Manufacturing Engineering Guide

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     Manufacturing Engineering

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Index
Classroom Science Experiments For THE SPACE AGE
Choosing the Right Oil Filter Line for Your Automotive Business
Avian Flu Fright: Politically Timed for Global "Latrogenocide"
Guide To Buying Vitamins Online
How To Write A Job Winning Resume That Puts Yours On Top
Advertising Your Copywriting Services Business
Working In Iraq: Is It For You?
Why Do Startups and Small Companies Need to Attend Trade Shows?
Computer Security - Preventing Social Engineering Attacks
Overcoming Obstacles and Successful Leadership: The Dr John Malone Story
Interview Skills That Attract Offers
The Value of IT Certifications in Career Development
Straight Talk on Highly Selective Colleges
Social Engineering: You Have Been A Victim
Computer Consulting and Virtual IT
Bachelor Of Science Degrees
Online Degree Programs
Let Design Take You To Different Heights of Creativity
Finding Structural Problems During Escrow - Upscale Home Example
U.S. Jobs in IT Development & Finance Solely Reserved for India
God Bless You Rosa Parks: Rest in Peace
Goodness Gracious! Is God Mad at Us Again?
Competencies for Recruitment Professionals: Measuring Their Efficiency and ROI!
Is the Best Online Dating Service, the Biggest?
Developing Communication Skills for Students
Failing an Underground Oil Tank Test
Fire Evacuation Drill with a Difference
Mall Protection
Genetically Modified Foods - Have You Been Eating Them?
Sheep Have Been Cloned...Are Humans Next?
Industrial Safety Can Be Funny
The Source of Growth and Creativity
Manufacturing Salaries - 2004
How International Organization for Standardization Helps
Job! Money! Career!
Will Israel Strike Iran's Nuclear Sites?
Software Process Improvement -A Successful Journey
What Is Reverse-Engineering
Applied Software Project Management Book Review
So You Want To Be A Sound Engineer?
Do You Know What Design/Construct (or "Design/Build ) Means? I Think You Should!
Sand Moulding Systems For Hobby Metal Casting
The Finite Element Method: A Four-Article Series

Manufacturing Salaries - 2004

By Dr. Steven Langer
The composite highest-income practitioner reported in this field (salary plus cash bonus and/or cash profit-sharing) is the President "B" of a manufacturing firm (defined as a chief executive officer who has little or no financial interest in the firm). The firm manufactures automotive parts/accessories, food/beverage/tobacco products, chemical & allied products, or machinery & heavy equipment; has 1,000 or more employees; has a total annual revenue of $100,000,000 or more; and is headquartered in or near Denver/Colorado Springs, Houston, Memphis, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Modesto/Stockton, Dallas/Ft. Worth, Indianapolis, Boston, New York City, or Dayton, or outside a metropolitan area studied in Idaho. However, while the median President "B' has a total annual income of $214,966, the highest-income individuals reported are Presidents "A" (having a financial interest in the firm) and make well over $30,000,000. Far toward the other end of the income spectrum, Assemblers "D" have a median income of $20,418. Sometimes earning under $14,600, the lowest-paid employees in this group are employed by firms that manufacture building materials; have $1 million to $4.99 million in total annual revenue; have 5,000 to 9,999 employees; and are located in or near Greensboro/Winston-Salem, Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill, Dallas/Ft. Worth, or Charlotte, or outside the metropolitan areas studied in Texas, North Carolina, or Florida. These composites represent the briefest possible "boil-down" of the voluminous data provided regarding current salaries and cash bonuses and/or profit sharing, and numerous demographic variables provided by 343 firms on over 54,000 managerial, supervisory, sales, engineering, technical, clerical, and blue-collar employees in 187 benchmark jobs which resulted in the eight-volume survey report, Compensation in Manufacturing, 24th Edition - 2004, sponsored by the National Association of Manufacturers. Copies of the entire eight-volume report are available for $1,250.00 from Abbott, Langer & Associates, Inc., Dept. ART, 548 First St., Crete, IL 60417 (telephone 708/672-4200; fax 708/672-4674; www.abbott-langer.com) Also available is Compensation in Smaller Manufacturing Firms (under 250 employees) for $595.00. Each volume of both reports may be purchased separately. Also available is findpay-MFG04 (a computer program which permits the user to determine pay levels of each survey job on the basis of two or more variables simultaneously). It would be an exercise in futility to attempt more than a superficial overview of the survey results in this summary. However, some overall data regarding compensation can be presented herein. In addition to the incomes of the benchmark jobs already discussed, the median total cash compensation nationally of some of the other jobs included in the survey report is: Chief Legal Officers - $181,200 Vice Presidents of Manufacturing/Production - $135,375 Chief Marketing & Sales Executives - $133,835 Chief Corporate Financial Officers - $130,066 Vice Presidents of Manufacturing/Production Engineering - $112,274 Research & Development Managers - $90,377 Engineering Department Managers/Superintendents - $89,232 Chief Human Resources Executives - $80,849 Plant Managers/Superintendents - $78,595 Product/Brand Managers - $75,789 Design Managers - $74,347 Facilities Managers - $68,198 Cost Accounting Managers - $67,161 Sales Engineers - $67,000 Manufacturing Engineers - $66,477 Production Managers/Superintendents - $65,730 Quality Assurance/Control Managers - $64,890 Computer Programmers - $61,963 Purchasing Managers - $61,805 Warehouse Managers - $54,000 General Production Supervisors - $49,781 General Accountants - $48,725 Product Designers - $45,000 Maintenance Leaders/Working Supervisors - $40,833 Drafters, Senior - $43,795 Buyers, Junior - $40,256 Secretaries to the Chief Executive Officer - $40,125 Machine Repairers, Maintenance - $39,192 Production Schedulers - $38,195 Automatic Screw Machine Operators - Multiple Spindle - $37,252 Maintenance Workers, General - $36,420 Chemical Production/Mixing Machine Operators - $35,686 Carpenters, Maintenance - $34,211 Quality Assurance/Control Technicians - $33,329 Inspectors "A" - $32,739 Secretaries - $32,500 Milling Machine Operators - $32,261 Payroll Clerks - $31,775 Numerically Controlled Machine Operators - $31,750 Customer Service Representatives - $29,787 Injection Molding Machine Set-up and Operators - $28,200 Senior Account Clerks - $27,913 Machine Set-Up Workers - $27,809 Material Handlers - $27,705 Lathe Operators, Engine or Turret - $27,690 Painters, Production - $27,619 Machinists, Production - $26,661 Junior Account Clerks - $26,449 Fork Lift Operators - $26,052 Shipping Clerks - $25,317 Finishers - $25,044 Janitors - $24,376 Receptionists - $23,795 Injection Molding Machine Operators - $23,443 Warehouse Laborers - $23,109 Drill Press Operators, Single - $21,320 The income relationships reported above may be distorted slightly, since some of these benchmark jobs were reported more frequently in organizations of one size, while other benchmark jobs were reported more frequently by larger or smaller organizations. This may also be true for product manufactured, geographic location, and supervisory/managerial responsibility. This possible defect is corrected in the complete survey report by reporting income for each benchmark job overall and with "break-outs" by each demographic variable. Type of Product Overall, administrative, fiscal, and information technology employees are paid best by manufacturers of communications equipment, medical/engineering/scientific equipment, stone/clay/concrete/glass products, and aerospace & aircraft products, and worst in firms producing building materials, heating/air conditioning/refrigeration products, chemical & allied products, and apparel & textile mill products. Employees in the sales/marketing group enjoy the highest income in firms that produce chemical & allied products, paper & allied products, circuit board products, and measuring & controlling devices. Income is lowest among producers of building materials, apparel & textile mill products, rubber & plastic products, and heating/air conditioning/refrigeration products. Clerical personnel are paid best by firms that manufacture aerospace & aircraft products, stone/clay/concrete/glass products, and chemical & allied products. They have the lowest median incomes in firms that produce heating/air conditioning/refrigeration products, circuit boards, and building materials. Engineering/technical employees have the highest median incomes among manufacturers of aerospace & aircraft products, communications equipment, apparel & textile mill products, and medical/engineering/scientific equipment. The lowest median income is reported among manufacturers of circuit board products, building materials, and primary ferrous metals. Maintenance/material acquisition personnel are best paid by firms that manufacture aerospace & aircraft products, stone/clay/concrete/glass products, and chemical & allied products. This group of employees are worst paid by manufacturers of apparel & textile mill products, building materials, furniture & wood products, and heating/air conditioning/refrigeration products. Managerial and supervisory personnel in plant/manufacturing/production functions receive the highest median incomes when employed by firms producing stone/clay/concrete/glass products, measuring & controlling devices, and food/beverage products, and the lowest median incomes when employed by companies producing primary ferrous metals, computer & allied products, and furniture & wood products. Quality assurance/control, regulatory affairs, and documentation employees are paid best by producers of measuring & controlling devices, aerospace & aircraft products, and primary ferrous metals. They are paid least by manufacturers of apparel & other textile products, rubber/plastic products, medical/engineering/scientific equipment, and circuit board products. Production employees in firms of 250 employees or more fare best among producers of chemical & allied products, paper & allied products, fabricated metal products, and measuring & controlling devices, and worst among manufacturers of furniture & wood products, apparel & textile mill products, and building materials. Production employees in firms of under 250 employees fare best in firms which product stone/clay/concrete/glass products, machinery & heavy equipment, chemicals & allied products, and fabricated metal products, and worst among manufacturers of apparel & textile mill products, circuit board products, and communications equipment. Level of Managerial/Supervisory Responsibility This factor is an excellent predictor of overall income in the manufacturing field. In larger firms, median income increases from $54,060 for those supervising under five professionals to $83,916 for those who direct the activities of 100 or more non-professionals, and from $72,992 for those supervising under five professionals to $95,813 for those who direct the activities of 50 to 249 professionals. Median income increases further (to $245,650) for those who direct the activities of 250 or more professionals and non-professionals. In smaller firms, median income increases from $48,505 for those supervising under five non-professionals to $90,000 for those who direct the activities of 100 or more non-professional employees, and from $75,401 for those supervising under five professionals to $91,617 for those who direct the activities of 50 to 249 professionals. Median income increases further (to $170,000) for those who direct the activities of 100 to 249 professionals and non-professionals. Size of Organization and Geographic Location Median income for job families and individual jobs varies significantly by size of organization and location. While the compensation data were analyzed by size of organization and region, state, and metropolitan area, the data are too voluminous to allow for succinct commentary herein and must be left to the complete report. Dr. Steven Langer is a Licensed Psychologist with 35 years of experience in business, industry, government, academe, and consulting. As a Visiting Professor of Management at Loyola University of Chicago and Community Professor of Behavioral Sciences at Purdue University, he has taught at both the undergraduate and graduate levels, teaching such subjects as statistics, wage & salary administration, human resources management, personnel selection, and industrial/organizational psychology. Dr. Langer is President of Abbott, Langer & Associates, Inc., consultants in human resources management and industrial/organizational psychology and publishers in the human resources field. He has directed and/or participated in a variety of compensation, human resources administration, psychological, and training projects for numerous business, industrial, and law firms, periodicals, governmental jurisdictions and human relations commissions, professional societies and trade associations, and organizations in the not-for-profit sector. He holds the B.A. degree in Psychology from California State University at Sacramento, the Master of Personnel Service degree from the University of Colorado at Boulder, and the Ph.D. degree in Educational Psychology from Walden University. He is past chairman of the Personnel Research Award Committee of the Society for Human Resource Management and recipient of their Senior Professional in Human Resources certificate; member of WorldAtWork (formerly the American Compensation Association); past member of the Board of Directors of the Chicago Compensation Association; past president of the Pueblo Personnel Association; past chairman of the Section of Industrial Psychologists of the Illinois Psychological Association; and past president of the Chicago Psychological Association. Dr. Langer has conducted or directed studies in and/or served as an expert witness in such areas as employee recruitment and selection; employee compensation, fringe benefits, and working conditions; prevailing rates; loss of and anticipated earnings; job discrimination; and employee attitudes and morale.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Dr._Steven_Langer


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