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Feature:

Best in Shows: Notes From Key Workforce Management Conferences and Conventions

  

Feature Contents
Top of Feature

1. Recruiting 2006 Conference and Expo.
November 8-9, Jacob Javits Center, New York City

2. HRO World Europe Annual Conference
November 6-8, the Conrad Hotel, Brussels, Belgium

3. The National Business Coalition on Health Annual Conference
November 5-7, the Astor Crowne Plaza Hotel, New Orleans

4. HR.com Employers of Excellence 2006 Conference
October 24-27, 2006, Red Rock Casino Resort, Las Vegas

5. Oracle OpenWorld 2006
October 22-26, 2006, Moscone Center, San Francisco

6. Pensions & Investments' Seventh Annual West Coast Defined Contribution Conference
October 8-10, 2006, the Fairmont Hotel, San Francisco

7. Human Resource Executive's Ninth Annual HR Technology Conference & Exposition
October 4-6, 2006, Navy Pier, Chicago

8. The Motivation Show 2006--Business Solutions That Motivate People
September 26-28, 2006, McCormick Place South, Chicago

9. The Conference Board 2006 Human Resources Outsourcing Conference
September 19-20, the Drake Hotel, Chicago

10. 19th Annual Benefits Management Forum and Expo
September 17-19, Hyatt Regency Hotel, Chicago

11. World Business Forum 2006
September 12-13, Radio City Music Hall, New York City

12. OnRec Expo 2006—Global Summit for Online Recruitment
September 12-13, 2006, at the Donald E. Stephens Convention and Conference Center, Chicago

13. The Conference Board 2006 Hot Topics & Hot Issues HR Forum--Dilemmas, Demographics & Direction
July 18-19, 2006, at the Marriott Marquis Hotel, New York City

14. Workforce Innovations 2006
July 11-13, 2006, Anaheim Convention Center, Anaheim, California

15. Society for Human Resource Management
June 25-28, 2006, Washington, D.C.

16. World Business Forum Chicago 2006
June 6-7, 2006 at Navy Pier, Chicago, Illinois

17. 2006 Workstream User Conference
May 23-24, San Francisco Hilton Financial District, San Francisco

18. The Conference Board 2006 Leadership Development Conference—Developing a New Cadre of Global Leaders for Top-line Growth
May 24-25, 2006, at the Coronado Island Marriott, Coronado, California

19. Vurv Revolution 2006
May 21-24 at Disney's Grand Floridian Resort, Lake Buena Vista, Florida.

20. SAP Sapphire '06
May 16-18, 2006, at the Orange County Convention Center, Orlando, Florida

21. Consumer Directed Health Care Conference and Expo and the National Health, Wellness and Prevention Congress
May 8-10, 2006, at the Hyatt Regency San Francisco

22. WorldatWork Total Rewards Conference & Exhibition 2006


23. HRO World Annual Conference
April 26-27, 2006, at the New York Hilton & Towers, New York City

24. 2006 Human Resource Planning Society Annual Global Conference
April 23-26, 2006, at the JW Marriott Starr Pass Resort & Spa in Tucson, Arizona.

25. The 2006 World Health Care Congress
April 17-19, 2006, at the Marriott Wardman Park Hotel, Washington, D.C.

26. International Association for Human Resource Information Management
April 9-12, 2006

27. Lawson Software Conference and User Exchange (CUE) 2006
April 9-11, 2006

28. The Conference Board 2006 Senior Human Resources Executive Conference–Strategic Workforce Management and Growth
April 6-7, 2006


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WorldatWork Total Rewards Conference & Exhibition 2006


May 7-10, 2006, at the Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, California
Comments 0 | Recommend 0

WorldatWork Total Rewards Conference & Exhibition 2006
May 7-10, 2006, at the Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, California

What: Founded in 1955, WorldatWork touts itself as is the world’s leading not-for-profit professional association dedicated to knowledge leadership in total rewards, compensation, benefits and work/life balance. WorldatWork focuses on human resources disciplines associated with attracting, motivating and retaining employees. The 2006 conference in Anaheim attracted more than 2,000 attendees from some 35 different countries, and 160 companies showcasing products and services in the exhibit hall.

Conference Info: For more information about WorldatWork, go to www.worldatwork.org.

Date: Tuesday, May 9, 2006

Is CEO compensation a zero-sum game? The solutions that companies concoct to cope with challenges of the moment often have unintended consequences, according to David Swinford, senior managing director at Pearl Meyer & Partners in New York. For instance, take stock options, which were created to give CEOs ownership incentives for meeting performance objectives. Or look at the golden parachutes of the 1980s that were devised to fend off hostile takeovers. The most recent example of this phenomenon is the practice of backdating stock options, which was acceptable in the 1990s but has now engulfed UnitedHealth Group CEO William McGuire in a storm of controversy.

Does Swinford believe that the CEO compensation system is fundamentally broken? No. But he does think that companies should be cognizant that compensation structures that made sense in the past are not necessarily sensible for today’s business environment.

Swinford also stressed the need for companies to develop a compensation philosophy and to stick to their principles when hiring a new CEO. "Be prepared to walk away from a candidate if necessary," he said.

A compensation specialist sitting in the audience swiftly challenged Swinford’s views. "I do not like what I am hearing," a woman said. "The situation is not as negative as you are portraying it to be." Swinford playfully responded: "If I ever give a speech that doesn’t stir controversy, please shoot me."

Digging beneath the surface: The session on developing remuneration frameworks for China—led by Elliot Santner, compensation specialist from Grainger, and Chikage Nose of Mercer Human Resource Consulting—got off to a rocky start. There were technical difficulties with the microphones and the speaker system, which inadvertently streamed in loud noises from concurrent sessions. Within the first five minutes of the presentation, the sound specialist made no less than three separate trips up to the stage. "This wouldn’t happen in China," an audience member said. "I wouldn’t know," Nose replied, "I’m from Japan."

The crowd laughed, and, it’s hoped, drew an important lesson from this incident: Asia should not be taken at face value. There are far too many nuances in the cultures, languages and business environments to take a simplistic approach. Take the variances in compensation structures within China alone. There are three different tiers that companies can use as a roadmap when creating remuneration packages.

Companies in first-tier cities like Shanghai, Beijing and Shenzhen can expect to pay out the highest salaries. Meanwhile, remuneration in second-tier locations like Nanjing, Wuxi and Suzhou can be 13 percent to 22 percent less. But if companies are really looking for a bargain, they should look for workers in cities like Zhongshan, Zhenjiang and Huizhou, where compensation can be as much as 30 percent lower than in first-tier locales. However, cheap doesn’t always translate to smooth operation, Nose and Santner point out. The less developed the city, the more difficult it may be to find qualified talent.

--Gina Ruiz


Day 2: Monday, May 8, 2006

Morning keynote: What would a conference be without a best-selling business author to give the keynote? For this conference, the speaker was Jason Jennings, author of Less Is More and It’s Not the Big That Eat the Small--It’s the Fast That Eat the Slow. There’s a reason why authors like Jennings, Malcolm Gladwell, Marcus Buckingham and others make such a good living speaking to HR and management conferences. It’s because everyone is hungry for leadership and management wisdom and hope that one of these guys has the silver bullet.
Jennings is good and has a good message, but no, he doesn’t have a silver bullet. What he has is this piece of advice: "Finding, keeping and growing the right people is the single biggest business challenge today." He talked about his book research, which looks at 180,000 companies around the world--research that he says has identified the fastest, most productive and best-performing companies anywhere. Jennings named a few: Cabela’s, the world’s largest catalog merchant selling fishing, hunting and outdoor gear; World Savings; Nucor Steel; and Ikea. Jennings said a company’s culture "is the ultimate competitive advantage."

I don’t want to work, I just want to bang on the drum all day: WorkatWork had an interesting way to get people awake and functioning for an extra-early 8 a.m. keynote Monday. A three-person troupe of taiko drummers banging away like the cast of Stomp. There were easily 20 minutes or more of headache-inducing drum pounding before the speakers mercifully came on. This is the ultimate way to get a crowd to appreciate the keynote and other presentations: Pound their brain cells into submission beforehand.

You can’t win over the comp committee without a scorecard: It took SunTrust Banks just under a year to overhaul its total rewards program in order to remain a competitive employer. SunTrust’s program is complex—there are 180 incentive plans covering the bank’s 35,000 employees, said Jo Anne Moeller, senior vice president of compensation and HRIS for the organization. Moeller described SunTrust’s case study during a Monday afternoon session and described one technique to engage and guide decision-makers in such a detailed and deep endeavor: Come up with the mother of all charts. So that senior management and the compensation committee could see where the bank stood in its current rewards plan, what should change and what the results of that change would mean to its competitive position in the bank-pay marketplace, Moeller and her team developed an at-a-glance chart that she described as "detailed but fairly concise." Indeed. The chart is eight levels deep and 14 categories across. Moeller said the team that developed the plan had outside consultants, of course, but also involved representatives from SunTrust’s benefits, compensation and controller’s departments. "In my experience, when you have the accounting folks say, ‘Yes, those are my numbers,’ it makes the CEO feel better," Moeller said.

Duel in the sun: Sometimes the best way to see all of the shades of gray of a subject is to examine it in stark black and white. That’s exactly what compensation consultants Jannice Koors of Pearl Meyer and Partners and Erin Bass-Goldberg of Frederic W. Cook & Co. did for the increasingly controversial subject of executive compensation during their workshop session "Dueling Consultants: Perspectives on Executive Compensation." The "dueling" duo addressed both sides of the "800-pound gorillas." Those are the thorniest executive compensation questions, such as impact of proposed SEC proxy rules on executives pay, whether CEO pay is too high and the effectiveness of various long-term incentives.
Their polarized examination helped highlight the fact that executive compensation is an emotional and complex issue, and is not governed by a fixed set of rules. Koors and Bass-Goldberg concluded that public companies are taking the issue of CEO compensation more seriously and, faced with new disclosure rules, are "self-regulating."

--Robert Scally, John Hollon and Carroll Lachnit

 


Next Article: 23. HRO World Annual Conference
April 26-27, 2006, at the New York Hilton & Towers, New York City

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