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Insights
on Excellence | "Insights
on Excellence" Archive
Tracking the work of exempt-status
employees
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR |
Stephen
Hawley Martin is
a former principal of The Martin Agency
in Richmond and the author of more than
half a dozen books including his newest,
Lean Enterprise Leader: How to Get Things
Done Without Doing It All Yourself.
He is editor and
publisher of The
Oaklea Press, a book publishing business
dedicated primarily to helping business
executives increase productivity.
He can be reached at shmartin@oakleapress.com
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by Stephen
Hawley Martin
for Virginia Business
February 20, 2007
Lately in this column we've been discussing the value
of workforce management technology (WMT) in providing
information that can be invaluable when making business
decisions. But what about decisions that relate to activities
performed by exempt employees whose time and attendance
data may not be entered into a WMT system?
Exempt employees are those who, because of their duties
and responsibilities, are exempt from the overtime provisions
of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). Exempt employees
are expected by most organizations to work whatever hours
are necessary to accomplish the goals of their positions.
Unlike nonexempt, or hourly, workers, exempt employees
usually have some flexibility in their schedules and
can come and go as necessary to accomplish their work.
But employers cannot simply label a job as exempt to
avoid paying overtime.
Let's say a number of workers
on your staff meet the requirements to be exempt employees.
Although salaried employees are exempt from overtime,
you still may want to track their activities for reporting
or cost accounting purposes, or to provide information
that will be used to bill clients for services rendered.
Certain service sectors have strict guidelines as to
the amount of staff required relative to the number
of "customers" -
i.e. patients, residents, clients. For them, tracking
exempt time is a critical operational need. In many situations,
exempt employees should also be included in time and
attendance data so that the figures management uses to
make decisions will be representative of the whole operation.
But this can be problematic.
Exempt employees aren't being paid by the hour and
are often considered "professional" workers,
so they typically don't punch in and out at a time clock
or report their actual arrival and departure times. They
are, of course, expected to work a full week, usually
40 hours, but technically their pay cannot be reduced
if they leave early every now and then or don't work
a full 40-hour week. Their pay is based on accomplishing
the goals they are required to meet. If it takes more
than 40 hours to get the job done, they are expected
to put in the extra hours, but their pay does not change.
Because actual time worked and pay are not linked, companies
have historically not closely tracked the time of exempt
employees.
But times have changed. Technology has introduced data
integration into management's tool kit. Labor management
systems now deposit information in corporate data warehouses
and parse it into reports that are used to make management
decisions Omitting exempt labor data leads to an incomplete
picture of labor activity. The old principle that recording
exempt employee time equates to tracking time for hourly
employees isn't true in today's info-centric business
environment. So long as the data isn't used to compute
salaries or earnings on an hour-for-hour basis, companies
are safe to collect the exempt employee information.
There are many ways to record those employees' activity.
Some companies are satisfied with a manual process that
allows exempt employees to report their time on a weekly
basis. Some require salaried personnel to allocate their
time to cost centers, projects or customers. These approaches
provide some sense of the cost of exempt labor activity,
but they fail to provide real time data and are not as
accurate and verifiable as information for hourly employees.
Here are things to consider if you plan to track exempt
employee time in a new labor management or time-and-attendance
system. For consistency and reporting purposes, it may
be preferable to have exempt employee hours come from
the same system as hourly employees. A problem may arise,
however, because exempt employees may work fewer or more
than 40 hours, but their pay does not change accordingly.
In other words, the actual hours of salaried workers
may vary each week, but the employees' earnings do not.
But existing software systems can be configured to limit
the number of hours passed to payroll for an exempt employee,
thus eliminating the potential problem that overtime
pay might be automatically generated. Another potential
problem is that the systems sometimes are not equipped
to guarantee the weekly minimum hours to support the
salary payment. That situation might result in an employee
being underpaid. The solution is to include exempt-hour
tracking requirements in the technical specifications
of an RFP (request for proposal) when selecting a system.
Before you make your selection, be sure to verify it
can support the payroll system side of the process.
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Stephen Hawley Martin is a former principal of The Martin Agency in Richmond
and the author of more than half a dozen books including his newest, Lean Enterprise
Leader: How to Get Things Done Without Doing It All Yourself. He is editor and
publisher of The Oaklea Press, a book publishing business dedicated primarily
to helping business executives increase productivity.
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