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When employers first sent workers home in the early spring of 2020, there was one question on everyone's minds: Is remote work here to stay? As the pandemic stretched on and workers adapted to the new arrangement, the answer became clear.
Remote work is now an expectation of any job that makes the setup feasible. In fact, workers are saying they won't consider an opportunity that doesn't include flexible work options.
But as employees hunker down to work from home in the long term, employers are left with a couple questions, the most pressing of which concerns compensation. Facebook, which has said vast swaths of its workforce will work from home, will adjust workers' pay based on their location. The company will shrink someone's pay if they move from the San Francisco Bay Area to Kalamazoo, Michigan, for instance.
As Payscale's survey indicated, not all employers will take this path. "There are many appropriate ways to structure compensation strategies to accommodate remote work and increased workplace flexibility, but the right solution is going to be unique to differentiate the organization in the bid for talent," Payscale CHRO Shelly Holt said. "What really matters though is that compensation programs are competitive, consistent, and fair."
This article, written by Katie Clarey, appeared first on HR Dive.
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