Compensation Portfolio

 

 

Part 1 Compensation Portfolio – Your portfolio will begin with a brief background of the organization, including
its mission and vision.
Part 2 Compensation Portfolio – Your portfolio will proceed with the internal and external motivators relating to
this kind of work and the relationship of this job to the overall goals / strategies / values of the organization.
(e.g., Nike needs to save money in production and boost sales so will incentivize employee behaviors that lead
to desired outcomes; Google needs to foster intense creativity so in addition to high pay, provides extensive
and uncommon benefits such as 24-hour cafeteria services for free).
Begin by providing the formal definition of job analysis for reward evaluation as described in the text. Discuss
your decision to conduct a job evaluation analysis and the factors that will need to be considered. Describe the
process of collecting information about the job and the relative evaluation factors. Prepare a Job Description of
the select position (see, Rubric). The job analysis, evaluation questionnaire(s), evaluation factors and reward
schemes will become appendices in your final report. (See Signature Assignment description in Course
Resources)
Part 3 Compensation Portfolio – Develop an evaluation plan utilizing the theories discussed in the text,
including identification of an appropriate external market and benchmarks for salary comparison data and
analysis. (See Signature Assignment description in Course Resources)

 

 

 

 

 

Sample Solution

nds causally on the existence of other beings (e.g., our parents), God’s existence does not depend causally on the existence of any other being. Further, on Malcolm’s view, the existence of an unlimited being is either logically necessary or logically impossible. Here is his argument for this important claim. Either an unlimited being exists at world W or it doesn’t exist at world W; there are no other possibilities. If an unlimited being does not exist in W, then its nonexistence cannot be explained by reference to any causally contingent feature of W; accordingly, there is no contingent feature of W that explains why that being doesn’t exist. Now suppose, per reductio, an unlimited being exists in some other world W’. If so, then it must be some contingent feature f of W’ that explains why that being exists in that world. But this entails that the nonexistence of an unlimited being in W can be explained by the absence of f in W; and this contradicts the claim that its nonexistence in W can’t be explained by reference to any causally contingent feature. Thus, if God doesn’t exist at W, then God doesn’t exist in any logically possible world. A very similar argument can be given for the claim that an unlimited being exists in every logically possible world if it exists in some possible world W; the details are left for the interested reader. Since there are only two possibilities with respect to W and one entails the impossibility of an unlimited being and the other entails the necessity of an unlimited being, it follows that the existence of an unlimited being is either logically necessary or logically impossible. All that is left, then, to complete Malcolm’s elegant version of the proof is the premise that the existence of an unlimited being is not logically impossible – and this seems plausible enough. The existence of an unlimited being is logically impossible only if the concept of an unlimited being is self-contradictory. Since we have no reason, on Malcolm’s view to think the existence of an unlimited being is self-contradictory, it follows that an unlimited being, i.e., God, exists. Here’s the argument reduced to its basic elements: God is, as a conceptual matter (that is, as a matter of definition) an unlimited being. The existence of an unlimited being is either logically necessary or logically impossible. The existence of an unlimited being is not logically impossible. Therefore, the existence of God is logically necessary. Notice that Malcolm’s version of the argument does not turn on the claim that necessary existence is a great-making property. Rather, as we saw above, Malcolm attempts to argue that there are only two possibilities with respect to the existence of an unlimited being: either it is necessary or it is impo

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