Job grading brings consistency and clarity to one of the most sensitive areas of people management: pay. It ensures that roles of similar value are treated in a comparable way and provides a clear rationale for differences in pay.
It also enables organisations to scale. As organisations grow, informal approaches to pay quickly become inconsistent and difficult to manage. Job grading introduces a repeatable structure that supports decision-making across teams, functions and geographies.
In the context of increasing pay transparency, it also plays a critical role in helping organisations explain and defend how pay is determined.
Job grading starts by establishing the value of a role. This is typically done through job evaluation, job levelling or a combination of both. Once the role’s position is understood, it is assigned to a grade, which links it to a defined pay range.
This process creates a clear connection between job value and pay, allowing organisations to make consistent decisions about compensation, progression and role positioning.
Job evaluation is the analytical approach. It measures the value of a role using structured factors such as knowledge, problem-solving and accountability.
Job levelling is the structural approach. It organises roles into a hierarchy using descriptors that define expectations, scope and progression.
Job grading builds on both. It takes the understanding of role value and translates it into pay bands.
In simple terms, job evaluation measures, job levelling organises and job grading determines how roles are paid.
A grade, or pay band, is a defined salary range assigned to a role. It reflects both the role’s position within the organisation and the external market value of that work.
Grades provide the framework for pay decisions, ensuring that compensation is consistent across similar roles while still allowing for variation within a defined range.
Levels describe the size and complexity of a role, including its scope, contribution and impact within the organisation. They define the nature of the work.
Grades describe how that work is paid. They define the salary range associated with a role.
Keeping these two concepts separate is important. It allows organisations to adjust pay based on market conditions or progression without changing the underlying structure of roles. In practice, a single level may include multiple grades to support flexibility and progression.
Job grading creates a consistent and transparent basis for pay decisions. It makes it easier to explain why roles are paid differently and ensures that similar roles are treated fairly.
It also supports organisational scale by providing a repeatable framework for decision-making and helps align internal structures with external market data. Over time, this builds trust with employees and confidence in the organisation’s approach to pay.
Without a clear grading structure, pay decisions can become inconsistent and difficult to explain. Organisations may rely too heavily on job titles, negotiation or local practices, leading to inequity and confusion.
As organisations grow, these issues tend to compound, making it harder to maintain alignment and trust. Poor grading can also make it more difficult to respond to pay transparency requirements or external scrutiny.
Job grading supports pay transparency by creating a clear link between roles and pay. It enables organisations to explain how roles are positioned, why they are paid differently and how decisions have been made.
Because it provides a structured and documented approach, it also supports compliance with regulatory expectations and strengthens the organisation’s ability to demonstrate fairness.
Job grading is the part of job architecture that makes the system usable in practice. While job evaluation measures role value and job levelling organises roles into a structure, job grading translates that structure into pay decisions.
It is the point where the design of work becomes visible to employees through pay, progression and perceived fairness.
Job grading is the bridge between job value and pay. It ensures that compensation decisions are consistent, explainable and aligned to the structure of work.
When done well, it brings clarity for managers, fairness for employees and confidence for the organisation.
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