instruction · evidence-based answer
How should HR make the financial case for compensation spend?
The short answer
Biswas's argument is blunt: accounting is the language of business, and HR has to speak it to be a strategic partner. Treat human-capital spend as investment in an asset that appreciates with investment, not a period expense to minimize (Fitz-enz), and integrate compensation planning with the organization's financial and operational plans rather than running it as a separate HR exercise. Forecast and budget compensation as what it usually is — the largest expense category — and analyze incentive and executive plans with the financial metrics that drive sustainable, long-term value, so the conversation with finance is about return, not headcount cost.
The problem underneath
Compensation is usually an organization's single largest expense, yet HR often presents it as a cost to minimize rather than an investment to manage — which forfeits the argument before it starts.
Grounded in
- Compensation and Benefit Design — Bashker D. Biswas
- The New HR Analytics — Jac Fitz-enz
Answer synthesized from the extracted models of these works in our library.
Related questions
- How do I present compensation as an investment, not a cost?
- How should HR talk about pay in financial terms?
Stop re-deriving this by hand. Compensation tools & market datasets — Design pay structures and executive plans on posted-price data, not a benchmarking guess.