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Range Spread

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What is range spread in HR?

A range spread is the range of pay established by employers to compensate employees for performing their job. It includes a minimum, maximum, and mid-range pay rate. For example, the range for a particular position can have a minimum of $45,000 and a maximum of $60,000: 

MinimumRange midpointMaximum
$45,000$52,500$60,000

A salary range spread is established through understanding market pay rates and external benchmarking. A range spread is useful for multiple reasons: 

  • Job postings: Many jobs require a salary range spread to be posted, so it is useful to have this information on hand. 
  • Setting targets: You can create compensation targets and adjust along the way to ensure there is an appropriate spread of pay across the company. 
  • Establishing pay equity: You’re able to compare spreads across different departments and roles and understand the state of internal pay equity.
  • Clear communication: Employees can be shown the salary range and where they fall within the range, making communication around salary clear and transparent. 
  • Plan salary increases: Companies are better able to understand salary increases and promotions if a clear range spread is present. For example, if an employee is already at the maximum of a range when it comes to annual increases, an employer has to make a decision on if a significant increase is needed or not (particularly when compared to employees at the minimum point).

Here is what salary range spread fits in the context of creating salary ranges:

Salary Range Spread

How do you calculate the salary range spread?

Depending on the data you have access to, you can calculate range spread in a couple of different ways:

1. Use the minimum pay and maximum pay data. The formula is:

(Maximum pay – Minimum pay) / Minimum pay = Range spread

In other words, if the maximum is $50,000, and the minimum is $30,000, your range spread from the minimum to the maximum number would be: 

($50,000 – $30,000) / $30,000  = 66%.

2. Use midpoints. If you know the midpoint as well as the minimum and maximum, you can do the following:

  • To calculate the spread above the range midpoint: (Maximum pay – Midpoint pay) / Midpoint pay
  • To calculate the spread below the range midpoint: (Minimum pay – Midpoint pay) / Midpoint pay.

What affects the range spread at your organization?

Some of the factors that could affect your range spread include: 

  • The use of broadbanding, which is a compensation approach that consolidates a range of similar job classifications into one pay band.
  • The tenure of an employee. Many times employees that have long tenure are outliers when placed on a salary spread due to historical increases.
  • The number of positions within the company. 
  • The complexity of roles; some roles and departments have a wider variety of roles and levels, and the spread might vary more. 
  • The pay grade structure in the company.
  • The maturity of a company’s job architecture. If there are clear guidelines around job families, levels, and grading, understanding your range spread becomes easier.

What is a good range spread?

A good salary range spread is typically anywhere between 30% to 40%. However, this is heavily dependent on the job, job level, and the industry. Findings by the Economic Research Institute use the following spreads for these job levels:

  • Administration/Operations: 40% +
  • Professional/Management: 50% +
  • Executives: 50-65% +

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