SECTION
2
DETERMINING YOUR 2003 SALARY
RANGE
INTRODUCTION
The most important variable operating to determine
salary ranges for any given occupational group is
the market, the relationship between the supply of
and the demand for the services of a particular occupational
group: a single supply/demand market.
There are many factors affecting the
market and those affecting the market for one occupational
group
are different from those affecting the markor
another occupational group. Market surveys to determine
the salaries paid by similar companies to members
of the occupational group being studied are therefore
widely used and consulted.
APEGGA MARKET SURVEY June of 2003 APEGGA conducted its annual Employer
Salary Survey. A total of 8,505 salary statistics
for Alberta engineers, geologists and geophysicists
were supplied by 93 employers who are identified
in Appendix
B (Page 49).
Participating organizations provided salary information
based on the level of responsibility of each employee's
position, data on year of graduation, if available,
and information on the classification of their organization.
Selected salary range tables from this
year's survey are reported here and various demographic
survey
results are given in Appendix B.
USING SURVEY RESULTS
TO DETERMINE YOUR 2003 SALARY RANGE
To use salary survey data as a guideline it is important
to consider all reported results and to keep in mind
the following remuneration concepts.
- Salary is basically determined by
the level of responsibility of the position.
- Salary levels vary between professional
groups. Survey results are reported in Figures
4, 5 and 6.
- Salary levels also vary among industry sectors.
Survey results are reported in Figures 7 and 8.
- Data on weekly hours of work and overtime payment
is given in Figures 12, 13, and 14 in
Section 5.
- Data on Additional Cash Compensation is noted
in Figure 15.
- Salaries by year of graduation
should only be used as a check on career progress
relative to others
of an equivalent age and as a check on the more basic
level-of-responsibility concept. Figure
B2 in Appendix
B provides survey results on salaries by year of
graduation and level of responsibility.
SURVEY NOTES
- The salaries quoted in the tables that follow
are base salaries in effect as of June 2003. Base
salaries include cost of living allowances, bonuses
which have a continuing relationship to salary,
pay for holiday days (statutory and declared) and
vacation
days. The base salary does not include bonuses
based on unusual performance or which do not become,
for
the next year or the next pay period, part of the
base salary. Commissions, fringe benefits, profit
sharing are not included. Bonuses with a continuing
relationship to salary would have the following
characteristics:
- They are performance based.
- All employees in the reporting category are
eligible to receive the bonus, but do not necessarily
receive
it every year (or bonus period).
- Although the bonus does not have to be proportional
to salary, it generally is; i.e. higher salaried
people generally receive higher bonuses.
- The statistical measures used in compiling
the tables are:
Mean: Numerical average. The mean is not shown where
there are fewer than three observations.
Low Decile (D1): 90% of the salaries were above
this point and 10% were below it. The decile rate
is not shown where there are fewer than 11 observations.
Low Quartile (Q1): 75% of the salaries were above
this point and 25% were below it. The low quartile
rate is not shown where there are fewer than five
observations.
Median: 50% of the salaries were above this point
and 50% were below it. The median rate is not shown
where there are fewer than five observations.
High Quartile (Q3): 25% of the salaries were above
this point and 75% were below. The high quartile
rate is not shown where there are fewer than five
observations.
High Decile (D9): 10% of the salaries were above
this point and 90% were below it. The high decile
rate is not shown where there are fewer than 11 observations.
- Where no significant differences
were found between salaries paid to engineers,
geologists and geophysicists
in a particular industry sector, or where there
was insufficient data to break responses down by
professions,
data from all three professions were combined
into a single table for that specific industry
sector.
Resource Exploitation (oil & gas) was the
only industry sector where sufficient data was
available
to report professions separately.
- Negative figures
are indicated by parentheses.
ANNUAL SALARIES BY LEVEL OF RESPONSIBILITY
Figure
4 ... view
Figure
5 ... view
Figure
6 ... view
Figure 7 ... view page 1,
page 2, page
3 and page 4
Figure 8 ... view
Figure 9 ... view
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