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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.

Compensation tools & market datasetsDesign pay structures and executive plans on posted-price data, not a benchmarking guess.

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

Answer synthesized from the extracted models of these works in our library.

Related questions

human capital roicompensation budgetingtotal rewardshr finance

Stop re-deriving this by hand. Compensation tools & market datasets — Design pay structures and executive plans on posted-price data, not a benchmarking guess.

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