Market compensation data (also called salary market data or pay benchmarks) refers to information about how much other employers pay for similar jobs in the same industry, location, and company size. It’s used to ensure your compensation is competitive, fair, and aligned with market practice.
In Compensation, this process is commonly known as salary benchmarking or compensation benchmarking — comparing your internal pay with external pay data to guide decisions on pay ranges, raises, hiring offers, and equity/benefits.
Market compensation data (also called salary market data or pay benchmarks) refers to information about how much other employers pay for similar jobs in the same industry, location, and company size. It’s used to ensure your compensation is competitive, fair, and aligned with market practice.
In Compensation, this process is commonly known as salary benchmarking or compensation benchmarking — comparing your internal pay with external pay data to guide decisions on pay ranges, raises, hiring offers, and equity/benefits.
Attract and retain talent by offering competitive pay.
Ensure pay fairness and equity (internal and external).
Maintain budget and cost controls while avoiding under- or over-paying.
Support your compensation strategy with defensible, data-informed decisions.
Large HR and consulting firms collect detailed pay data across industries and roles. Mid-size to large employers often purchase access to these annual or periodically updated surveys. Examples include:
Culpepper Compensation Reports
Economic Research Institute (ERI)
Equilar is well known for Executive Compensation, although you can collect similar data from the competitors’ public proxy/financial reports.
Mercer Benchmark Database
Radford Survey Data
Willis Towers Watson surveys
More…
While less reliable for formal compensation strategies, these sources are helpful for preliminary insights and for smaller companies that do not have the budget to purchase the big surveys.
industry, location, company size
updated regularly vs. point-in-time surveys
base salary, bonus, equity, benefits
accurate job level alignment
Market matching jobs correctly is critical because it directly affects productivity, wages, business performance, and overall economic growth. When the right workers are matched with the right jobs, everyone benefits; when they aren’t, costs ripple through the entire economy. Here are the key reasons:
This is especially important during technological change or economic transitions.
In short, job matching is critical because it ensures that human talent is used effectively, benefiting workers, firms, and the economy as a whole.
Reviewing market compensation data effectively helps ensure your pay decisions are competitive, fair, and aligned with business goals. Below is a clear, practical framework you can use—especially useful for work-related compensation analysis.
Poor job matching is the #1 cause of misleading compensation data.
Consistency matters more than precision.
For further collaboration, we will create training module(s) on Udemy to provide more details and walk you through the process. Stay tuned…