Intranet managers pay
Posted by Phil Edwards on September 3, 2009
Loads of money
Are you worth what you get paid?
As part of our drive to become more “transparent” to the licence fee payers, the BBC announced a while ago that it would be regularly publishing the salary bands of it’s highest earners. The BBC board’s salaries have always been available in the annual report, but the BBC took the unusual step of announcing the salaries earned by the next management level down and this information has already been made public. Apparently it’s raised a few eyebrows internally; probably understandably.
Later in September, the BBC will announce the next highest 100 earners within the organisation. This is in addition to the publication of expenses claimed by senior BBC managers as a result of requests made from the public as provided by the Freedom of Information (FOI) Act.
At last weeks Edinburgh TV Festival, questions were asked about “talent” pay and calls made for the BBC to disclose what it pays its high profile performers. The actor and comedian, Alan Davies, has already been subjected to a 25% pay cut for his role as Jonathan Creek; http://tinyurl.com/mvr48v
Director of BBC Vision, Jana Bennett, stated in Edinburgh “The BBC is in a market; in the broader sense it’s part of the creative industries. It performs a fundamentally different role than that performed by, for example, policemen or teachers. It is a category error to suggest that the public would actually be able to contribute to working out what we do about it. It’s like me talking about Tom Cruise’s movie deals. I’m not of that sector.” http://tinyurl.com/knvxe3
So as we become more open regarding our top earners’ salaries, would you be happy to have your salary become common knowledge within the intranet industry? Would it affect our salaries if companies benchmarked their intranet people positions with other organisations?
I would imagine that our HR departments already do some form of pay benchmarking exercise as part of their role in setting job descriptions commensurate with pay scales, but I’ve seen little evidence of a consistent and common approach. As intranet managers tend to sit in different departments within differing organisations, this doesn’t appear to be an exact science. There’s also the complication of aligning salaries internally within the appropriate existing pay bands.
Would the publication of our collective pay help the intranet business overall or are we all too secretive about what we earn?
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