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Pay structures: what we’re seeing in practice

Pay issues rarely start with pay. They build over time through decisions that quietly weaken structure and consistency.

Maria Bartolo Zahra

In recent conversations I’ve had with clients, a consistent pattern keeps emerging around pay structures.

The issues are rarely sudden. They build gradually through decisions made in isolation, without stepping back to consider the overall structure. By the time frustration surfaces, it’s usually not about numbers. It’s about how everything fits together.

Pay structures break down over time

Pay rarely becomes a problem overnight. It becomes a problem when small decisions accumulate, each one reasonable on its own, but collectively weakening the structure.

Adjustments are made to solve immediate issues: a retention risk, a difficult hire, an internal pressure point. Without a broader review, those decisions begin to pull the structure in different directions. By the time concerns are raised, the issue is no longer individual salaries.

It’s the underlying structure that no longer holds.

Market data doesn’t fix internal misalignment

Market benchmarking matters but external data doesn’t fix internal inconsistency.

We often see organisations respond to market pressure by adjusting salaries and without reviewing how those changes affect the wider structure.

Over time, this creates imbalance.

Roles that were once aligned drift apart. Internal comparisons become harder to explain. Managers lose confidence in the logic behind decisions.

Good governance requires both external context and internal alignment. One without the other creates problems.

Transparency reveals what already exists

Market transparency doesn’t create pay issues. It exposes them.

The EU Pay Transparency Directive is pushing organisations to examine their pay structures, many for the first time in years.

What usually surfaces isn’t a problem with pay levels alone. It’s a lack of structure. The organisations that handle this well don’t start by fixing numbers. They step back and review the framework those numbers sit within.

Pay structures don’t fail because they are badly designed. They fail because they are not revisited, not applied consistently, and not aligned with how the organisation evolves.

In most cases, the solution isn’t to rebuild everything. It’s to restore clarity and reconnect pay decisions to a structure that makes sense.

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