Exploring the Black Box of Managing Total Rewards for Older Professionals in the Canadian Financial Services Sector.

Journal: Canadian journal on aging = La revue canadienne du vieillissement
Published Date:

Abstract

This study extends our knowledge about the management of older employees in the sector of financial services, which faces enormous transformational pressures (e.g., emergence of artificial intelligence, digital services). Based on the black box model of human resource management, we investigate how executives at 16 major financial institutions manage their total rewards to motivate their older professionals to stay at work longer. Top management's views towards older professionals underlie a firm's culture or climate, and more precisely, the extent of the perception that they are a strategic resource that needs focused management. Across firms, such adaptation (or lack thereof) is made through the following total rewards components: (1) flexibility in working time and place of work, (2) hiring of retirees, (3) hiring or promotion of older professionals, (4) role adjustment, (5) responsibilities and performance standards, (6) monetary rewards, benefits, and (7) recognition, succession planning, and support for retirement planning or preparation. The black box model should be used in future research to understand which reward components work best in which contextsto motivate older workers to stay at work longer.

Authors

  • Sylvie St-Onge
    Departement of Management, HEC Montréal, Québec.
  • Marie-Ève Beauchamp Legault
    Department of human resource management, HEC Montréal, Québec, Canada.
  • Félix Ballesteros-Leiva
    Département de Management, Université Laval, Québec, Canada.
  • Victor Haines
    École de Relations Industrielles, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
  • Tania Saba
    École de Relations Industrielles, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada.