrigley (Wm.) Jr, Wyman Gordon Xerox Zenith Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 HAY COMPENSATION COMPARISON INDUSTRIAL - 1983 Abitibi Price Sales Alitalia North America American Broadcasting Leisure Publishing Radio Television Video American Chemical Society Chemical Abstracts Service American Gas Association American Society of Mechanical Engineers American Telephone & Telegraph American Bell Bell Telephone Laboratories Bell Telephone Co. of Pennsylvania , Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Cos. Cincinnati Bell Illinois Bell Telephone Indiana Bell Telephone Long Lines Michigan Bell Telephone New England Telephone New Jersey Bell Telephone New York Telephone Ohio Bell Belephone Pacific Northwest Bell Telephone Pacific Telephone & Telegraph South Central Bell Telephone Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Southern New England Telephone Southwestern Bell Telephone Wisconsin Telephone American Trucking Association Amtrak Ashland Services Atlantic Aviation Bariven Bessemer & Lake Erie Railroad Best Western International Blount Bra mco Burlington Northern Railroad Burns International Security Service Butt (H.E.) Grocery CO-I Computax CSX Carson Pirie Scott Department Stores Wholesale Floor Covering Central Telephone of Illinois Charles Levy Circulating Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railroad Chicago & Northwestern Transportation C L Systems Cominco American Communications Satellite 1983 HCC INDUSTRIAL NON-MANUFACTURING Consolidated Freightways CF Air Freight CF Data Service Consolidated Freightways of Delaware Consolidated Rail Continental Holding Cox Cable Communications Cox Data Services Distek Dravo DynaCor EG & G Idaho Factory Mutual Engineering and Research Federal Express Flagship Computer Services Fleming Flickinger (S.M.) Florist Transworld Delivery Floral Network Flying Tigers Fox & Jacobs GATX GARD GATX Leasing GATX Terminals American Steamship GTE Genstar Flintkote Land and Housing Godfather's Pizza Grand Trunk Western Railroad Graver Water/Unitech Graybar Electric Hannaford Brothers Hartmarx Howe-Baker Engineering Illinois Central Gulf Railroad Illinois Consolidated Telephone Institute of Elect. & Electr. Engineers Kepner-Tregoe Kroger Lavino Shipping Lee Way Motor Freight Long Island Railroad Major League Baseball Matson Navigation Mayflower McKee (Robert E.) Mercedes-Benz of North America Met Path Metro North Commuter Railroad Metropolitan Transit Authority Midcoast Aviation Services Mill Power Supply Minolta Missouri Pacific Railroad Missouri Valley Machinery Mutual Broadcasting National Broadcasting National CSS Norfolk Southern North American Car North American Van Lines North Carolina Assoc. of Electric Cooperatives Norwest Financial Information Services Group Pancho's Mexican Buffet Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Pizza Hut Princeton University Plasma Physics Laboratory Puerto Rico Marine Management Red Owl Stores Snyder Drug Stores Reynolds & Reynolds Reynolds Electrical & Engineering Ryder System Santa Fe Railway Sea Land Sears, Roebuck Society of Automotive Engineers Soo Line Railroad Southeastern Railroad Associated Bureau Southern Pacific Railroad Suburban Propane Gas Eastern Division Vangas Subaru of America SuperValu County Seat Stores Risk Planners Supermarkets General Syscon Terminal Freight Handling Texas American Services Trailer Train Trans Union Credit Information Union Pacific Railroad United Telecommunications North Supply United Telephone System Carolina Group Eastern Group Florida Group Midwest Group Northwest Group Southeast Group Texas Group United Telephone of Indiana United Telephone of Ohio Utelcom University Computing Viacom International WSM Williams Realty Yellow Freight System Zale Corporation nprinqcifiRd and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 INDUSTRIAL ? 1983 HAY COMPENSATION COMPARISON 1983 HCC INDUSTRIAL Arizona Public Service Basin Electric Power Cooperative Boston Gas Brooklyn Union Gas Carolina Power & Light Citizens Gas & Coke Colonial Gas Energy System Columbia Gas System Dayton Power & Light Detroit Edison Duke Power East Ohio Gas Florida Power General Public Utilities Gulf States Utilities Hackensack Water InterNorth Kansas City Power & Light Louisville Water Massachusetts Municipal Wholesale Electric Memphis Light, Gas and Water Metropolitan Sewer District Missouri Public Service Nebraska Public Power District UTILITIES Nevada Power Northern States Power Ohio Edison Pennsylvania Power Omaha Public Power District Pennsylvania Power & Light Philadelphia Gas Works Piedmont Natural Gas Plains Electric Generation & Transmission Cooperative Portland General Electric Power Authority of the State of New York Providence Gas Santee Cooper Sierra Pacific Power Sonat Southern Natural Gas Southwest Gas Texas Gas Transmission Texas Utilities Services Valero Energy Saber Energy Washington Public Power Supply Wisconsin Gas Please Note: All organizations listed have submitted data to this survey. However, data from some participants may not be available for use in some types of standard and special analyses at some times. When major re-evaluation and recorrelation processes take place, data may be withdrawn from the active file until those processes are complete. In other cases, due to the nature of a survey request and our knowledge of the required participants' data, we may restrict availability in order to preserve confidentiality. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 HAY COMPENSATION COMPARISON FINANCIAL ? 1983 1983 LIST OF Acacia Mutual Life Insurance (Washington, DC) Aid Association for Lutherans (Appleton, WI) Alabama Farm Bureau Mutual Casualty Insurance (Montgomery) Allendale Mutual Insurance (Johnston, RI) American Express (NYC) Fireman's Fund Insurance (San Francisco) American Family Insurance Group (Madison, WI) American Mutual Insurance Companies (Wakefield, MA) American Mutual Life Insurance (Des Monies) American National Insurance (Galveston, TX) American Security Insurance Group (Atlanta) Arizona Bank, The (Phoenix) Armco Financial Services Group (Middletown, OH) Armco Financial Corporation (Middletown, OH) Armco Insurance Group (Milwaukee) Bellefonte Reinsurance (Cincinnati) Columbia National Life Insurance (Columbus, OH) Continental Western Life Insurance (Wilwaukee) North Pacific Insurance (Portland, OR) Northwestern National Insurance (Milwaukee) Pacific National Insurance (Los Angeles) Special Risks (Dallas) Talbot, Bird (NYC) Universal Reinsurance (Milwaukee) Association Life Insurance (Milwaukee) BMA (Kansas City, MO) Bank of New England (Boston) Bank of the Commonwealth (Detroit) Bank One of Northeastern Ohio (Painesville, OH) BankEast Corporation (Manchester, NH) Bankers Life (Des Moines) Bankers Life Nebraska (Lincoln) Bankers Life and Casualty (Chicago) Banking Center, The (Waterbury, CT) Banner Life Insurance (Rockville, MD) Barclays American Business Credit (East Hartford, CT) Barnett Banks of Florida (Jacksonville) Berkshire Life Insurance (Pittsfield, MA) Borg Warner Acceptance (Chicago) Capital Holding (Louisville) Capital Enterprise Insurance Group (Louisville) Commonwealth Life (Louisville) Georgia International Life (Atlanta) Home Security Life (Durham, NC) National Standard Life (Orlando) Peoples Life (Washington, DC) Carteret Savings and Loan (Morristown, NJ) Central Fidelity Bank (Richmond, VA) Central Life Assurance (Des Moines) Central Trust Bank (Jefferson City, MO) Chase Federal Savings & Loan (Miami) Chase Manhattan Bank (NYC) Citicorp (NYC) Clark Equipment Credit (Buchanan, MI) Columbus Mutual Life Insurance (Ohio) Commercial Security Bank (Salt Lake City) Commercial Union Insurance (Boston) Community Savings Bank (Rochester, NY) Connecticut Bank & Trust (Hartford) Connecticut Savings Bank (New Haven) PARTICIPANTS Continental Corporation (NYC) Cotton States Insurance (Atlanta) Dallas Federal Savings & Loan (Texas) Dominion Bankshares (Roanoke, VA) East New York Savings Bank, The (NYC) Empire Mutual Insurance (NYC) Equitable Life Insurance of Iowa (Des Moines) Essex Bank (Peabody, MA) Farm Credit Banks of Springfield (Massachusetts) Farm Family Life Insurance (Albany, NY) First Bank System (Minneapolis) First National Bank of Minneapolis (Minnesota) First Columbia Financial Corporation (Denver) Columbia Savings & Loan (Denver) First Federal Savings & Loan of Lake Worth (Florida) First National Bank of Clayton (Missouri) First National Bank of Dubuque (Iowa) First National Bank of Maryland (Baltimore) First National Bank of Pennsylvania (Erie) First Pennsylvania Bank (Philadelphia) First Security Corporation (Salt Lake City) First Texas Savings (Dallas) Flagship Banks (Miami) Flagship National Bank of Miami (Florida) General American Life Insurance (St. Louis) General Electric Credit (Stamford, CT) Goldome (Buffalo, NY) Great Southern Life Insurance (Houston) Great Western Bank (Phoenix) Great West Casualty (South Sioux City, NE) Home Federal Savings and Loan (Tuscon) IBM Endicott/Owego Employees Federal Credit Union (Endicott, NY) IBM Mid America Employees Federil Credit Union (Rochester, MN) Independent Life Insurance (Jacksonville) InterFirst (Dallas) InterFirst Bank Austin (Texas) InterFirst Bank Dallas (Texas) InterFirst Investment Management (Dallas) Integon (Winston-Salem, NC) Investors Diversified Services (Minneapolis) Kanawha Valley Bank (Charleston, WV) Kansas City Life Insurance (Kansas City, MO) National Reserve (Topeka, KS) Sunset Life (Olympia, WA) Lake Shore National Bank (Chicago) Liberty National Life Insurance (Birmingham, AL) Lincoln National Bank (Ft. Wayne, IN) Lincoln National Corporation (Ft. Wayne, IN) American States Insurance (Indianapolis) Chicago Title & Trust (Illinois) Lincoln National Life Insurance (Fort Wayne, IN) Lutheran Brotherhood (Minneapolis) Lutheran Mutual Life Insurance (Waverly, IA) M & I Marshall & Ilsley Bank (Milwaukee) M & T Bank (Buffalo) Maine Savings Bank (Portland) Manhattan Life Insurance (NYC) Manufacturers Hanover Trust (NYC) Marine Corporation (Milwaukee) Massachusetts Property Insurance Underwriters Association and Rhode Island Joint Reinsurance Association (Boston, MA) Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 FINANCIAL ? 1983 HAY COMPENSATION COMPARISON 1983 LIST OF PARTICIPANTS (Continued) Mechanics Savings Bank (Hartford) Mellon Bank (Pittsburgh) Merrill Lynch (NYC) Midland Mutual Insurance (Columbus, OH) Ministers Life Insurance (Minneapolis) Minnesota Federal Savings & Loan (St. Paul) Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance (St. Paul) Monumental Life Insurance (Baltimore) Morgan Guaranty Trust (NYC) Mutual Benefit Life Insurance (Newark) Mutual Federal Savings & Loan (Norfolk, VA) Mutual Life Insurance of New York (NYC) Mutual of Omaha Insurance (Nebraska) Mutual Trust Life Insurance (Chicago) National Bank of Detroit (Michigan) National Life Insurance (Montpelier, VT) National Rural Utilities Cooperative Finance (Washington, DC) New England Mutual Life Insurance (Boston) North American Life & Casualty (Minneapolis) Northwest Bancorporation (Minneapolis) Banco Financial (Minneapolis) Banco Incorporated (Minneapolis) Banco Properties (Minneapolis) First American National Bank (Duluth, MN) First National Bank of Aberdeen (South Dakota) First National Bank of the Black Hills (Rapid City, SD) Iowa-Des Moines National Bank (Iowa) Midland National Bank (Minneapolis) Northwest National Bank Southwest (Bloomington, MN) Northwestern National Bank (Minneapolis) Northwestern National Bank (Sioux Falls) Northwestern National Bank (St. Paul) Southside Insurance (Minneapolis) Unites States National Bank (Omaha) Composite of 77 Banks Composite of 4 Trust Companies Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance (Milwaukee) Northwestern National Life Insurance (Minneapolis) North Atlantic Life Insurance (Jericho, NY) Northern Life Insurance (Seattle) Norwest Financial (Des Moines) Ohio Citizens Trust (Toledo) Ohio National Life Insurance (Cincinnati) Old National Bank (Evansville, IN) Old National Bank (Spokane, WA) Old Stone Bank (Providence, RI) Omaha National Bank (Nebraska) Onondaga Savings Bank (Syracuse, NY) PMI Mortgage Insurance (San Francisco) Patrons Mutual Insurance (Olathe, KS) Pennsylvania National Mutual Casualty Insurance (Harrisburg) People's Savings Bank (Bridgeport, CT) Pioneer Savings & Loan (Racine, WI) Pitney Bowes Credit (Darien, CT) Pittsburgh National Bank (Pennsylvania) Pontiac State Bank (Michigan) Protective Life Insurance (Birmingham, AL \ Provident Life and Accident Insurance (Chattanooga, TN) Provident Life Insurance (Bismarck, ND) Provident Mutual Life Insurance (Philadelphia) Puget Sound National Bank (Tacoma, WA) Ranger Insurance (Houston) American Founders Life Insurance (Austin, TX) Royal Bank of Canada (NYC) San Diego Trust & Savings Bank (California) Security Benefit Life Insurance (Topeka, KS) Security Mutual Life of New York (Binghamton) Security Pacific Finance (San Diego) Security Savings Bank (Marshalltown, IA) Sentry Insurance (Stevens Point, WI) Society for Savings (Hartford, CT) St. Paul Companies (Minnesota) Western Life Insurance (St. Paul) State Automobile Mutual Insurance (Columbus, OH) State Street Bank & Trust (Boston) Statesman Group (Des Moines) Student Loan Marketing Association (Washington, DC) Sun Life of Canada (Wellesley Hills, MA) Texas American Bancshares (Fort Worth) American Ag Credit (Aurora, CO) Texas American Bank ? Amarillo (Texas) Texas American Bank ? Austin (Texas) Texas American Bank ? Dallas (Texas) Texas American Bank ? Denison (Texas) Texas American Bank ? Fort Worth (Texas) Texas American Bank ? Galleria (Houston) Texas American Bank ? Houston (Texas) Texas American Bank ? LBJ (Dallas) Texas American Bank ? McKinney (Texas) Texas American Bank ? Midland (Texas) Texas American Bank ? Prestonwood (Dallas) Texas American Bank ? Riverside (Fort Worth) Texas American Bank ? Westside (Fort Worth) Texas American Investment Management (Fort Worth) Texas Commerce Bank ? Austin (Texas) Texas Federal Savings & Loan (Dallas) Third National Bank and Trust (Dayton, OH) Time Insurance (Milwaukee) Title Insurance & Trust (Los Angeles) Tower Federal Credit Union (Annapolis Junction, MD) Travelers, The (Hartford, CT) Union Mutual Life Insurance (Portland, ME) United Central Bank (Des Moines) United Insurance Co. of America (Chicago) United Virginia Bank (Richmond) Valley National Bank (Phoenix) Virginia National Bank (Norfolk) Washington National Corporation (Evanston, IL) Anchor National Life Insurance (Phoenix) Washington National Insurance (Evanston, IL) Western States Life Insurance (Fargo, ND) Zurich Insurance (Schaumburg, IL) Please Note: All organizations listed have submitted data to this survey. However, data from some participants may not be available for use in some types of standard and special analyses at some times. When major re-evaluation and recorrelation processes take place, data may be withdrawn from the active file until those processes are complete. In other cases, due to the nature of a survey request and our knowledge of the required participants' data, we may restrict availability in order to preserve confidentiality. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 NONPROFIT ? 1982 HAY COMPENSATION COMPARISON 1982 SERVICE PARTICIPANTS BLUE CROSS/BLUE SHIELD P1 Alabama BC/BS (Birmingham) California, BC of Southern (Los Angeles) Connecticut BC/BS (North Haven) Florida BC/BS (Jacksonville) Iowa BC/BS (Des Moines) Kentucky BC/BS (Louisville) Maryland BC/BS (Baltimore) Massachusetts BC/BS (Boston) Michigan BC/BS (Detroit) Missouri BC/BS (St. Louis) New Jersey BC/BS (Newark) New York, BC/BS of Greater (NYC) North Carolina BC/BS (Durham) Ohio, BC of Northeast (Cleveland) Ohio, BC of Southwest (Hospital Care Corporation) (Cincinnati) Ohio BS (Worthington) Pennsylvania, BC of Greater Philadelphia Pennsylvania, BC of Western (Pittsburgh) Pennsylvania BS (Camp Hill) Texas BC/BS (Dallas) Virginia BC/BS (Richmond) Wisconsin, United BC/BS (Milwaukee) HOSPITALS Allegheny General Hospital (Pittsburgh) Alta Bates Corporation (Berkeley, CA) Appalachian Regional (10 Hospitals) (Lexington, KY) Archbishop Bergan Mercy Hospital (Omaha) Baptist Hospitals and Health Systems (Phoenix) Baystate Medical Center (Springfield, MA) Bethesda Hospital & Deaconess Association (Cincinnati) Bishop Clarkson Memorial Hospital (Omaha) Boswell Memorial Hospital (Sun City, AZ) Children's Hospital of San Francisco (California) Choate/Symmes Health Services (Woburn, MA) Citizens General Hospital (New Kensington, PA) Evangelical Hospital Association (Oak Lawn, IL) Fresno Community Hospital and Medical Center (Fresno, CA) Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital (Philadelphia) Hartford Hospital (Connecticut) Hillcrest Medical Center (Tulsa, OK) IHC Hospital Corporation (25 Hospitals) (Salt Lake City) Madison General Hospital (Madison, WI) Maine Medical Center (Portland) Manchester Memorial Hospital (Connecticut) Memorial Hospital Medical Center (Long Beach, CA) Memorial Hospital System (Houston) Mercy Hospital (Miami, FL) P2 Arkansas BC/BS Little Rock) Colorado BC/BS Denver) Delaware BC/BS Wilmington) Georgia BC/BS (Atlanta) Georgia BC/BS (Columbus) Idaho BC (Boise) Kansas BC/BS (Topeka) Maine BC/BS (Portland) Mississippi BC/BS (Jackson) Missouri BC/BS (Kansas City) Montana BC (Great Falls) New York, BC of Northeastern (Albany) New York, BC of Western (Buffalo) Ohio, BC of Central (Columbus) Ohio, BC of Northwest (Toledo) Pennsylvania, Capital BC (Harrisburg) Pennsylvania, Lehigh Valley BC (Allentown) Rhode Island BC/BS (Providence) Utah BC/BS (Salt Lake City) West Virginia BC/BS (Charleston) Mercy Medical Center (Coon Rapids, MN) Michael Reese Hospital and Medical Center (Chicago) Montefiore Hospital and Medical Center (NYC) NKC (Louisville, KY) Oil City Hospital (Oil City, PA) Overlook Hospital (Summit, NJ) St. John Hospital (Detroit, MI) St. Joseph's Hospital (Tucson, AZ) St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center (Patterson, NJ) St. Luke's Hospital (Milwaukee) St. Luke's Hospitals (Fargo, ND) St. Luke's Medical Center (Phoenix) St. Mary-Corwin Hospital (Pueblo, CO) St. Mary's Hospital & Health Center (Tucson, AZ) St. Mary's Medical Center (Knoxville, TN) St. Mary's Medical Center (Racine, WI) Samaritan Health Service (5 Hospitals) (Phoenix) Shadyside Hospital (Pittsburgh) Sutter Community Hospital (2 Hospitals) (Sacramento, CA) Trumbull Memorial Hospital (Warren, OH) United Presbyterian Residence (Long Island, NY) University Hospital of Cleveland (Ohio) Warren General Hospital (Warren, PA) Wesley Medical Center (Wichita, KS) NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS A.A. World Services (New York, NY) American Bankers Association (Washington, D.C.) American Heart Association (Dallas) American Hospital Association (Chicago) American Institute of CPA's (New York, NY) American Society of Chartered Life Underwriters (Bryn Mawr, PA) Appalachia Educational Laboratory (Charleston, WV) Bank Marketing Association (Chicago) Blue Cross and Blue Shield Associations (Chicago) Carnegie Institute and Library (Pittsburgh) CEMREL (St. Louis) Far West Laboratory (San Francisco) Financial Accountants Standards Board (Stamford, CT) Financial Executives Institute (NYC) Gateway School District (Pittsburgh, PA) Girl Scouts of the USA (NYC) International Reading Association (Newark, DE) Life Insurance Marketing and Research Association (Hartford, CT) Life Office Management Association (Atlanta) Lucas County Children Services Board (Maumee, OH) Lutheran Social Services (Dayton, OH) Midwest Research Institution (Kansas City, MO) National Association for Retarded Citizens (Arlington, TX) National Association of Mutual Savings Banks (NYC) National Board of Medical Examiners (Philadelphia) Pennsylvania Medical Society (Lemoyne, PA) San Diego Zoological Society (San Diego, CA) United Methodist Publishing House (Nashville, TN) University of Texas Health Science Service (Houston, TX) Wilder (Amherst H.) Foundation (St. Paul) YMCA of Metropolitan Chicago (Illinois) YMCA of the United States (Chicago) neclassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 APPENDIX B Hay/Huggins Benefits Comparison Participant List Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 NONCASH COMPENSATION COMPARISON HAY ? HUGGINS 1983 HAY-HUGGINS BENEFITS CONSULTING SERVICES Hay-Huggins, a member of the Hay Group, is a unique affiliation of two professional consulting organizations: Hay Associates with its extensive capabilities in human resources consulting and Huggins and Company with its actuarial consulting expertise. This combination produces a "total remuneration" approach to employee benefits. The Hay- Huggins approach takes into account the full picture of cash compensation, incentives, and noncash compensation including employee benefits, perquisites and related personnel policies. As a member of The Hay Group, the largest human resources consulting firm in the world with 73 offices in 23 countries, Hay-Huggins serves over 1,000 organizations worldwide: industrial and financial companies of all size, including many Fortune 500 companies, government and research organizations and not-for-profit institutions. All client assignments are approached from a viewpoint that is practical, innovative and flexible enough to meet each client's unique objectives. To ensure total objectivity, Hay-Huggins does not accept commissions. Hay-Huggins pioneered the development of employee benefits measurement and comparison systems; in addition, Hay- Huggins maintains the most detailed data base of employee benefits and personnel policies in the United States. Hay-Huggins actuaries and consultants also help establish an important bridge between the two organizational functions most concerned with employee benefits: Personnel and Finance. This valuable orientation permits our professional staff to help both personnel and financial executives meet their objectives of providing employees with the best benefit coverages possible at the most reasonable cost to the organization. Among specific services available to employers are: ? Establishing Employee Benefits Objectives ? Total Compensation Planning and Budgeting ? Assessing the Adequacy of Benefits ? Objective Analysis of Benefit Program Competitiveness ? Actuarial Analysis Services ? Group Insurance Financial Audits ? Studies of Employee Perceptions of Benefits ? Benefits Communications 7 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 HAY ? HUGGINS 1983 NONCASH COMPENSATION COMPARISON Abbott Laboratories Abbott Northwestern Hospital Acacia Mutual Life Insurance Company Action Industries, Inc. Advanced Technologies AEL, Inc. Aerospace Corporation AGA Gas, Inc. Aid Association for Lutherans Air Products and Chemicals Alabama Power Company ALCOA Alexander & Alexander Alexander & Baldwin. Inc. Alfa Romeo. Inc. Allegheny Intermediate Unit Allen Bradley Company Allendale Mutual Insurance Allergan Pharmaceuticals Allied Bank International Allied Corporation Allis Chalmers Company AMAX. Inc. Amerada Hess Corporation American Association for the Advancement of Science American Bank and Trust of Pennsylvania American Bankers Association American Broadcasting Company, Inc. American Chemical Society American College, The American Council of Life Insurance American Crystal Sugar American Express Company American Family Insurance Group American Gas Association American Heart Association, Inc. American Hoechst American Hospital Association American Hospital Supply Corporation American Institute for Research American Institute of CPA's American Iron and Steel Institute American Public Transit Association American Reinsurance Company American Security and Trust Company American Shipbuilding American Society of Civil Engineers American Society of Refrigerator & Air Conditioner Engineers American Standard, Inc. American States Insurance Companies American Sterilizer Company American Systems Corporation American Telephone & Telegraph Company Amerifirst Federal Savings & Loan Ameritrust Amersham Amfac Hotels Amtrak Anaconda Minerals Company Anchor/Darling Industries Anchor Hocking Corporation Anchorage School District Andersons, The Annuity Board of Southern Baptists Arc America Arcata Corporation Archbishop Bergan Mercy Hospital Archer-n.nieic Declassified and Approved LIST OF PARTICIPANTS ARINC Research Corporation Arizona Bank Arkansas Best Corporation Armco, Inc. Armco Insurance Group Armstrong World Industries, Inc. Arvida Corporation Asarco, Inc. ASEA Ashland Oil, Inc. ASHRTAC Engineering Atlantic Aviation Corporation Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company Automobile Club of Michigan Avery Products Corporation BABB, Inc. Badische Corporation Baker Industries Baltimore Aircoil Bank Fund Staff Federal Credit Union Bank Marketing Association Bank of the Commonwealth Bank of New England, N.A. Bank East Corporation Bankers Life and Casualty Company Bankers Life Company, The Bankers Life of Nebraska Baptist Hospital & Health Systems Barber-Greene Company Barclays Bank of California Barclays Bank of New York Barden Corporation Bariven Corporation Barnett Banks of Florida Basin Electric Power Cooperative BATUS, Inc. BDM Corporation, The Bean Company, L. L. Beaven Companies Bechtel Corporation Beechum, Inc. Bell Helicopter Textron Bell Telephone of Pennsylvania Bendix Corporation? Aerospace and Electronics Group Berkshire Life Insurance Company Berol Corporation Bessemer & Lake Erie Railroad Best Products Company, Inc. Bethesda Hospital Betz Laboratories Beverage Management, Inc. Bishop Clarkson Memorial Hospital Black & Decker Manufacturing Company Blessings Corporation Dick Blick Company Blue Cross Hospital Service Inc.? St. Louis, Missouri Blue Cross of Greater Philadelphia Blue Cross of Northeast Ohio Blue Cross of Northeastern New York Blue Cross of Northwest Ohio Blue Cross of Southern California Blue Cross/Blue Shield Associations, Inc. Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Alabama Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Colorado Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Connecticut, Inc. Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Delaware, Inc. 11111P rrncc/RIt IP ShiPlri (If FInrirla For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RD Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Iowa Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Blue Bolt, Cross/Blue Shield of Kansas Cross/Blue Shield of Maine Cross/Blue Shield of Maryland Cross/Blue Shield of Massachusetts Cross/Blue Shield of Michigan Cross/Blue Shield of Nebraska Cross/Blue Shield of North Carolina' Cross/Blue Shield of Southern West Virginia Cross/Blue Shield of Texas Cross/Blue Shield of Virginia Beranck and Newman, Inc. Boone County National Bank Borg Warner Acceptance Corporation Boston Edison Company BP Alaska Exploration BP North America Braden Steel Corporation Bristol-Meyers Company Brooklyn Union Gas Brooks and Perkins, Inc. Brown University Brown & Williamson Tobacco Brunswick Corporation Buckeye Gas Products Bucyrus Erie Company Buffalo Savings Bank Burger King Corporation Burlington Northern, Inc. Burnett Company, Leo Business Men's Assurance Company of America Butler Manufacturing Company Butt Grocery Company, H.E. Buttes Gas & Oil Company C.A.C.I., Inc. California & Hawaiian Sugar Company California Credit Union League Cameron Iron Works Campbell Soup Company Capital Holding Corporation Cargill, Inc. Carle Foundation Carrier Corporation Carson, Pirie Scott Company Carteret Savings & Loan Castle & Company, A.M. Castle & Cooke, Inc. Caterpillar Tractor Company Catholic Health Associations Ceco Corporation Center for Naval Analysis Central Bancshares of the South Central Life Assurance Central Soya Company, Inc. Central Telephone and Utilities Corporation Central Trust Bank Centronics CertainTeed Corporation CFS Continental Chamber of Commerce of the United States Chase Federal Savings and Loan Chase Manhattan Bank Chemical Bank Chemlawn Corporation Chesebrough-Pond's, Inc. Chicago Board of Trade Chicago Bridge & Iron Industries, Inc. Chicago & Northwestern Transportation Company rkirmon Titla Tri let P89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 NONCASH COMPENSATION COMPARISON HAY ? HUGGINS 1983 Chicago Tribune Chipman-Union, Inc. Chrysler Corporation Ciba-Geigy Corporation CIGNA Cincinnati Association for the Blind Citibank, N.A. Citizen's Bank & Trust, MD Citizen's Bank City Bank & Trust City of Colorado Springs City of Hampton City of Los Angeles City of Los Angeles (Fire & Police) City of Los Angeles (General) City of Los Angeles (Water & Power) Cit of Newport News City of Norfolk City of Portsmouth City of Richmond City of Suffolk Cleveland Electric Illuminating CMS Companies CNA Insurance Coastal Corporation, The Coca-Cola Company, Inc. Cole National Corporation Colonial Bank Colonial Life and Accident Columbia Gas System Service Corporation Columbia Hospital Columbia Nitrogen Corporation Commercial Security Bank Commercial Shearing, Inc. Commercial Union Insurance Companies Commonwealth National Bank Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Community Federal Savings and Loan Computer Sciences Corporation Computer Sciences Corporation? Systems Divisions COMSAT Congressional Budget Office Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Consolidated Rail Corporation Continental Bank Continental Corporation Continental-Emsco Company Continental Illinois Corporation Continental Materials Corporation Contraves Goerz Corporation Conwed Corporation Thomas Cooke. Inc. Cooper Industries Copperweld Corporation Corroon and Black of Tennessee. Inc. Cotton States Insurance Country Pride Foods, Ltd. County of Lake Courier Corporation Cox Cable Communications, Inc. Crane & Company Crocker National Bank Crompton & Knowles Corporation Crowley Maritime Corporation CRST, Inc. CSX Corporation Cyclops Corporation LIST OF PARTICIPANTS (Continued) Danly Machine Corporation Dayton Power and Light Company Dayton-Hudson Corporation Dead River Company Decision Data Computer Corporation Deluxe Check Printers, Inc. Dennison Manufacturing Company Deposit Guaranty National Bank Detroit Edison Company Dexter Corporation Dial Financial Corporation Diamond Shamrock Dick Company, A. B. DiGiorgio Corporation Disston Distek, Inc. Dixie Yarns, Inc. Donaldson Company Dow Chemical, U.S.A. Dow Corning Corporation Draper Laboratory, Inc., Charles Stark Dravo Corporation Duke Power Company Duriron Company, Inc. Durr Fillauer Medical, Inc. Dynalectron Corporation East New York Savings Bank Eastern Stainless Steel Economics Laboratory, Inc. E. F. Hutton Credit Union EG & G Idaho EG & G, Inc. EMC Technologies, Inc. Energy Reserves Group Ensign-Bickford Industries, Inc. Equibank, N.A. Equitable Trust Erie Insurance Group Euclid, Inc. Excelsior Truck Leasing Company, Inc. Factory Mutual Engineering Corporation Farm Bureau Family Insurance Farm Credit Banks of Springfield, MA Farm Credit Banks of St. Paul Farm Family Life/Mutual Insurance Companies Federal Express Corporation Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation Federal National Mortgage Association Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Fidelity Bank Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Fidelity Union Life Insurance Company First American Bank & Trust, MD First American Bank, N.A. First Amtenn Corporation First Bank System, Inc. First Mississippi Corporation First National Bank of Maryland First National Bank of Mexico, MO First National Bank of Minneapolis First Oklahoma Bancorporation First Pennsylvania Bank First Security Corporation Fisher-Price Toys Flickinger Corporation Flo-Valve Company Florida Power Corporation FMC Corporation Foremost-McKesson Foster Company, L. B. Four Cities United Way Fox & Jacobs, Inc. Fox-Stanley Photo Products, Inc. Foxboro Company Frantz Manufacturing Company Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. French Company, R.T. Friendly Ice Cream Corporation Frito-Lay, Inc. Frito-Lay (Puerto Rico) Fruit Growers Express Fusion Systems Corporation Gallaudet College GEICO General American Insurance Company General Electric Company General Electric Company? Space Systems Division General Foods Corporation General Mills General Shale Products Corporation General Signal Corporation Genstar, Ltd. Georgetown Texas Steel Georgia Power Company Germantown Sayings Bank Gibraltar Savings Gifford-Hill & Company, Inc. Girard Bank Girl Scouts of the U.S.A. Godfather's Pizza Gould SEL., Inc. Government Employee's Life Insurance GPU Service Corporation Grand Trunk Western Railroad Company Graybar Electric Company Great Southern Life Insurance Company Greatwest Casualty Corporation Greyhound GRI Corporation GTE Automatic Electric, Inc. GTE Laboratories Hahnemann Medical College & Hospital Hallmark Cards. Inc. Hall's Motor Transit Hamady Brothers Foods, Inc. Hanes Corporation John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company Hannaford Brothers Hartmarx Hartford Hospital Healthdyne Heinz Company, H.J. Hewlett-Packard Company Highlands Energy Corporation Hillcrest Medical Center Hilti Industries, Inc. Hiram Walker Holmes & Narver, Inc. Home Federal Savings and Loan Home Petroleum Honeywell Federal Systems Division Honeywell, Inc.?PMSD Hospital Data Center of Virginia Hospital Service Plan of New lersev Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 HAY - HUGGINS 1983 NONCASH COMPENSATION COMPARISON Howard Johnson Company Howard University Howe-Baker, Inc. Hubbard Milling Huber Corporation, J.M. Huffy Corporation Hughes Aircraft Corporation Human Resources Research Organization Hunt Chemical Corporation, Phillip A. Hunt Manufacturing Company Husky Oil Hyatt Clark Hygia Coca-Cola Bottling Company ICI Americas, Inc. Illinois Bell Telephone Illinois Central Gulf Railroad Illinois Power Company Illinois Tool Works, Inc. Independent Life Insurance Indianapolis Life Insurance Indianapolis Power & Light Ingersoll-Rand Company Integon Corporation Interfirst Corporation Intermedics, Inc. Intermountain Health Care International Packings Corporation International Playtex, Inc. Investors Diversified Services Itek Graphic Systems & Communications Industries IU International Corporation Jefferson Bank of Miami Johnson, E.F. Johnson & Son, S.C. Jonathon Corporation Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation Joy Manufacturing Company Kaiser Foundation Health Plan Kaiser Steel Kal Kan Kansas City Life Insurance Kansas City Power & Light Kawasaki Motors Corporation, USA Kellogg Company Kendall Company Kennametal, Inc. Kent-Moore Corporation Kepner-Tregoe, Inc. Kerr-McGee Corporation Kimberly-Clark Corporation Knapp-King-Size Corporation Kroger Company Lamb-Weston, Inc. Lavino Shipping Company Lawrence Livermore Laboratory Lever Brothers Company Levi Strauss & Company Charles Levy Circulating Company Leybold Hereaus Vacuum Libbey-Owens-Ford Company Liberty National Bank & Trust Company Liberty National Life Insurance Company Life Insurance Marketing and Research (LIMRA) Lincoln National Corporation Lipe-Rollway Corporation Declassified and Approved LIST OF PARTICIPANTS (Continued) Thomas J. Lipton Inc. LITHCO Long Island Railroad Company Lucas CAV Industries, Inc. Lucas Industries, Inc. Lutheran Brotherhood Lutheran Mutual Life Insurance Company Mack Printing Company Mack Trucks, Inc. Madison General Hospital Magnetic Controls Company Mallinckrodt Manchester Memorial Hospital Manufacturers and Traders Trust MAPCO, Inc. Mark Twain Bancshares, Inc. Mary Kay Cosmetics Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company Mathus Company, The Matsushita, Inc. Mattel, Inc. May Department Stores Company Mayflower Corporation McGraw-Edison Company McGraw-Hill, Inc. McKee, Inc., Robert E. McQuay-Perfex, Inc. MCI Telecommunications Mead Corporation Medical Mutual of Cleveland Memorial Hospital Medical Center of Long Beach Memorial Hospital System of Houston Memphis Light, Gas, & Water Division Merchants Insurance Group Merck & Company, Inc. Metpath, Inc. MetroNorth Corporation Metropolitan Life Insurance Company MIB, Inc. Michigan Wisconsin Pipe Line Company Mid-Atlantic Toyota Distributors, Inc. Midcon Corporation Midland Mutual Life Insurance Company Midwest Research Institute Midwest Stock Exchange, Inc. Milchem, Inc. Miles Laboratories Milwaukee Sanitation Department Minnesota Fabrics, Inc. Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Company Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance Company Minolta Corporation Missouri Pacific Railroad Company Mitre Corporation Mitsubishi International Modern Drop Forge Modern Merchandising, Inc. Modine Manufacturing Company Monarch Capital Corporation Montefiore Hospital and Medical Center Montgomery Ward and Company Moog, Inc. Moore Business Forms, Inc. Morgan Guarantee Trust Company of New York Morrison, Inc. Motorola, Inc. Murphy Oil Corporation Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Mutual Broadcasting System Mutual Federal Savings and Loan Association Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York Mutual of Omaha NACUBO National Bank of Detroit National Can Corporation National Gypsum Corporation National Railroad Labor Conference National Rural Utilities Cooperative Finance Corporation National Supply Nationwide Insurance Natomas Navy Federal Credit Union NCNB Corporation NCR Corporation Nebraska Public Power District NEC Information System NERCO New England Mutual Life Insurance Company Newport News Shipbuilding & Drydock Newport Steel Corporation Nippondenso of Los Angeles NKC, Inc. Norfolk Southern Corporation North American Life & Casualty Company North American Philips Corporation North American Van Lines North Broward Hospital District North Mississippi Medical Center Northern Indiana Public Service Company (NIPSCO) Northern Life Insurance Northern Trust Company Northrup Corporation? Aircraft Division Northwest Bancorporation Northwest Industries, Inc. Northwest Pipeline Corporation Northwestern Bell Telephone Company Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company Northwestern National Life Insurance Company Norton Company Occidental Petroleum Ohio Edison Company Ohio Medical Indemnity Mutual Corporation Ohio Valley Medical Center, Inc. OKIDATA Corporation Old Kent Bank and Trust Old Stone Bank Omaha Airport Authority Omaha Public Power District ORI, Inc. Overlook Hospital Overseas Development Council Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corporation Owens-Illinois, Inc. Paccar, Inc. Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Pacific Resources, Inc. Pako Corporation Palco, Inc. MSI Insurance Company Paper Converting Machine Company For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 NONCASH COMPENSATION COMPARISON HAY - HUGGINS 1983 Pendleton Woolen Mills Penn Virginia Corporation Pennfield Corporation Pennsylvania Blue Shield Pennsylvania Medical Society Pennsylvania National Insurance Pennsylvania Power & Light Company Pennwalt Corporation Pentagon Federal Credit Union Peoples Gas Light & Coke Company Peoples Natural Gas Company, Inc. Peoples Savings Bank Peoples Security, Maryland Pepsi-Cola Perkin-Elmer Company Perpetual American Federal Savings & Loan Pfizer, Inc. Philips Coal Company Piedmont Natural Gas Pillsbury Company PIMA County Governmental Center Pioneer Savings and Loan Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Company Pittsburgh National Bank Pizza Hut, Inc. Plains Electric Generation & Transmission Cooperative Planning Research Corporation Planters Bank & Trust Company Pontiac State Bank Poole Equipment Company, Gregory Portland General Electric Power Authority of State of New York PPG Industries PQ Corporation Preferred Risk Mutual Insurance Company Presbyterian Hospital of New York City Price Associates, Inc., T. Rowe Price Brothers Company Protective Life Insurance Company Provident Life & Accident Insurance Compan Provident National Bank Public Broadcasting Service Public Service Company of New Mexico Puget Sound National Bank Puritan-Bennett Corporation Racal-Milgo, Inc. Rainier National Bank Rapistan, Inc. Raymond Corporation Raymond International Raytheon Company Reading & Bates Corporation Recognition Equipment Michael Reese Hospital Regional Transportation Authority Research Triangle Institute Research-Cottrell, Inc. Rexham Rexnord, Inc. Reynolds Metals Richardson-Vicks, Inc. Riggs National Bank Riss International Roadway Express, Inc. Rockefeller Brothers Fund Rogers Corporation Rouse Company Royal Bank of Canada Declassified and Approved LIST OF PARTICIPANTS (Continued) Royal Insurance Company Royster Company Ryan Homes, Inc. Ryder System, Inc. Safeguard Industries, Inc. Saga Corporation Sanders Associates, Inc. Sandia Corporation Sandvik, Inc. Santa Fe Railroad Santee Cooper/S. Carolina Public Service Authority Schenkers International Schering-Plough Corporation Schreiber Foods, Inc. Schroders, Inc. Schumaker & Company, F. Scott Paper Company Sears, Roebuck and Company Security Benefits Group Sentry Insurance Company Shaklee Corporation Shawmut Bank of Boston, N.A. Sherex Chemical Corporation Siemens Corporation Sierra Pacific Power Company SIFCO Industries, Inc. Signode Corporation Sioux Valley Hospital Association Sloane Manufacturing, R & G Society For Savings Society of Manufacturing Engineers Sola Optical U.S.A.. Inc. Solar Energy Research Institute Soltex-Polymer Corporation Sonoco Products Company Soo Line Railroad Company South Jersey Industries, Inc. South Suburban Hospital Southeast Bank, N.A. Southern Company Services Southern Pacific Transportation Company Southwest Research Institute Southwestern Public Service Company Sperry Systems Management SPS Technologies St. Luke's Episcopal & Texas Children's Hospital St. Luke's Hospitals (Fargo) St. Mary's Medical and Health Center St. Paul Companies, Inc. St. Paul Fire and Marine St. Vincent's Hospital and Medical Center St. Vincent's Hospital (San Francisco) Staley Manufacturing Company, A.E. Stanadyne, Inc. Standard Oil of California Standard Oil of Ohio Stanhome, Inc. State Department Federal Credit Union State Farm Insurance Companies State Merit System (Georgia) State of Wisconsin Statesman Group, The Stauffer Chemical Company Steelcase, Inc. Steiger-Tractor, Inc. Storer Broadcasting Company Strategic Planning Association Student Loan Marketing Accnriatinn For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Suburban Bancorporation Suburban Propane Gas Sun Chemical Company Sun Company, Inc. Sunday School Board of Southern Baptists Sunpapers, The Supermarket General Corporation Susquehanna Corporation Sverdrup/Aro Technology, Inc. Syntex Syscon Corporation Systems Research Laboratories Talon Tektronix Tenneco Oil Company? Processing and Marketing Tennessee Valley Authority Terra Chemicals International, Inc. Tesoro Petroleum Corporation Tetley, Inc. Texas Federal Saving and Loan Texas Instruments Texas Oil & Gas Corporation Texas Utilities Services, Inc. Textron Inc. Thermo Electron Third National Bank and Trust of Dayton TIAA-CREF Time Life Books Timex Corporation Timken Company, The Tonka Corporation Topps Chewing Gum, Inc. Toronto Dominion Banchares Touche, Ross & Company Tower Federal Credit Union Townsend-Textron Cherry Fasteners Trailer Train Company Transamerica Corporation Travelers Insurance Company, The Travenol Laboratories Triangle Corporation Triangle Publications, Inc. TRW Uarco, Inc. UGI Corporation Unigard Mutual Insurance Company Union Carbide Corporation Union Mutual Life Insurance Company Union Pacific Railroad Company Union Special Corporation Union Tank Car Corporation Unit Rig & Equipment Company United Nuclear Corporation United Services Life Insurance Company United Technologies United Telecommunications United Virginia Bank United Way of Southeast Pennsylvania Universal Oil Products University Computing Company University Hospitals of Cleveland University of Alaska University of California University of Utah Research Institute Upjohn Company Upstate Milk Cooperative Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 HAY - HUGGINS 1983 NONCASH COMPENSATION COMPARISON U.S. Brewers Association, Inc. U.S. Gypsum Company U.S. Leasing International, Inc. U.S. Life Corporation U.S. Synthetic Fuels Utah International, Inc. Utah Power and Light Company Utelcom, Inc. Valero Energy Corporation Vallen Corporation Valley National Bank Versa Technologies Virginia Chemical Corporation Virginia National Bank Volunteer Electric Cooperative Wagner Electric Company Sam P. Wallace Company LIST OF PARTICIPANTS (Continued) Ward Foods Warner & Swasey Company Washington National Corporation Washington Post, The Washington Public Power Supply System Wausau Homes, Inc. Wesley Medical Center West Penn Motor Club Western Forge Corporation Western Life Insurance Western Publishing Western Union International Western Union Telegraph Westin Hotels Wickland Oil Company Amherst H. Wilder Foundation John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Williams Brothers Engineering Williams Companies Williams International Wisconsin Physician Service Wisconsin Public Service Corporation Wool Bureau, Inc. Woolworth Company, F.W. Barry Wright Corporation Wrigley Jr. Company, Wm. Wyman-Gordon Company YMCA of the United States Zale Corporation Zayre Corporation Zenith Radio Corporation Zurich Insurance Company Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 APPENDIX C Detailed Description of Hay Job Evaluation Methodology Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 The Hay Guide Chart-Profile Method of Job Evaluation 1982 Alvin 0. Bellak, Ph.D. GENERAL PARTNER THE HAY GROUP Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 The Hay Guide Chart-Profile Method of Job Evaluation HAY Alvin 0. Bellak, Ph.D. The Guide Chart-Profile Method of Job Evaluation was conceived by the Hay Group in the early 1950's. Its roots are in factor comparison methods in which Edward N. Hay was a pioneer. In its evolved form, it has become the most widely used single process for the evaluation of man- agement, professional and technical jobs in existence. It is used by more than 4,000 profit and nonprofit organiza- tions in some thirty countries. The Hay organization was founded in 1943. While job evaluation processes of various kinds had existed for many years prior to that date, they were applied for the most part to factory and clerical positions. "Edward N. Hay and Associates," the founding organization, thought it not only had a better "mouse trap", its own factor comparison method, but that the method could be applied effectively to exempt as well as non-exempt jobs. This was quite au- dacious at a time when few managers thought their jobs could be described in written form, let alone evaluated. The Guide Charts were created in 1951 in a client situa- tion. The consultants had led a corporate committee in its application of the Hay Factor Comparison Method. A re- view board was pleased with the results but mystified as to the reasons which equated jobs in different functions to each other. As one member put it, "Tell me again on what precise premises this sales job was equated to that man- ufacturing job." It became apparent that to repeat en- dlessly an explanation of factor comparison processes would be hopeless. What was needed was a record for present and future use which would show exactly the de- scriptive considerations and their quantitative measures which entered into each evaluation. This forced a search for the basic reasons, arranged in some kind of rational order, on a scale. Thus, the Guide Charts came into being. It is important to note that the creation came through an inductive process in a real situation. It re- quired a deep understanding of jobs and organizations as well as scaling techniques. The creators of the Guide Chart-Profile Method made four critically important observations: 1. While there were many factors one could consider (indeed, some methods had dozens), the most sig- nificant could be grouped as representing the knowledge required to do a job, the kind of thinking needed to solve the problems commonly faced, and the responsibilities assigned. -Prepared for Handbook of Wage and Salary Administration,-Sec- ond Edition, being published by McGraw-Hill. All rights re- served. 2. Jobs could be ranked not only in the order of impor- tance within the structure of an organization, but the distances between the ranks could be deter- mined. 3. The factors appeared in certain kinds of patterns that seemed to be inherent to certain kinds of jobs. 4. The focus of the process of job evaluation must be on the nature and requirements of the job itself, not on the skills or background or characteristics or pay of the job holder. The Guide Chart-Profile Method What evolved was a three-factor codification with a total of eight elements (see Exhibit 1): KNOW-HOW The sum total of every kind of capability or skill, however acquired, needed for acceptable job perfor- mance. Its three dimensions are requirements for: ? Practical procedures, specialized techniques and knowledge within occupational fields, commercial functions, and professional or scientific disciplines. ?? Integrating and harmonizing simultaneous achievement of diversified functions within man- agerial situations occurring in operating, technical, support or administrative fields. This involves, in some combination, skills in planning, organizing, executing, controlling and evaluating and may be exercised consultatively (about management) as well as executively. ??? Active, practicing person-to-person skills in work with other people. PROBLEM SOLVING The original, self-starting use of KNOW-HOW re- quired by the job to identify, define, and resolve prob- lems. "You think with what you know." This is true of even the most creative work. The raw material of any thinking is knowledge of facts, principles, and means. For that reason, PROBLEM SOLVING is treated as a percentage of KNOW-HOW. PROBLEM SOLVING has two dimensions: ? The environment in which thinking takes place. ?? The challenge presented by the thinking to be done. ACCOUNTABILITY The answerability for action and for the consequences thereof. It is the measured effect of the job on end 1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Exhibit 1 !SPECIALIZED TECHNIQUES ? ? BREADTH OF MANAGEMENT KNOW?HOW ILLUSTRATIVE GUIDE GUIDE KNOW CHART ? ? ? Human Relations Skills?m? I. NONE OR MINIMAL Performance or supervision of an activity Co. activities) specific as to ?bee- the and content, with ap- propriate *wanness of re- listed activities. II. RELATED Operational or conceptual integration or coordination of activities which are rele W ture end objective. Wooly homogeneous in na- III. DIVERSE Operational or conceptual integration or coordination on of ectivities which are di- verse in nature and objec- tives, in an important man- &gement area. 111 ft 1 11 -NOW 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 A. BASIC Basic work routines plus work indoctrination. 50 57 66 57 66 76 66 76 87 66 78 87 76 87 100 57 100 115 87 100 116 100 115 132 115 132 152 1 , B. ELEMENTARY Ferniliwization and/or use of VOCATIONAL in uninvolved, standardized work routine. simple equipment and machines. 66 78 87 76 67 100 87 100 115 57 100 115 100 115 132 115 132 152 115 132 152 132 152 175 152 175 200 : C. VOCATIONAL Procedure or facility in the systematic proficiency, which may involve a use of specialized equipment. 67 100 115 100 115 132 116 132 152 115 132 152 132 152 175 152 175 200 152 175 200 175 200 230 200 230 264 . ' D. ADVANCED Some specialized acquired, giving single functional VOCATIONAL (generally nontechnical) skill(s), however additional breadth or depth to ? generally element. 116 132 152 132 152 176 152 175 200 152 175 200 175 200 230 200 230 264 200 230 264 230 264 304 264 304 350 I. BASIC TECHNICAL Sufficiency In involved practices principles; or ? ? technique and both. SPECIALIZED which requires ? grasp either of 152 ,25 ' 200 175 200 230 200 230 264 200 230 264 230 264 304 264 304 350 264 304 350 304 360 400 350 400 460 precedents; or of scientific theory and F. SEASONED TiCHNICAL Proficiency, In a specialized combines a ? SPECIALIZED gained through wide exposure or experiences Of technical field. In a technique which brood grasp either of Involved practices and of scientific theory and principles; or both. 200 no 284 230 2M 304 264 304 350 264 304 350 304 350 400 350 400 460 350 400 460 400 460 526 460 528 606 / 5 ( precedents Of 0. TECHNICAL -SPECIALIZED Determinative ad.'?' MASTERY mastery of techniques, practices and theories '- wagoning and/or special development. 254 - 104 350 350 400 400 180 460 4.? 460 . - 526 Ong 606 700 1 .A. ASSOCIATES as, ? ILLUSTRATIVE ?? THINKING CHALLENGE GUIDE In 1 CHART 1. REPETITIVE 2. PATTERNED 3. INTERPOLATIVE 4. ADAPTIVE PROBLEM-SOLVING Idanticel situations re- wiring solution by sum- Pie choice of loomed things, Similar situations re- quiring solution by di* criminatIng choice of learned things. Differing situations re- quiring search for solu- tions within area of lewned thing Variable situations quiring analytical, terprative, eveluat' and/or construct thinking. Thinking guided or circumscribed by: A. STRICT ROUTINE Simple rules and detailed Instructions. 10% 12% 14% 16% 19% 22% 25% 29 B. ROUTINE Established routines and wending instruc- dons. 12% 14% 16% 19% 22% 25% 29% 33% C. SEMI-ROUTINE Somewhat diversified procedures end Pro- calersts. 14% 16% 19% 22% 25% 29% 33% 38% D. STANDARDIZED Substantially diversified procedures end specialized rt?rod?rd% 16% 19% 22% 25% 29% 33% 31% 43% E. CLEARLY DEFINED Ciewly defined policies and principles. 19% 22% 26% 29% 33% 38% 43% 50% P. BROADLY DEFINED Broad policies end specific objectives. 22% 25% 29% 33% 39% 43% 50% 57% A 0. GENERALLY DEFINED General policies and ultimate goes. 25% 29% 33% 26x 43% 50% 57% H. ABSTRACTLY DEFINED 29% 38% 50% BM HAY ASSOCIATES Mal 2 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 INDIRECT DIRECT Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 ? ? IMPACT OF JOB ON END RESULTS I REMOTE: Informational, recording, or Incidental mimic's for we by others in relation to some important end result. CONTRIBUTORY: Interpretive, edvlsory, or facilitating services for use by others in taking action. SNARED: Participating with others lexcept own subordinates and / superiors). within or outside the atomization& unit, In taking action. PRIMARY: Controlling impact on end results, where shared account- ability of others is subordinate. AMI for use with 1212.... dollen isl.faa. S'S MAGNITUDE MAI EQUIVALENT ILLUSTRATIVE GUIDE PM kid CHART ACCOUNTABIUTY II) VERY MALL OR INDETERMINATE Under SIOOM (2) MALL SIOOM ? SIMM MI MEDIUM SIMM ? SIOMM ? ? IMPACT ??-??..." ? 0 0 0 us 11. A. PRESCRIBED rises Jobe are subject to: Direct and detailed instructions Clow supervision 10 12 14 14 16 19 19 22 25 25 29 33 14 16 19 19 22 25 25 29 33 33 3s 43 19 22 25 ze 29 33 33 29 43 43 50 57 ze 29 33 B. CONTROLLED Thew Jobs we subject to: Instructions and astablialled work routines Class supervision 16 19 22 22 25 211 29 33 38 22 25 29 29 33 3e 3e 43 50 50 57 66 29 33 38 38 43 SO 50 57 68 68 76 57 29 43 50 C. STANDARDIZED Thus jobs are subject, wholly or in port to: Standardized practices and procedures Gemini work instructions Supervision of program' and results 25 29 33 33 313 43 43 50 57 57 66 76 33 38 43 43 50 57 57 66 76 76 et 100 43 50 57 57 66 76 76 87 100 100 115 132 57 66 76 D. GENERALLY REGULATED Them Jobs are subject, wholly or in part, to: Practices and procedures catered by precedents or well- defined Policy Supervisory review 35 43 50 50 57 es 66 78 87 87 100 115 50 57 es se 76 87 87 100 115 115 132 152 es 76 87 87 100 115 115 132' 152 152 175 200 57 100 1/ E. DIRECTED Then iota, by their nature or size. In subject to: Brood practice and procedures covered by functional pre- cedents and policies Achievement of ? circumscribed operational activity Managerial direction 57 66 76 76 87 100 100 115 132 132 152 175 76 87 100 100 115 132 132 152 175 175 200 230 100 115 132 132 152 175 175 200 230 230 264 304 17 F. ORIENTED DIRECTION Thew Jobe, by their nature or size, we broadly subject to: Functional policies and peals General managerial direction 87 100 115 115 132 152 152 175 200 200 230 264 115 132 152 152 175 200 200 230 264 284 304 350 152 175 200 200 230 264 264 304 350 350 400 460 200 230 264 G. BROAD GUIDANCE These jobs are Inherently subject only to broad policy and general management ;pittance. 132 152 175 175 200 230 230 264 304 304 350 400 175 200 230 230 254 304 304 350 400 400 460 528 230 264 304 304 350 400 400 480 529 528 606 700 304 350 400 H. STRATEGIC GUIDANCE These Jobs, by reason of their size, Independent ccmplexity and high degree of effect on Company results, we subject Only tn - '-)mce from tap-most management. 200 230 264 264 304 350 350 400 460 460 526 608 264 304 350 350 400 460 460 528 606 806 700 800 350 400 460 460 525 60111 608 700 800 800 920 1055 460 529 809 304 400 528 528 700 920 528 700 920 1216 700 ED HAT ASSOCIATES 1901 results of the organization. It has three dimensions in the following order of importance: ? FREEDOM TO ACT ? the extent of personal, procedural, or systematic guidance or control of actions in relation to the primary emphasis of the job. ?? JOB IMPACT ON END RESULTS ? the extent to which the job can directly affect actions neces- sary to produce results within its primary empha- sis. ??? MAGNITUDE ? the portion of the total organi- zation encompassed by the primary emphasis of the job. This is usually, but not necessarily, re- flected by the annual revenue or expense dollars associated with the area in which the job has its primary emphasis. 3 A fourth factor, WORKING CONDITIONS, is used, as appropriate, for those jobs where hazards, an unpleasant environment, and/or particular physical demands are sig- nificant elements. It is to be noted that the Equal Pay Act of 1963 reference to job-to-job comparisons based upon "skill, effort, and responsibility" relates remarkably to the 1951 Hay Guide Chart factors. Both, of course, were derived from the same large body of knowledge as to what is common and measurable in job content. Within the definitional structure, each Guide Chart has semantic scales which reflect degrees of presence of each element. Each scale, except for PROBLEM SOLVING, is expandable to reflect the size and complexity of the organ- ization to which it is applied. The language of the scales, carefully evolved over many years and applied to literally many hundreds of thousands of jobs of every kind, has Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 remained fairly constant in recent years but is modified, as appropriate, to reflect the unique nature, character, and structure of any given organization. For each factor, the judgment of value is reflected in a single number. At a later point, the size of the number is significant but, for the moment, it is the sequence of the numbers which is important. The numbers (except for the very lowest ones) increase at a rounded 15% rate. This conforms to a general principle of psychometric scaling derived from Weber's Law*: "In comparing objects, we perceive not the absolute difference between them, but the ratio of this difference to the magnitude of the two objects compared." Further, for each type of perceived physical difference, the extent of difference required in order to be noticeable tends to be a specific constant per- centage. The concept of "just noticeable difference" was adopted for the Guide Chart scales and set at 15%. Speci- fically, it was found that a job evaluation committee, when comparing two similar jobs on any single factor, had to perceive at least a 15% difference in order to come to a group agreement that Job A was larger than Job B. Again, for the moment, the relationship between the numbering scales on the three charts is more significant than the absolute numbers themselves. Before there were Guide Charts, it was observed that jobs had characteristic shapes. Furthermore, these shapes were, in fact, known to managers and could be verbalized easily by them if they had a useful language for expression. Grouping job content elements under the rubrics of KNOW-HOW, PROBLEM SOLVING and ACCOUNTABILITY gave them this language. job shapes were characterized as: ? "Up-hill", where ACCOUNTABILITY exceeds PROBLEM SOLVING ? "Flat", where these factors are exactly equal ? "Down-hill", where ACCOUNTABILITY is less than PROBLEM SOLVING Profiling PROBLEM SOLVING I ACCOUNTABILITY *See H.E. Garrett, -Great Experiments in Psychology," Century Co., N.Y., 1930, pp 268-274, and Edward N. Hay, "Characteristics of Factor Comparison Job Evalua- tion,- "Personnel,- 1946, pp 370-375. HAY While all jobs, by definition, must have some of each fac- tor, however much or little, relative amounts of each can be vastly different. Therefore, one of the three shapes not only had to appear but also had to have a believable real- ity of its own. Thus, an up-hill job was one where results to be achieved were a relatively more important feature than intensive thinking, i.e., a "do" job. A down-hill job was one where heightened use of knowledge through thinking was fea- tured more than answerability for consequent results, i.e., a "think" job. A flat job was one with both "thinking" and "doing" in balance. For example, in the context of a total business organiza- tion, a sales or direct production position would be a typi- cal up-hill, "do" job where the emphasis is clearly and strongly upon performance against very specific, often quite measurable targets or budgets. A chemist doing basic research or a market analyst studying the eating hab- its of teenagers would be a typical downhill, or "think" job, where the emphasis is more on collecting and analyz- ing information than taking or authorizing action based on the results. A personnel or accounting manager would be typical flat jobs characterized both by the requirement to develop information for use by others (recommend a new pension plan or a means of handling foreign currency transactions) and to answer for results (the accuracy of the payroll or the timely production of books of account). The concept of typical job shape is the "Profile" in "Guide Chart-Profile Method" and controls the relative calibra- tion of the three Guide Charts. That is, the numbering patterns on the Guide Charts are set such that proper use produces points for the factors which, when arrayed for a given job, produce credible profiles. It is very important to note that the Guide Chart-Profile Method gives an evaluation committee, or review board, quite uniquely, two means to assess the accuracy of its evaluation for any given job. First, it can look at the points determined for a given job, relative to similar jobs and to jobs that are clearly larger or smaller. Second, by relying on its understanding of job shapes, it can assess the job's array on the three factors and make an independent judg- ment as to the probable validity of the evaluation. Rela- tive point value and profile both must make sense for an evaluation to be accepted. The final early observation that led to the creation of the Guide Chart-Profile Method was that jobs were to be measured independently of the job holders. This was not only correct but prescient, as it turns out. There was never, ever, any consideration of the talent, education, etc. of the job holder let alone the job holder's sex, age, ethnic origin, physical condition or any other now-banned personal attribute. The further stricture, also present from the beginning, was that the pay of the job holder or the market for such positions were both irrelevant to job evaluation. judgments were to be made only for the pur- pose of rank-ordering jobs and delineating the distances between ranks, i.e., to establish the relative importance of positions, top to bottom, within an organization struc- ture. 4 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Over the years since 1951, the fundamental principles of the Guide Chart-Profile Method have remained intact al- though there have been many refinements in language and application. Investigation of compensable job content elements continues and there are refinements still to come. For example, is "concentration" a discrete, mea- surable, element? Is working with many others in a vast, windowless office an environmental unpleasantry com- parable to the noxious quality of some factory environ- ments? Should managers, as well as blue collar workers, get WORKING CONDITIONS points for spending time in dangerous, underground coal mines? Or for frequent travel? If one reflects on the material presented thus far, specifi- cally, (a) Guide Chart "sizing" (adjusting the length of the scales to each particular organization), (b) modifying the scale language to reflect the character and structure of the organization, (c) absorbing new information on job con- tent-related requirements, then it becomes very clear that the Guide Chart-Profile Method is a process, not a fixed instrument like a physical measuring device. Fur- ther, it is a relative measurement process, not an absolute one. The theses of the Guide Chart-Profile Method thus be- come: 1. Every job that exists in an organizational context re- quires some amount of KNOW-HOW, PROBLEM SOLVING and ACCOUNTABILITY. 2. Semantic scales reflecting degrees of these factors can be developed and applied, with consistency and with collective agreement, by any group of knowl- edgeable organization members after a modest amount of training. 3. The Guide Chart-Profile Method will produce a rel- ative rank order, and a measure of the distances be- tween ranks, for all jobs that the organization will accept as reflective of its own perception of their relative importance. 4. The measurement principles are timeless and will hold until there is a fundamental change in the na- ture of jobs and in the inter-relationship of jobs that make up organization structures. 5. As a process guided and controlled by principles rather than by immutable rules and scales the Guide Chart-Profile Method is adaptable to the unique character of diverse jobs and organizations in changing environments. Were these theses not correct, the Guide Chart-Profile Method would not be in the situation of increasing usage in a very changing world after more than thirty years. A very substantial number of organizations have relied on the process in excess of ten years and ranging up to over twenty-five years. They have applied the methodology through many reorganizations and to totally new product and service divisions during long periods of enormous growth and in an environment of great social change and legal challenge to the previously established order. While 5 the Guide Chart-Profile Method was developed for busi- ness, industrial and financial organizations, the theses have proven to hold for nearly any organization. Among the long-term users are nonprofit trade, professional, charitable and cultural organizations, federal government departments, states, local municipalities, schools and uni- versities, and hospitals within the United States and abroad. While the application is most common for exempt positions, there is widespread usage for nonexempt cleri- cal/office positions and growing usage for blue collar posi- tions. Installation of the Guide Chart- Profile Method The objective is to place all the jobs in an organization in a sequence which represents the order and extent of their difficulty and importance within the organization. A typical installation of the Guide Chart-Profile Method would proceed as follows: 1. After study of the organization, a set of Guide Charts is selected, sized, and appropriate language changes made as the initial step. 2. A benchmark sample of positions is selected to cover all organization levels, functions, and units where jobs are to be evaluated. 3. Position descriptions are prepared and accepted for evaluation when approved by the job holder and one higher level of authority. 4. A job evaluation committee is selected to evaluate the benchmark sample. The usual criteria for com- mittee selection are that its members should: (a) be from diverse line and staff organizations, (b) be of roughly equivalent level within the organization, (c) hold positions somewhat higher than these to be evaluated (i.e., high enough up to have perspective but not so high as to be out of touch), and (d) be sufficiently familiar with the total organization to un- derstand not only its purposes and structure but also its values. A member of the personnel department participates either as a formal committee-person or ex officio. Where significant numbers of job holders are among the "protected classes,-* it is especially desirable to have a member(s) from such classes on the committee. While in-house compensation experts would be the most technically proficient group to use for install- ing a job evaluation program, it has proven to be more beneficial to use a group of non-experts for the benchmark effort. Since the benchmark committee is building the foundation and framework for all sub- sequent evaluations, it is important that it be built to reflect the values of the total organization. This *The term "protected classes,- as used by the EEOC, refers to various groups, such as females, blacks, Hispanics and the physically handicapped. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 can be done best by the people who work in, and know, the departments and divisions and who will have to live with the results. A committee selected from the finance, engineering and manufacturing departments (among others) having to agree, for ex- ample, on the relative internal value of a financial analyst, a project engineer, and a production super- visor is of incalculable importance in achieving cred- ibility for the job evaluation program. 5. The benchmark evaluation committee is led by a Hay consultant who acts as a combination teacher and coach. Initially, the consultant teaches the methodology in a learn-by-doing framework, then fades back as coach as the committee develops profi- ciency. 6. The committee evaluates each job for which it ac- cepts the job description as a fair and clear state- ment that it finds believable. (Descriptions not meeting these criteria are sent back to the preparer for improvement.) 7. The instructions to the committee are clear and spe- cific: (a) They must make judgments within the con- text of the total organization, not their own unit. (b) If they accept the description, they must evaluate it as it stands without regard to any knowledge they may have of the current job holder's ability, perfor- mance, potential or pay, or the market value of such a position. (c) They must achieve a common under- standing and application of the semantic scales within the principles of the Guide Chart-Profile Method. (As the committee proceeds and gains competence, aspects of the preliminary Guide Charts that are problematic are resolved.) (d) No job in the benchmark sample is finally evaluated until they are all finally evaluated, i.e., any evaluation can be changed as the committee proceeds in its learning and becomes a coherent team. (e) The com- mittee has completed its work when all agree that the total list of evaluations makes sense even though each member may have some reservations about an evaluation here and there. 8. In most cases, there is a review process of some kind either done by a formal review board at a higher level of authority or through one-on-one reviews with department and division heads. New informa- tion on job content, challenges, etc., are processed by the committee to its own and the reviewer's sat- isfaction, thus completing the benchmark project. 9. All other positions are then evaluated. Depending on the size, complexity and culture of the organiza- tion, there are a number of ways this can be done, among which are (a) the original benchmark evalua- tion committee can do it all, (b) multiple commit- tees can be appointed, with their output reconciled by the benchmark committee cum control commit- tee, (c) several single job evaluation experts (or very small teams) can be appointed to do the evaluations in batches subject to department/division head re- view followed by committee reconciliation. Any HAY means which sustains the credibility of the evalua- tion process within the organization's culture is ac- ceptable. Use of Evaluations in Compensation Analysis Given the final, agreed evaluations, their most common application is to serve as a basis for studies of salary prac- tices (other uses will be mentioned later). Internal Analysis If we plot the pay for each job holder against the sum of KNOW-HOW, PROBLEM SOLVING and ACCOUNT- ABILITY points for his/her job, it will result in a scatter- gram, as in Exhibit 2, i.e., each dot represents one per- son's job points and pay. This can be done in consecutive scattergrams for actual current salary, salary midpoint as- signed to the job held by the incumbent, and actual total cash compensation (i.e., salary plus cash bonus or incen- tive). For this explanation, we will use actual current sal- ary only. Exhibit 2? Scattergram ? ? ? ? ? ?? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? POINTS Through the scattergram we then draw a line of central tendency*, which becomes the "salary practice line", as in Exhibit 3. To the extent that the population is fairly ho- Exhibit 3? Line of Central Tendency ? ? ? ? ? ? POINTS 6 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 mogeneous, the dispersion on the scattergram will be moderate and a single straight line will be a satisfactory representation of the median relationship between job size (expressed in points) and pay for the population as a whole. To the extent that the dispersion is great, a scattergram as in Exhibit 4 will result. While one can nonetheless de- velop a line of central tendency, the existence of excessive dispersion suggests that the population is heterogeneous and further analysis is pursued. Exhibit 4? Excessive Dispersion X X ? ? ? ? X X X ? X ? ? ? X ? ? ? ? ? .500 ? ? o 0 0 ? 0 S. POINTS By successive hypotheses, one searches out the reason for this dispersion. If we proceed to code the plottings, say, "x" for jobs in high-tech Division A and "o" for jobs in dull old commodity product Division B, things become clear: Hidden within the whole, there are multiple pay struc- tures as would be summarized in Exhibit 5. That is, if we plotted separate scattergrams for Division A and Division Exhibit 5? Multiple Pay Structures Div A Div B POINTS B, we would find that they have different salary practice lines. In other words, the salaries paid in Division A are greater than in Division B for jobs with the same points. Is this differential deliberate? Is it the result of generosity, or lack thereof, on the part of the division heads? Is it the result of inadequately managed or unmanageable salary systems? 7 If the plottings were by sex and Division, the "x's" would still be jobs in Division A but the "o's" could turn out to be not Division B but women throughout the whole or- ganization. Since the job evaluations were made without regard to pay, sex, division, or anything other than job content, the dependent variable is pay. Higher dollars for the "x's" might be deliberate and appropriate for Division A, but what is the explanation for the "o's"? Depending on the facts, they might indicate an unacceptable, and per- haps illegal, practice. The essence of this type of analytic exercise is to demon- strate that there is a means of searching out pay patterns that are not otherwise observable. Given an understand- ing of what might be buried in the data mass, manage- ment can be thoughtful in its understanding of what exists and in the development of the pay strategy it wants to follow. While it isn't likely to choose pay discrimination against women, there might well be good reason for hav- ing, or not having, multiple pay lines for various divisions. Exhibit 6 illustrates lines of central tendency with a "dog leg" up, i.e., the higher level jobs have a higher dollar rate of increment per point. This is a different kind of heterogeneity that might reflect different pay practices for the nonexempt vs. the exempt populations or it could be the entire exempt population but with a higher pay struc- ture for the executive group. Exhibit 6? Dog Leg Up POINTS *One, or more, straight lines, drawn by sight or calculated by the least squares method, is appropriate and has proven practical and meaningful, since both axes are geometric scales. It has already been mentioned that the points on the Guide Charts increase on a compounded 15% incremental scale. Salary is also best thought of as a percentage incremental scale since one awards, for example, an 8% raise which amounts to, say, $2,400, rather than vice versa. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Exhibit 7? Dog Leg Down POINTS Exhibit 7 illustrates a "dog leg" down, i.e., the jobs with higher points having a lower rate of increment per point. The juncture of the two salary practice lines could be the job level where a management incentive plan kicks in. If this hypothesis is correct, then Exhibit 8 might be what would result if we plotted total cash compensation. The lower level group gets salary only, i.e., salary equals total cash. The addition of incentive awards to the top manage- ment group causes both a discontinuity and a higher prac- tice line for management.. Exhibit 8? Discontinuity POINTS Proper application of the Guide Chart-Profile Method provides a unique tool for analyzing the degree of internal consistency in the existing pay program and the validity and appropriateness of disparate pay practices. While it might seem at first glance that perfect internal consistency is the goal of equitable salary administration, one should keep in mind Ralph Waldo Emerson's admonishment, "Foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds". In- ternal equity, or simple fairness, requires that pay and internal job value be consistent only for homogeneous populations however desirable it might be for all jobs, functions and divisions in all locations. Simple logic clic- 8 HAY tates that, for example, the same clerical job, with the same points, will most probably be paid on a different dollar scale at different geographic locations in view of the sometimes extreme cost-of-living differences we have in the U.S. The existence of an incentive plan for only the management group will break the continuity of what might have otherwise been a perfectly consistent salary program for the total exempt population. Disparate mar- kets periodically appear for individual jobs, whole func- tions, and whole lines of business. These realities must be recognized and dealt with when they appear. The thesis, then, for the development of an effective and controllable pay structure is that one must always know the difference between internal job value and external markets for people. As in any complex phenomenon, whether a pay structure or a chemical compound, one must be able to identify the components in order to un- derstand and manage the whole with intelligence. Given a firm baseline, i.e., carefully assigned points reflecting internal job value, the organization can knowledgeably and with strategic intent create pay structures which are rational, competitive, controllable, cost-effective, and motivational. External Comparison To compare one's pay line(s) with those of external organi- zations, job evaluation points must first be converted to a standard scale. The conversion process, conducted very carefully by highly specialized consultants, is straight for- ward and serves its purpose so long as the organization has not violated the basic evaluation principles and has been consistent in its application of the methodology to all units and functions. Given a standard scale, compensation lines are directly comparable from one organization to another. Hay facili- tates this process by publishing annually the actual salary, midpoint salary, and total cash compensation lines of sub- scribers to the Hay Compensation Comparison (coded and arrayed in a manner that protects the confidentiality of each subscriber). Exhibit 9? Comparator Distribution POINTS Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Thus, in the same way that an organization can compare pay practices among segments within its structure, it can compare with segments or totalities of outside organiza- tions. To compare its salary practice lines with those of others which use the Guide Chart-Profile Method, the organiza- tion would look to an array as in Exhibit 9. This exhibit shows the distribution of salary practice lines for the com- parator organizations in percentiles. "M" is the median, or 50th percentile. The 10th and 90th percentiles are shown as are the third and first quartile lines (i.e., the 75th and 25th percentiles). An organization need only su- perimpose its own line on the distribution to determine, at a glance, its current position in the market, as in Ex- hibit 10. Exhibit 10? Market Position 90 Q3 Organization M Q1 10 POINTS As the number of users of the Guide Chart-Profile Method has grown, so has the market data base, that is, the point-to-dollar practice lines that can be arrayed. They now exist for thousands of organizations and can be broken out by industry, line of business, function, loca- tion and individual positions. They exist in some thirty countries for nationals in local currencies. After making as many external comparisons as are useful, e.g., for salary practice, for total cash compensation prac- tice, for segments, for functions, and so forth, the organi- zation can position itself strategically in the market(s) for people. The selected position, represented by a line(s) drawn onto the comparison charts, is then, by simple cal- culation, turned into a set of midpoints and merit ranges. Thus, (a) internal equity is achieved (the salary midpoints will relate exactly to job evaluation points), as is (b) exter- nal competitiv eness (the organization will have posi- tioned itself, i.e., priced its pay structure, in its best judgment, against the appropriate market or markets.) The Bottom Line: Employee Motivation One of the "in" concepts in contemporary management thinking is "system", as in "information system" or "com- pensation system". Simplified, it means the assemblage of parts into an integrated, comprehensive whole to support 9 a larger purpose. In this sense, a compensation system requires the parts dwelled upon in this chapter, namely, a process for establishing internal job value and internal pay equity, and a means to access and appraise the mar- ketplace for people. However, to become a complete sys- tem, there are more parts to be assembled. For example, there must be administrative procedures, a performance appraisal and merit award plan, a communications plan, the development and integration of benefits and extra pay, elements (e.g., incentives), and so forth. All must thoughtfully be put together and managed to support the organization's human resources strategy which in turn supports the achievement of the organization's ultimate goals. However, while assembling the compensation system to support the grand design, one must be sure not to over- look the less grandiose sounding, and very basic purpose, viz, employee motivation. Without it, the great goals will not be achieved. Employee motivation is a very specific result to be sought from the compensation system. It is a truism that people work best when they know what is expected of them. After all, a job can be thought of as the interaction be- tween the employer's expectations and the employee's in- tentions and actions. A well written job description defines the context in which the job exists and spells out its accountabilities, i.e., the end results to be achieved. Job evaluation identifies and defines its place in the spec- trum. The competitive midpoint salary assigned, the merit range and additional incentives to reward individual achievement, link the critical three "P's" in a compensa- tion system: "position, performance, and pay". Other Applications of the Guide Chart- Profile Method EEO compliance has become important in the United States and similar requirements exist in a number of other countries. The Guide Chart-Profile Method, properly used, provides several specific tools to aid in achieving compliance with such laws and their objectives. Its major uses can be summarized in three major areas: ? Progress Monitoring. Job measurement enables an employer to identify the high-content, high- value jobs within the work force into which pro- tected classes must be moved if meaningful pro- gress toward compliance is to be made. With a demonstrable and reliable job measurement sys- tem, periodic monitoring of the relative and abso- lute progress of persons in terms of the value of jobs they hold (as distinguished from the number of jobs they hold) becomes possible. ? Job Requirement Validation. With Guide Chart methodology, an employer is able to define job re- quirements and accurately measure and compare job content and pay differences to prevent dis- crimination. Such validation efforts by employers are specifically required by some compliance agency regulations. The reason is to ensure that Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 job requirements are not inflated with the con- sequence that protected classes are excluded or otherwise adversely affected. ? Discrimination Defense. In addition to its impor- tance in employer compliance efforts, a rational, systematic, and professionally maintained job mea- surement program can provide a defense against charges of discrimination. The books can be opened, the methodology explained, and the de- fense mounted. Hay methodology has been successfully used in court pro- ceedings, administrative hearings, and labor arbitration cases to determine the extent of internal equity of com- pensation. In addition, the Guide Charts have been used as a basis for determining minimum qualification require- ments in recruitment and selection where corrective ac- tions are required. Organization analysis and planning is the discipline of defining an organization's jobs and the job clusters into sections, departments, and divisions and detailing how these are related to each other. The thoroughness and objectivity of the Hay job evaluation process brings out the nature and extent of those relationships and helps to reveal such things as work duplication, overlapping of au- thority, and accountability vacuums. As part of assessing future strategic options, job measurement can be used to identify and make explicit the changes in organization structure which would be required. Human resource appraisal, planning, and development can be supported by assessing current and future require- ments of jobs and existing and potential capabilities of people within the same measurement framework. This is possible because jobs can only exist in human terms. Dif- ferences between current capabilities and current job re- quirements identify immediate needs for specific training, career development and recruiting. Differences between future job requirements and potential capabilities of cur- rent people facilitates human resource planning vis-a-vis long-term strategic organization plans, goals, and struc- tures. Conclusion The Guide Chart-Profile Method has been tested and proved by continuing and expanding application. Organi- zations of all kinds in all major economies, and their em- ployees, have found that it provides an accurate and clear reflection of the relative requirements that they see in jobs, because: 1. It is based on concrete, practical concepts and prin- ciples that are easy to define and use. 2. It narrows matters of opinion to a minimum and brings sharp judgments to bear from more than one independent angle. It does not rely on single judg- ments, no matter how good they might be. 3. By providing a framework within which measure- ment decisions must be made, it does away with endless committee discussions, which frequently 10 HAY stall on the most basic issues. 4. It forces disciplined and orderly thinking about job content, quickly highlighting vague, poorly con- ceived or designed jobs. 5. It provides a clear, understandable basis for inter- relating requirements of all kinds of jobs at all levels ? top executives, middle managers, hourly work- ers, clerical workers, scientists, technical personnel, sales personnel, and professional people such as in- dustrial physicians and lawyers. It considers the core content that is common to all jobs and can easily be adapted to reflect special determinants that affect some jobs in some organizations. The Guide Chart-Profile Method is far more useful than ad hoc formulations which fit only singular work contexts and then only for limited periods of time. It is also far more useful than the "policy capturing" job structures which are developed to mirror or model market practices. Guide Chart measurements are independent of the mar- ket and encourage rational determination of the basis for the pricing of job content rather than automatic reactions to the forces that drove pay in the past. The Guide Chart- Profile Method works because it is a dynamic process that people apply and adapt in ways that meet needs and solve problems in the situations that they face. El Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 U.S. Offices Headquarters Philadelphia 229 S. 18th Street Rittenhouse Square Philadelphia PA 19103 (215) 875-2300 Atlanta 57 Executive Park South, N.E. Suite 395 Atlanta, Georgia 30329 (404) 321-4996 Boston Five Faneuil Hall Marketplace Boston, Massachusetts 02109 (617) 367-7100 Charlotte 212 South Tryon.St. Suite 950 Charlotte, North Carolina 28281 (704) 333-1591 Chicago One East Wacker Drive Suite 3400 Chicago, Illinois 60601 (312) 644-5700 Cincinnati 1st National Bank Center 425 Walnut Street Suite 2110 Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 (513) 579-1180 Dallas 12700 Park Central Place Suite 1411 Dallas, Texas 75251 (214) 233-9767 Houston 1100 Louisiana Suite 1050 Houston, Texas 77002 (713) 658-9032 Kansas City 2460 Pershing Rd. Suite 200 Kansas City, Missouri 64108 (816) 842-5656 Ins Angeles 700 South Flower St. Suite 2300 Los Angeles, California 90017 (213) 629-3921 Minneapolis TCF Tower Suite 1318 Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402 (612) 339-0555 New York One Dag Hammarskjold Plaza New York, New York 10017 (212) 486-6300 Pittsburgh One Gateway Center Suite 1100 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15222 (412) 263-2640 St Louis Clayton Mercantile Centre Suite 820 St. Louis, Missouri 63105 (314) 726-1506 San Francisco One Market Plaza Suite 1018 San Francisco, California 94105 (415) 543-3455 San Jose 2099 Gateway Place Suite 110 San Jose, California 95110 (408) 280-0333 Seattle 110-110th Avenue Northeast Suite 312 Bellevue, Washington 98004 (206) 455-4979 Stamford One Landmark Square Stamford, Connecticut 06901 (203) 324-4800 Walnut Creek 925 Ygnacio Valley Road Suite 100 Walnut Creek, California 94596 (415) 945-8220 Washington 1110 Vermont Avenue, N.W. Suite 710 Washington, D.C. 20005 (202) 833-9250 Athens. Auckland, Barcelona, Birmingham. Brussels, Buenos Aires, Calgary, Cape Town, Caracas. Copenhagen, Dublin, Durban, Dusseldorf. East London, Edinburgh, Frankfurt, Halifax, Helsinki, Hong Kong, Johannesburg, Lisbon, London, Lyon, Madrid, Manchester, Melbourne, Mexico City, Milan, Montreal. Paris, Port Elizabeth, Regina, Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo. Singapore, Sydney, Tokyo, Toronto, Utrecht, Vancouver, Wellington, Zurich. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 APPENDIX D List of 392 GS and Equivalent Positions Selected by Grade and Series, Including Population Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Series GS-15 & Equivalent Population Title 110 Economist 727 301 Misc. Adm. & Programs 2632 345 Program Analysis 959 510 Accounting 749 602 Medical Officer 5635 680 Dental Officer 576 801 General Engineering 1950 817 Civil Engineering 503 855 Electronic Engineering 914 861 Aerospace Engineering 670 905 General Attorney 3103 1102 Contract & Procurement 411 1301 General Physical Science 917 1310 Physics 459 1320 Chemistry 406 1515 Operations Research 375 201 Personnel Management 456 334 Computer Specialist 454 341 Administrative Officer 381 840 Nuclear Engineering 414 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Series GS-14 & Equivalent Population Title 110 201 301 334 343 Economist Personnel Management Misc. Admin. & Programs Computer Specialist Management Analysis 986 992 3143 1984 781 345 Program Analysis 1808 510 Accounting 1783 602 Medical Officer 1368 801 General Engineering 3388 810 Civil Engineering 1323 830 Mechanical Engineering 718 855 Electronic Engineering 2597 861 Aerospace Engineering 1596 905 General Attorney 3607 1102 Contract & Procurement 1126 1301 General Physical Science 914 1110 Physics 818 1320 Chemistry 825 560 Budget Analysis 607 1515 Operations Research 677 105 Social Insurance Administrator 552 512 Internal Revenue Agent 529 1224 Patent Examining 493 1825 Aviation Safety Officer 593 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Series GS-13 & Equivalent Population Title 105 Social Insurance Administrator 1119 110 Economist 1038 160 Civil Rights Analysis 1092 180 Psychology 1503 201 Personnel Management 1870 301 Misc. Admin. & Programs 4689 334 Computer Specialist 5623 341 Administrative Officer 628 343 Management Analysis 1709 345 Program Analysis 3099 346 Logistics Management 882 401 General Biological Science 686 460 Forestry 747 510 Accounting V 3838 512 Internal Revenue Agent 3940 560 Budget Analysis 1213 602 Medical Officer 773 801 General Engineering 5251 810 Civil Engineering 3377 830 Mechanical Engineering 1998 850 Electrical Engineering 867 855 Electronics Engineering 5634 856 Electronics Technician 1093 861 Aerospace Engineering 2830 905 General Attorney 3605 1102 Contract & Procurement 2572 1165 Loan Specialist 755 1301 General Physical Science 895 1310 Physics 1324 1320 Chemistry 1580 1515 Operations Research 993 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 GS-13 & Equivalent (continued) Series Title Population 1520 Mathematics 933 1825 Aviation Safety Officer 948 2003 Supply Program Management 744 2181 Aircraft Operation 1006 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Series GS-12 & Equivalent Population Title 18 105 Safety Management Social Insurance Administrator 890 2442 110 Economist 1091 160 Civil Rights Analysis 1647 180 Psychology 761 185 Social Work 656 201 Personnel Management 2044 212 Personnel Staffing 1117 221 Position Classification 860 235 Employee Development 703 249 Wage & Hour Compliance 603 301 Misc. Admin. & Programs 6485 334 Computer Specialist 10244 341 Administrative Officer 1270 343 Management Analysis 2999 345 Program Analysis 3467 346 Logistics Management 1749 393 Communications Specialist 612 401 General Biological Science 990 460 Forestry 1394 501 General Acctg. Clerical/Admin. 715 510 Accounting 6571 512 Internal Revenue Agent 3233 560 Budget Analysis 1942 570 Financial Inst. Examining 845 610 Nurse 1450 701 Veterinary Medical Science 1171 801 General Engineering 3961 802 Engineering Technician 2342 808 Architecture 607 810 Civil Engineering 5243 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Series GS-12 & Equivalent (continued) Title Population 819 830 850 855 856 861 896 905 Environmental Engineering Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering Electronics Engineering Electronics Technician Aerospace Engineering Industrial Engineering General Attorney 709 3828 1740 7090 6556 1654 940 2754 993 Social Insurance Claims Examining 761 996 Veterinary Insurance Claims Examining 805 1102 Contract & Procurement 5215 1150 Industrial Specialist 739 1152 Production Control 676 1165 Loan Specialist 1560 1169 Internal Revenue Officer 1723 1170 Realty 685 1301 General Physical Science 700 1310 Physics 1115 1320 Chemistry 1842 1340 Meterology 633 1370 Cartography 934 1410 Librarian 790 1515 Operations Research 796 1520 Mathematics 1224 1670 Equipment Specialist 1980 1702 Education & Drug Technician 1142 1712 Training Instruction 685 1810 General Investigating 639 1822 Mine Safety & Health 938 1910 Quality Assurance 1777 2003 Supply Program Management 1740 2010 Inventory Management 1006 2181 Aircraft Operation 1043 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Series GS-11 & Equivalent Population Title 18 105 110 160 185 201 212 Safety Management Social Insurance Administrator Economist Civil Rights Analysis Social Work Personnel Management Personnel Staffing 936 3027 788 1339 2551 1698 1365 221 Position Classification 862 301 Misc. Admin. & Programs 5371 334 Computer Specialist 6265 341 Administrative Officer 1703 343 Management Analysis 3088 345 Program Analysis 2059 346 Logistics Management 909 401 General Biological Science 1018 457 Soil Conversation 2117 460 Forestry 2095 470 Soil Science 836 475 Agricultural Management 1695 510 Accounting 4478 512 Internal Revenue Agent 3544 560 Budget Analysis 2181 610 Nurse 7428 660 Pharmacist 1861 801 General Engineering 1116 802 Engineering Technician 6173 810 Civil Engineering 3701 830 Mechanical Engineering 2023 850 Electrical Engineering 1072 855 Electronics Engineering 1830 856 Electronics Technician 7180 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 GS-11 & Equivalent (continued) Series Title Population 905 General Attorney 1068 993 Social Insurance Claims Examining 1751 1102 Contract & Procurement 4606 1150 Industrial Specialist 985 1152 Production Control 888 1165 Loan Specialist 795 1169 Internal Revenue Officer 2006 1170 Realty 1037 1320 Chemistry 1631 1370 Cartography 1834 1410 Librarian 1080 1670 Equipment Specialist 3228 1710 Education & Vocational Training 1492 1712 Training Instruction 1470 1810 General Investigating 947 1910 Quality Assurance 4376 2001 General Supply 851 2003 Supply Program Management 1523 2010 Inventory Management 2322 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Series GS-9 & Equivalent Population Title 23 Outdoor Recreation Planning 858 201 Personnel Management 970 301 Misc. Admin. & Programs 5154 318 Secretary 1779 332 Computer Operator 1752 334 Computer Specialist 3028 341 Administrative Officer 1984 343 Management Analysis 1773 345 Program Analysis 1370 404 Biological Technician 810 457 Soil Conversation 1148 460 Forestry 1400 462 Forestry Technician 1328 501 General Acctg. Clerk./Admin. 1283 510 Accounting 2146 512 Internal Revenue Agent 1385 526 Tax Technician 3315 560 Budget Analysis 1987 610 Nurse 21595 644 Medical Technologist 1364 802 Engineering Technician 5741 809 Construction Control 1313 810 Civil Engineering 1151 856 Electronics Technician 3057 895 Industrial Engineering Technician 970 962 Contract Representative 1215 993 Social Insurance Claims Examiner 1611 996 Veterans Claims Examining 1008 1102 Contract & Procurement 4026 1152 Production Control 2172 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Series ? GS-9 & Equivalent (continued) Population Title 1165 1169 Loan Specialist Internal Revenue Officer 889 853 1670 Equipment Specialist 2620 1710 Education & Vocational Training 2601 1712 Training Instruction 2481 1863 Food Inspection 2636 1910 Quality Assurance 4948 1980 Agricultural Commodity Grading 1673 2001 General Supply 1601 2003 Supply Program Management 833 2010 Inventory Management 3059 2050 Supply Cataloging 814 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Series GS-7 & Equivalent Population Title 105 Social Insurance Administrator 1126 203 Personnel Clerical & Assistant 2122 204 Military Personnel Clerk. & Tech. 1362 301 Misc. Admin. & Programs 6482 303 Misc. Admin. Clerk & Assistant 7125 318 Secretary 9886 332 Computer Operator 2315 334 Computer Specialist 1822 335 Computer Clerk & Asst. 1152 341 Administrative Officer 1070 344 Management Clerical & Asst. 2200 404 Biological Technician 1326 462 Forestry Technician 2032 501 General Acctg. Clerk./Admin. 1798 510 Accounting 1215 512 Internal Revenue Agent 927 525 Accounting Technician 3502 560 Budget Analysis 1085 592 Tax Accounting 3391 644 Medical Technologist 2523 645 Medical Technician 838 802 Engineering Technician 3337 809 Construction Control 1091 962 Contract Representative 4684 993 Social Insurance Claims Examiner 988 1102 Contract & Procurement 2011 1105 Purchasing 946 1152 Production Control 1379 1712 Training Instruction 1017 1863 Food Inspection 3256 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 GS-7 & Equivalent (continued). Series Title Population 2001 General Supply 1244 2005 Supply Clerical & Technician 3451 2010 Inventory Management 1358 2102 Transportation Clerk & Asst. 992 526 Tax Technician 751 649 Medical Machine Technician 735 699 Health Aid & Technician 797 856 Electronics Technician 699 986 Legal Clerk & Technician 797 1060 Photography 726 1311 Physical Science Technician 719 1411 Library Technican 754 1910 Quality Assurance 727 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 , GS-6 & Equivalent Series Title Population 203 Personnel Clerical & Assistant 2124 204 Military Personnel Clerk. & Tech. 1315 301 Misc. Admin. & Programs 4217 303 Misc. Admin. Clerk & Assistant 6562 305 Mail & File 1023 318 Secretary 20172 332 Computer Operator 1504 335 Computer Clerk & Asst. 1086 344 Management Clerical & Asst. 1302 458 Soil Conservation Technician 1080 462 Forestry Technician 1132 501 General Acctg. Clerk./Admin. 1620 525 Accounting Technician 5219 540 Voucher Examining 900 544 Payroll 827 592 Tax Accounting 3915 621 Nursing Assistant 2774 647 Diagnostic Radiology Technician 1190 649 Medical Machine Technician 1283 699 Health Aid & Technician 802 802 Engineering Technician 819 962 Contract Representative 1460 986 Legal Clerk & Technician 1325 1105 Purchasing 1280 1106 Procurement Clerk & Assistant 825 2005 Supply Clerical & Technician 4237 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Series GS-5 & Equivalent Title Population 26 Park Technician 904 203 Personnel Clerical & Assistant 4234 204 Military Personnel Clerk. & Tech. 2502 301 Misc. Admin. & Programs 7539 303 Misc. Admin. Clerk & Assistant 12909 305 Mail & File 3038 312 Clerk Steno & Reporter 2591 318 Secretary 33897 322 Clerk Typist 2906 332 Computer Operator 1619 334 Computer Specialist 997 335 Computer Clerk & Asst. 1950 344 Management Clerical & Asst. 1566 404 Biological Technician 1306 462 Forestry Technician 3638 501 General Acctg. Clerk./Admin. 2813 525 Accounting Technician 6388 540 Voucher Examining 2326 544 Payroll 2294 545 Military Pay 1486 592 Tax Accounting 3704 621 Nursing Assistant 15680 661 Pharmacy Technician 1000 675 Medical Record Technician 1010 699 Health Aide & Technician 961 802 Engineering Technician 2499 962 Contract Representative 1241 986 Legal Clerk & Technician 1758 993 Social Insurance Claims Examiner 1103 998 Claims Clerical 2616 1087 Editorial Assistance 915 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 GS-5 & Equivalent (continued) Series Title Population 1102 Contract & Procurement 1129 1105 Purchasing 1946 1106 Procurement Clerk & Assistant 3048 2005 Supply Clerical & Technician 10567 2134 Shipment Clerical 1145 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Series GS-4 & Equivalent Population Title 26 203 Park Technician Personnel Clerical & Assistant 895 605 204 Military Personnel Clerk. & Tech. 3114 301 Misc. Admin. & Programs 4447 303 Misc. Admin. Clerk & Assistant 11697 305 Mail & File 8288 312 Clerk Steno & Reporter 7100 318 Secretary 14594 322 Clerk Typist 24637 332 Computer Operator 679 335 Computer Clerk Assistant 1700 350 Equipment Operator 1140 356 Data Transcriber 4976 382 Telephone Operating 1747 462 Forestry Technician 3625 501 General Acctg. Clerk./Admin. 1311 525 Accounting Technician 2845 530 Cash Processing 890 540 Voucher Examining 1279 544 Payroll 781 545 Military Pay 1046 592 Tax Accounting 1905 621 Nursing Assistant 13511 622 Medical Supply Aide/Technician 821 679 Medical Clerk 5956 681 Dental Assistant 1619 802 Engineering Technician 1785 998 Claims Clerical 5624 1106 Procurement Clerk & Assistant 3004 1411 Library Technician 640 1702 Education & Training Technician 2136 2005 Supply Clerical & Technician 8694 2134 Shipment Clerical 1037 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Series GS-3 & Equivalent Population Title 203 Personnel Clerical & Assistant 605 204 Military Personnel Clerk. & Tech. 779 301 Misc. Admin. & Programs 1809 303 Misc. Admin. Clerk & Assistant 8653 305 Mail & File 1072 312 Clerk Steno & Reporter 944 318 Secretary 28746 332 Computer Operator 679 350 Equipment Operator 1023 356 Data Transcriber 5100 382 Telephone Operating 1845 462 Forestry Technician 2505 621 Nursing Assistant 2741 679 Medical Clerk 1828 802 Engineering Technician 729 998 Claims Clerical 858 1106 Procurement Clerk & Assistant 869 2005 Supply Clerical & Technician 3248 2091 Sales Store Clerk 1386 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 APPENDIX E Lists of 38 SES Jobs Evaluated Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 SES Position Listing The eleven participating agencies and the 38 SES positions included in the sample are listed below. DEFENSE LOGISTICS AGENCY Comptroller. DLA Executive Director, Contract Management Deputy Executive Director, Supply Operations DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE Principal Deputy Assistanct Secretary (Research. Development and Logistics) Assistant Secretary (Financial Management) Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary (Manpower. Reserve Affairs and Installations) Deputy Comptroller DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY Administrative Assistant to the Secretary Auditor General Deputy Under Secretary (Operations Research) Deputy Comptroller DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE Director. Minority Business Development Agency Deputy Under Secretary for International Trade Assistant Administrator for Fisheries DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES Chief of Staff Administrator. Health Care Financing Administration Assistant Secretary for Management and Budget Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 SES Position Listing (Cont'd) DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Associate Director, U.S. Geological Survey Director. Minerals Management Service Deputy Assistant Secretary DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE Deputy Solicitor General & Counselor to the Solicitor General Director, Office of Public Affairs Director, U.S. Marshalls Service Deputy Commissioner DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY Deputy under Secretary (Financial Management) and Comptroller Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary (Shipbuilding and Logistics) Prinicpal Deputy Assistant Secretary (Research, Engineering, and Systems) Deputy Chief of Naval Material DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Deputy Administrator Assistant Secretary for Administration DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY Fiscal Assistant Secretary Deputy Commissioner Commissioner of Customs Director. U.S. Secret Service Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 SES Position Listing (Cont'd) VETERANS ADMINISTRATION Chief Benefits Director Director, National Cemetery System Associate Deputy Administrator (Information Resources Management) Associate Deputy Administrator (Logistics) Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 APPENDIX F List of 24 Bureau of Labor Statistics Positions Included Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 BLS Position Titles Accounting Clerk II Accounting Clerk III Accounting Clerk IV Secretary II Secretary III Secretary IV Secretary V Computer Operator I Computer Operator II Computer Operator III File Clerk I File Clerk II File Clerk III Typist I Typist II Stenographer I Stenographer II Order Clerk Payroll Clerk Key Entry Operator I Key Entry Operator II Switchboard Operator Switchboard Operator/Receptionist Messenger Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 APPENDIX G Matrix of Jobs Matched by State Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Distribution of Position Matches by State STATE CODE TOTAL % Match Rate Position Title 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 ACCOUNTING/BUDGETING 1-Manager, General Accounting X XXXXXXXXXXX12 92.3 2-Budget Analyst V XXXXXXXXXXXX 12 92.3 3-Accountant IV XXXX XXXXXXXX12 92.3 4-Budget Analyst III XXXX XXXXXXXX12 92.3 5-Supervisor, General Accounting X X X XXXXXXXXX12 92.3 6-Senior Accountant XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 7-Budget Analyst II XXXX XXXXXXXX12 92.3 8-Accountant I XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 AUDITING 9-Revenue Audit Manager X X X X X X XXXXX11 84.6 10-Field Auditor V XXXXXXXXXX X X 12 92.3 11-Revenue Audit Supervisor XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 12-Field Auditor III XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 13-Field Auditor I XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 CLERICAL 14-Secretary AA XXXXXXXX XX XX 12 92.3 15-Secretary A XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 16-Accounting Clerk A X XXXXXXX X X X 11 84.6 17-Secretary B XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 18-General Clerk A x XXXXXXXXXX11 84.6 19-Accounting Clerk B XXXX - . XXXX X X X 11 84.6 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Distribution of Position Matches by State STATE CODE TOTAL % Match Rate Position Title _01 02 ,03 04 05 06 07 _08 09 10 , 11 12 13 20-Payroll Clerk X X X XXXX X X X 10 76.9 21-Word Processing Operator A x XXXXXXX X X X 11 84.6 22-General Clerk B x XXXXXXXXXX11 84.6 23-Telephone Operator A XXXXX XXXXXXX12 92.3 24-Secretary D XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 25-Typist Clerk A x XXXXXXXXXXX12 92.3 26-General Clerk C x XXXXXXXXXX 11 84.6 27-Typist Clerk B XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 28-Mailroom Clerk XXXXXXXXX X X X 12 92.3 29-File Clerk C XXXXXXXXXXXX 12 92.3 DATA PROCESSING 30-EDP Director X X ? XXXXXXXX10 76.9 31-Director, Systems and Programming X X X X X XXXXXIO 76.9 32-Director, Data Center Operations X X XXXX XXXXX11 84.6 33-Manager, Systems and Programming X X XXXX XXXXX11 84.6 34-Data Base Manager X X X X X X X X 8 61.5 35-Project Leader X X X XXXXXXXX11 84.6 36-Computer Operations Manager X X XXXXXXXXXX12 _ 92.3 37-Senior Systems Programmer XXXXXXXXXXXXXI3 100.0 38-Senior Programmer Analyst X XXXXXXX X X X 11 84.6 39-Systems Analyst X X XXXXXXXXXX12 92.3 40-Shift Supervisor XXXX XXXXXXXX12 , 92.3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Distribution of Position Matches by State STATE CODE TOTAL 1 Match Rate Position Title 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 41-Associate Data Base Analyst X X X X X X X X 8 61.5 42-Senior Programmer X X XXXXXXXXXX12 92.3 43-Supervisor, Data Entry X X XXXXXXXXXX12 92.3 44-Programmer XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 45-Computer Operator A XXXXXXXXX X X X 12 92.3 46-Lead Data Control Clerk X X XXXX X X 8 61.5 47-Associate Programmer x XXXXXXXXXXX12 92.3 48-Programmer Trainee XXXXXXXX XXXX 12 92.3 49-Computer Operator B XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 50-Data Control Clerk XXXXXXXXX 1 X X X 12 92.3 51-Tape Librarian XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 52-Data Entry Operator B XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 EMPLOYMENT SERVICES 1 53-Executive Director, Employment Security XXXXX XXXXXX11 84.6 54-Director, Bureau of Job Services XXXXX XXXX X 10 76.9 55-Employment Interviewer Supervisor XXXX XXXXXXXX12 92.3 ENGINEERING 56-Chief Engineer XXXXXX XXXXXX12 92.3 57-Highway District Engineer XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 58-Civil Engineer IV XXXX XXXXXXXX12 92.3 59-Civil Engineer II XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Distribution of Position Matches by State STATE CODE TOTAL % Match Rate Position Title 01 02 03 , 04 05 06 07 08 09 . 10 11 12 13 FORESTRY 60-State Parks Director XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 61-Forester III XXXXXXX X X X X 11 84.6 62-Forester II ' XXXXXXX X X X X 11 84.6 63-Forest Ranger X X X X X X X X 8 61.5 HIGHWAYS 64-Superintendent, Shop & Equipment X X X X X X X X 8 61.5 65-Highway Foreman XXXXXXX? XXXXX12 92.3 HOSPITAL 66-Hospital Administrator X X X ?X X X X X X 9 69.2 67-Director of Nursing/School of Nursing X X X X 4 30.8 68-Rehabilitation Supervisor III XXXX X X X X X X 10 76.9 69-Chief Pharmacist ? XXXXXXXXX X X X 12 92.3 70-Rehabilitation Supervisor I XXXXXXXX X X X X 12 92.3 71-Chief Physical Therapist XXXX X X X X X X X 11 84.6 72-Chief Occupational Therapist XXXX X X X X X X X 11 84.6 73-Head Nurse, Medical/Surgical XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 74-Laundry Manager XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 75-Occupational Therapist II XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 76-Staff Nurse XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 77-Rehabilitation Counselor I XXXX X X X X X X X 11 84.6 78-Practical Nurse XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 I 79-X Ray Technologist XXXX _ XXXXXXXX12 92.3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Distribution of Position Matches by State STATE CODE TOTAL 1 Match Rate Position Title 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 HUMAN SERVICES 80-Superintendent, Mental Hospital XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 81-Senior Social Work Supervisor X X XXXXXXXXXX12 92.3 82-Social Worker XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 PERSONNEL 83-Director, Office of Personnel ServicesXXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 84-Personnel Analyst II XXXXXXXXXXXX 12 92.3 POLICE .. 85-State Police Commissioner XXXX . XXXXXXX11 84.6 86-State Police Major XXXX XXXXXXXX12 92.3 87-State Police Lieutenant X X XXXXXXXXXX12 92.3 88-State Police Sargent XXXXXXX XXXXX12 92.3 89-State Police Trooper XXXXXXX XXXXX12 92.3 PRISONS 90-Superintendent, Correctional Institution XXXXX XXXXX10 76.9 91-Prison Warden X X X XXXXXXX10 76.9 92-Corrections Officer V X XXXXXXXXXX11 84.6 93-Corrections Officer IV XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 94-Corrections Officer III XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 95-Probation Officer I x XXXXXXXXXXX12 92.3 96-Corrections Officer I XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Distribution of Position Matches by State STATE CODE TOTAL 'I Match Rate Position Title 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 13 PURCHASING ,12 _. 97-Purchasing Director XXXXX XXXXXXX12 92.3 98-Purchasing Agent III X XXXXXXXXXXX12 92.3 99-Purchasing Agent II XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 _ 100.0 MISCELLANEOUS 100-Secretary of Transportation XXXXXXXXXXXXX13 100.0 101-Insurance Commissioner XXXXXXX'XXXXXX13 100.0 102-Tax Examiner III XXXXXXXX X X X X 12 92.3 103-Biologist X XXXXXXX X X X 11 84.6 104-Senior Librarian XXXXXXX.XXXXXX13 100.0 TOTAL NUMBER 97 86 86 100 80 97 99 89 89 92 102 99 99 1215 % Match Rate L 93.3 82.7 82.7 96.2 76.9 93.3 95.2 85.6 85.i$ 88.5 98.1 95.2 95.2 89.9 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 APPENDIX H Prevalence of Benefit Practices Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 DEATH BENEFITS Basic Group Life Supplemental Group Life Basic Accidental Death Supplemental Accidental Death Voluntary Accidental Death Dependent Group Life Group Survivor Income Business Travel Accident Executive Group Life DISABILITY Short Term Disability Long Term Disability (Other than pension disability) HEALTH CARE BENEFITS - Service Benefit Hospital/Medical Plan Retiree Coverage Dental Coverage Prescription Drugs Vision Care RETIREMENT BENEFITS Pension Plan 401(k) Thrift Plan/Matching Stock Purchase Plan Profit Sharing/Stock Bonus ESOP/PAYSOP Discount Stock Purchase Plan Section 457 Plan Prevalence of Benefit Practices HHBC 1983 Database 100% have plan 58% have plan 74% have plan 17% have plan 35% have plan 36% have plan 11% have plan 72% have plan 20% have plan 100% have formal plan 93% have plan State Employees 100% have plan 46% have plan 54% have plan 23% have plan 23% have plan 31% have plan 0% have plan 8% have plan 23% have plan for management 100% have formal plan 31% have plan Federal Employees has plan has plan has plan no plan no plan has plan no plan no plan no plan has formal plan no plan Plan (High Option Blue Cross/Blue Shield) used for Federal Employees 100% have plan 70% cover both early and normal retirees 78% have plan 89% cover as an eligible expense under major medical 17% have plan 91% have plan 13% have plan 43% have plan 20% have plan 19% have ESOP or PAYSOP 7% have plan 0% have plan 100% have formal plan 92% cover both early and normal retirees 46% have plan 62% cover as an eligible expense under major medical 0% have plan 100% have plan 0% have plan 0% have plan 0% have plan 0% have plan 0% have plan 38% have plan has plan covers all retirees no plan covers as an eligible expense under major medical no plan has plan no plan no plan no plan no plan no plan no plan Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 C-1-0001-Z008000199000-68dCW-V10 Prevalence of Benefit Practices HHBC 1983 EXECUTIVE PERQUISITES Database State Employees Federal Employees Stock Option Plan 55% provide 0% provide do not provide Stock Appreciation 29% provide 0% provide do not provide Phantom Stock/Dividend Units 7% provide 0% provide do not provide Executive Stock Bonus 6% provide 0% provide do not provide Executive Stock Purchase 3% provide 0% provide do not provide Performance Shares/Units 18% provide 0% provide do not provide Front-end Bonuses 6% provide 0% provide do not provide Supplemental Retirement 38% provide 0% provide do not provide Executive Dining Room 18% provide 0% provide do not provide Physical Exam (Non pre-employment) 72% provide 15% provide do not provide Special Medical Reimbursement 16% provide 0% provide do not provide Special Vacation Schedule 35% provide 0% provide do not provide Split Dollar Insurance 8% provide 0% provide do not provide Special Executive Group Life 20% provide 23% provide do not provide Executive Severance Pay Practice 20% provide 0% provide do not provide Waiver of Insurance Waiting Periods 15% provide 0% provide do not provide Education Program 10% provide 0% provide do not provide Pre-retirement Counseling 7% provide 0% provide do not provide Deferred Compensation Plan 24% provide 0% provide do not provide Company Cars or Car Allowance 69% provide 0% provide do not provide Key Man Life Insurance 10% provide 0% provide do not provide Excess Personal Liability Insurance 11% provide 0% provide do not provide Apartments/Suites/Houses 9% provide 0% provide do not provide Mortgages (other than transfer) and Loans 5% provide 0% provide do not provide Personal Legal Services 5% provide 0% provide do not provide Personal Financial Counseling 26% provide 0% provide do not provide Tax Preparation Services 17% provide 0% provide do not provide Employment Contracts 14% provide 0% provide do not provide Special Parking 58% provide 0% provide do not provide Country Club 44% provide 0% provide do not provide Lunch Club 47% provide 0% provide do not provide Athletic Club 16% provide 0% provide do not provide Company Aircraft 26% provide 0% provide do not provide Paid Spouse Travel Expenses 26% proivde 0% provide do not provide Sabbaticals with Pay 4% provide 0% provide do not provide Directors and Officers Liability Insurance 51% provide 0% provide do not provide Golden Parachutes 8% provide 0% provide do not provide Percentages are based on the number of respondents to each perquisite practice (except Stock Plans where percentages are based on the number of stockholder companies). C-1-0001-Z00800n199000-68dCll-V10 DEATH BENEFITS Basic Group Life Insurance Eligibility Cost Basis of Benefit Amount of Benefit (Plans based on Uniform Earnings Multiple) Maximums Disability Benefit Prevalence of Benefit Practices HHBC 1983 Database 100% have plan 50% have immediate eligibility 32% require a waiting period 82% are employer paid 82% are based on earnings multiple 47% are 2 times pay 25% are 1 times pay 14% are 1.5 times pay 66% have maximum flat dollar amount of coverage, of these, State Employees 100% have plan 55% require a waiting period 36% have immediate eligibility 46% are employer paid 46% involves cost sharing 69% are based on earnings multiple 31% are based on a flat amount 50% are 1 times pay 38% 1.25-2 times pay 67% have no maximum 33% have maximum, of these, 38% are $100,000- 100% have < _ $50,000 $249,000 24% are $250,000- $399,999 16% are $400,000- $999,999 18% are < $100,000 89% continue coverage in the event of disability 77% continue coverage in the event of disability Federal Employees has plan has immediate eligibility involves cost shar- ing based on uniform earnings multiple provides coverage which varies by age; age 35 or under - 2 times basic amount age 35 to 45 - reduces 5% each year age 45 or older - 1 times basic amount has a maximum linked to the basic benefit continues coverage in event of dis- ability 0 2 DEATH BENEFITS (Cont'd) CD w Basic Group Life Insurance =Pi Retirement Provisions CD a I> 8 CD 11-1 CD 70 (ICDCDT N) Supplemental Group Life CD Cost Cost of Retiree Coverage ?1,0001-Z00800n199000-68dC1I-V10 Basis of Benefit Amount of Benefit Prevalence of Benefit Practices HHBC 1983 Database 37% cancel coverage 31% make a one time reduction on normal retirement date 25% reduce at retirement and make further reduction(s) thereafter 89% are employer paid 58% have plan 74% are employee paid 85% are based on earnings multiple 42% are 1 times pay 28% are 2 times pay State Employees 54% cancel coverage 31% make a one time reduction on normal retirement date 67% are employer paid 33% are employee paid 46% have plan 67% are employee paid 17% involve cost sharing 17% are employer paid 67% are based on earnings multiple 33% are based on a flat amount 33% are 1 times pay 33% are 1.5 times pay 34% are 2 times pay Federal Employees makes a reduction on normal retire? ment date and further reduction(s) thereafter involves cost? sharing has plan employee paid based on earnings multiple allows the employee to choose from 1 times pay to 5 times pay Prevalence of Benefit Practices HHBC 1983 o DEATH BENEFITS (Cont'd) Database State Employees Federal Employees ET Supplemental Group Life Maximums 53% have a maximum flat 67% have no maximum has a maximum dollar amount of coverage, of these, flat dollar amount of coverage of 5 times pay I> -0 -0 8 29% 22% 21% are $100,000-$199,999 are > $400,000 are -200,000-$299,999 ln Disability Benefit CD 70 (IT Retirement Provisions CD CD R3 C) ; 70 TJ Cost CO CP CD CD CD CD Basis of Benefit CD 70 CD CD CD Amount of Coverage co CD CD CD CD 0 Basic Accidental Death 93% continue coverage in the event of disability 75% cancel coverage 74% have plan 86% are employer paid 78% are based on earnings multiple, of these, 42% are 2 times pay 26% are 1 times pay 67% continue coverage in the event of disability 67% cancel coverage 17% continue coverage in full 17% make a reduction on retirement date and further reduction(s) thereafter 54% have plan 43% are employer paid 29% are employee paid 29% involve cost sharing 86% are based on a flat amount, of these, 50% are $4,000-$5,000 33% are $10,000-$15,000 continues cover- age in event of disability makes a reduction on normal retire- ment date and further reduc- tion(s) thereafter has plan involves cost shar- ing based on earnings multiple provides coverage which varies by age 0 m)EATH BENEFITS (Cont'd) TOasic Accidental Death ? Maximums 8 -n o, -,)upplemental Accidental Death (T? roluntary Accidental Death ? Cost N.) N.) - Basis of Benefit Prevalence of Benefit Practices HHBC 1983 Database State Employees Employees 77% have a maximum flat dollar amount of coverage, of these, 33% are $50,000-$100,000 27% are $1,00,000-$150,000 25% are $200,000-$250,000 13% are $300,000-$400,000 Not Applicable 17% have plan 23% have plan 35% have plan 23% have plan 97% are employee paid 100% are employee paid 86% are based on a flat 100% are based on a flat amount amount 12% are based on earnings multiple has no maximum amount of coverage no plan no plan C) Amount of Benefit 90% are the employee's 100% are the employee's choice choice 0 -0 oolependent Group Life 36% have plan 31% have plan has plan Cost 69% are employee paid 100% are employee paid employee 22% are employer paid paid 0)(3) Maximum of Spouse 42% are $1,000-$3,000 75% are $2,000 $5,000 27% are $5,000 co n.) 0 - Maximum of Children 39% are $1,000 50% are $2,000 $2,500 26% are $2,000 25% are $2,500 8% are $2,500 25% are $1,000 Group Survivor Income 11% have plan 0% have plan no plan Prevalence of Benefit Practices HHBC 1983 Federal 0 m WDEATH BENEFITS (Cont'd) Database State Employees Employees o e7 o w m w Business Travel Accident 72% have plan 8% have plan no plan w w m a m a Cost 98% are employer paid m m m a m a_ Basis of Benefit 55% are based on a flat amount > 73 > 38% are based on earnings multiple 73 -a 8 -a < E3 Executive Group Life 20% have plan 23% have plan for management no plan m < a CD -n o -, 71 CD C-1-0001-Z00800n199000-68dCl-V10 CD CD CD N) CD N) R3 C-1-0001-Z00800n199000-68dCW-V10 o DISABILITY BENEFITS CD (?).Short Term Disability (Sick Leave) R3 ?1,0001-Z00800n199000-68dCI-V10 Eligibility Salary Continuance Plans Number of Days Accumulated Maximum Number of Days Accumulated Amount of Benefit 2 Wks. 4 Wks. 6-13 Wks. 13.1-17.9 Wks. 18.0-25.9 Wks. 26 Wks. Prevalence of Benefit Practices HHBC 1983 Database 100% have formal plan 97% are salary continuance plans 54% have immediate eligibility 46% require a waiting period 48% have schedule that varies with service 28% are based on accumu- State Employees 100% have formal plan 100% have salary continuance plans 80% have immediate eligibility 100% are based on accumulation of days lation of days 45% credit 12-12.9 days 38% credit 12-12.9 days 18% credit 10-10.9 days 31% credit 15-15.9 days 8% credit 15-15.9 days 15% credit 13-13.9 days 30% have no maximum 85% have no maximum 23% have 60-99 days 15% have > 180 days 16% have 121-180 days Number of Weeks of Full Pay (Service Related Plans) 2 Yrs. 8 Yrs. 18 Yrs. Max. 13% 2% 1% 2% 27% 4% 3% 2% 34% 51% 19% 17% 2% 12% 6% 2% 2% 15% 24% 8% 3% 12% 37% 55% Federal Employees has formal plan has salary con- tinuance plan has immediate eligibility based on accumulation of days credits 13 days has no maximum ?1,0001-Z008000199000-68dCl-V10 DISABILITY BENEFITS (Cont'd) (Other than pension disability) Long Term Disability Eligibility Cost Exclusion Period Amount of Benefit Plans Based on a Flat Percentage Maximum Benefit Social Security Offset Prevalence of Benefit Practices HHBC 1983 Database 93% have plan 55% require a waiting period 32% have immediate eligibility 63% are employer paid 21% involve cost sharing 62% begin LTD benefits after 6 months of disability 15% begin LTD benefits after 3 months of disability 90% base benefit on a flat percentage of monthly earnings 60% pay 60% of monthly earnings 18% pay 50% of monthly earnings 79% have monthly maximums; State Employees 31% have plan 50% have immediate eligibility 25% require first of the month following employment 25% require a waiting period 50% are employee paid 25% involve cost sharing 25% are employer paid 75% begin LTD benefits after 3 months of disability 25% being LTD benefits at the end of STD 100% base benefit on a flat percentage of monthly earnings 50% pay 60% of monthly earnings 25% pay 50% of monthly earnings 25% pay 66%-67% of monthly earnings 100% have monthly maximums, of these, of these, 25% are $3,000 50% are $3,000 23% are $2,000-$2,999 25% are $1,000 20% are $4,001-$5,000 25% are $1,500-$1,999 18% are $3,001-$4,000 51% offset primary social security 30% offset family social security 50% offset family social security directly 25% offset primary social security directly 25% offset all social security when benefits from all sources exceed 70% Federal Employees no plan HEALTH CARE Hospitalization/Medical Eligibility Cost Employee Coverage Dependent Coverage Plan Design Basic Plan Coverage Hospitalization Maximum Surgical Coverage Prevalence of Benefit Practices HHBC 1983 Database 100% have plan 46% have immediate eligibility 31% require first of the month following employment 66% are employer paid 34% involve cost sharing 57% involve cost sharing 39% are employer paid 62% have basic plan coverage with supplemental major medical 32% have comprehensive major medical 94% pay 100% of reasonable and customary charges 82% have a maximum based on the number of days of care, of these, 51% pay for 365 days of care 24% pay for 180 days of care State Employees 65% have basic plan coverage, of these, 73% reimburse based on reasonable and custom? ary charges, of these, 82% pay 100% of reasonable and customary charges 100% have plan Federal Employees Service Benefit Plan High Option has plan 33% require first of the has immediate month following eligibility employment 22% have immediate eligibility 54% involve cost sharing 46% are employer paid 77% involve cost sharing 23% are employer paid 77% have basic plan coverge with supplemental major medical 23% have comprehensive major medical 90% pay 100% of reasonable and customary charges 90% have a maximum based on the number of days of care, of these, 56% have a maximum of 365 days of care 22% have a maximum of 120 days of care 90% have basic plan coverage, of these, 89% reimburse based on 100% of reasonable and customary charges involves cost sharing involves cost sharing has basic coverage with supplemental major medical pays 100% of reasonable and customary charges has no maximum has basic plan coverage reimburses based on 80% of reasonable and customary charges C-1.0001.Z008000199000-68da-V10 m HEALTH CARE (Cont'd) CD w Basic Plan Coverage Outpatient X-Rays and Lab CD -o Doctor's Visits in the Hospital -o 8 m_ Doctor's Office Visits -n 0 0 (T) Supplemental Major Medical Deductible Amount N.) N.) - Family Deductible ?L , 000 I- Z00800n199000-68dC1I-V10 Coinsurance (cont'd on following page) Prevalence of Benefit Practices HHBC 1983 Database 84% have basic plan coverage 55% have basic plan coverage 84% cover under major medical only 71% have a $100 deductible 78% have a maximum family deductible; of these, 37% are $200 32% are $300 22% are 0200 42% have coinsurance based on eligible charges; of these, 96% have initial co- insurance of 80% of the eligible charges 41% have breakpoint of $2,000-$2,999 34% have breakpoint of $5,000-$10,000 99% pay 91-100% of the remaining eligible charges State Employees 60% have basic plan coverage 90% have basic plan coverage 50% have basic plan coverage 30% cover under major medical only 50% have a $100 deductible 30% have a $50 deductible 80% have a maximum family deductible, of these, 38% are < $200 25% are $200 25% are > $300 Federal Employees Service Benefit Plan High Option 50% have coinsurance based on individual out-of- pocket expenses 60% have initial coinsurance of 80% of eligible charges 40% have initial coinsurance of > 90% 60% have breakpoint of $500 20% have breakpoint of 30% 17% gave 60.1-70% 15% gave 10.1-15% 8% gave 5.1-10% 8% gave 35.1-40% 8% gave 50.1-55% 0 -0 co 13% have plan, of these, 81% have matching employer contributions 58% are features of a thrift plan 25% are salary reduction only 48% are 1%-1.99% 32% are 2%-2.99% 25% are 5%-6.99% 23% are 9%-10.99% 16% are 15%-16.99% 14% are 1%-4.99% 0% have plan no plan 0 0 0 0 0 0 co 0 0 n.) 0 RETIREMENT BENEFITS (Cont'd) Captial Accumulation Thrift Plan or Stock Purchase with Matching Contribution 8 Maximum Contribution Matched by Employer -n CD (T) CD CD N.) N.) - Employer Matching C-1-0001-Z00800n199000-68dCl-V10 Profit Sharing/Stock Bonus Plan Stock Ownership Plans Discount Stock Purchase Plan Section 457 Plan Prevalence of Benefit Practices HHBC 1983 Database 43% have plan 54% permit maximum con- tribution of 6% of pay 16% permit maximum con- tribution of 5% of pay 10% permit maximum con- tribution of 4% of pay 76% match by specified percent; of these, 53% match 50% of the employee's con- tribution 14% match 25-45% of the employee's contribution 20% have plan 19% have plan; of these, 79% are PAYSOPs 21% are ESOPs 7% have plan 0% have plan State Employees 0% have plan 0% have plan 0% have plan 0% have plan 38% have plan Federal Employees no plan no plan no plan no plan no plan 0 CD CD =Pi (D ) 73 73 8 CD -n CD CD CD CD n.) n.) R3 . . 0 0 -0 co 0 0 0 0 0 0 co 0 0 n.) Prevalence of Benefit Practices n HOLIDAYS AND VACATIONS 2 Yrs. HHBC 1983 Database State Employees Federal Employees CD ECDT a CD a I> -c) -c) 8 CDa 11-1 7o CD (ICDT CD n) CD n) :17 Holidays 33% provide 10-10.5 holidays 20% provide 9-9.5 holidays 19% provide 11-11.5 holidays 11% provide 12-12.5 holidays 5 Yrs. 10 Yrs. 20 Yrs. 23% 23% 23% 15% 2 Yrs. provide provide provide provide 5 Yrs. 11 holidays 13 holidays > 13 holidays 12 holidays 10 Yrs. 20 Yrs. provides 9 holidays 2 years-13 days 5 years-20 days 10 years-20 days 20 years-26 days CD CD Total Number of Holidays Provided 8 CD -n m Vacations CD CD 10-14 days N.) 15-17 days 18-20 days N.) >21 days 83% 10% 2% 0% 31% 1% 0% 57% 65% 4% 6% 22% 68% 0% 1% 22% 857. 15% 0% 07. 15% 85% 0% 0% 0% 0% 46% 0% 54% 387. 0% 627. ?1,0001-Z00800n199000-68dC1I-V10 C) 70 co CD CD CD CD CD 70 CD CD CD CO CD CD n) CD CD CD Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 APPENDIX I Characteristics of Participating Firms Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF PARTICIPANTS Table A.12 Participants by Region No. Total Central 177 21 Mid-Atlantic 280 33 Northeast 77 9 Plains 82 9 Mountain 26 3 South 136 16 West Coast 75 9 U. S. Participants 853 100 Canadian Participant 1 Total Participants 854 The following map indicates the regions noted in Table A.12 above, and the number of participants in each. WEST COAST 75 Participants MOUNTAIN 26 Participants PLAINS 82 Participants ? I V ! ?., CENTRAL 177 Participants SOUTH 136 Participants MID. ATLANTIC 280 ft Partitipants NORTHEAST 77 Participants Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 HAY ? HUGGINS 1983 NONCASH COMPENSATION COMPARISON EXTENT OF OPERATIONS OF PARTICIPATING ORGANIZATIONS Table A.13 Extent of Operations in the United States No. Industrial ? % No. Fin./Svc. No. Total Single Location 31 7 86 33 117 16 Regional?One State 34 7 78 30 112 15 Regional-Multi-State 109 23 38 15 147 20 National 301 63 58 22 359 49 Total 475 100 260 100 735 100 No Response 64 55 119 Total Participants 539 315 854 A majority (54%) of the Industrial organizations operate outside the United States or the United States and Canada as well, but only 12% of the responding Fin./Svc. group, as shown in Table A.14. Table A.14 Areas of Operation No. Industrial No. Fin./Svc. % No. Total U. S. Only 220 46 231 88 451 61 U. S. & Canada 32 7 9 3 41 5 Multinational 229 47 25 9 254 34 Total 481 100 265 100 746 100 No Response 58 50 108 Total Participants 539 315 854 VARIATIONS OF BASIC BENEFITS PROGRAM WITHIN ORGANIZATIONS Table A.15 Variations of Basic Benefits Within Organizations No. Industrial No. Fin./Svc. % No. Total Same Program Organization-Wide (With Minor Differences) 417 88 251 98 668 92 Industry-Oriented 21 4 ? ? 21 3 Location Oriented 23 5 2 1 25 3 Job-Oriented 12 3 3 1 15 2 Total 473 100 256 100 729 100 No Response 66 59 125 Total Participants 539 315 854 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21: CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/21 : CIA-RDP89-00066R000800210001-3 NONCASH COMPENSATION COMPARISON HAY ? HUGGINS 1983 NUMBER OF EMPLOYEES OF PARTICIPATING ORGANIZATIONS Table A.16 Categories of Personnel Employed by Survey Participants Industrial Fin./Svc. Total No. % No. No. Salaried Exempt 335 100 218 98 553 99 Salaried Nonexempt 265 82 184 85 449 83 Hourly Non-Bargaining 201 71 94 53 295 64 Hourly Bargaining 186 63 26 15 212 45 Table A.17 Number of Total Salaried Employees Industrial Fin./Svc. Total No. No. % No.