WHY SHOULD YOU ATTEND?
1. Payroll Professionals- Need to confirm proper classification to avoid back-pay and tax issues.
- Collaborate with payroll and legal to maintain compliant policies and procedures.
- Need awareness of overtime rules, recordkeeping requirements, and labor regulations.
- Should understand how misclassification can affect financial statements and tax liabilities.
- Need to be aware of classification requirements to prevent costly mistakes as they scale.
- Should understand the financial and reputational implications of proper employee classification.
AREA COVERED
- Recognize the critical components of exempt and non-exempt employee classification.
- Understand how to accurately determine employee vs. contractor status.
- Use relevant statistics and case studies to stay alert to common misclassification pitfalls.
- Apply best practices for documentation, audits, and continual monitoring.
- Foster collaboration among payroll, HR, finance, and legal teams to ensure company-wide compliance.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- Understand the importance of accurate employee classification.
- Recognize the implications of misclassification on payroll compliance.
- Learn best practices and utilize key data points/statistics to guide decisions.
- Consequences of noncompliance (fines, litigation, reputational damage).
- Overview of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) role in classification.
WHO WILL BENEFIT?
1. Payroll Roles- Payroll Manager / Payroll Director: Oversees payroll operations, ensuring compliance with wage and hour laws and accurate employee classification.
- Payroll Specialist / Payroll Administrator: Responsible for day-to-day payroll processing, tracking hours, and handling overtime pay.
- HR Manager / HR Director: Defines and updates job descriptions, manages employee relations, and advises on compensation strategies.
- HR Business Partner / HR Generalist: Works closely with business units to align staffing and compensation decisions with legal requirements.
- Finance Manager / Financial Controller: Monitors labor costs, forecasts budgets, and ensures accurate financial reporting.
- Accounting Manager / Accountant: Tracks wage expenses, manages payroll accounts, and flags potential classification issues that could affect the general ledger.
- Legal Counsel / Employment Attorney: Provides guidance on labor law compliance and risk mitigation; often reviews or advises on classification decisions.
- Compliance Officer / Regulatory Affairs Specialist: Develops and enforces organizational policies, ensuring alignment with federal and state labor regulations.
- Operations Manager / Office Manager: May oversee hiring, vendor contracting, and day-to-day scheduling, impacting classification decisions.
- Business Administrator / Director of Operations: Coordinates cross-departmentally to maintain compliance infrastructure.
- Chief Financial Officer (CFO) or Chief Operations Officer (COO): Champions the strategic approach to compliance, budgeting, and operations.
- CEO / President (especially in small or mid-sized businesses): Sets the overall compliance culture and is ultimately accountable for organizational risks.
- Founder / Owner: Often manages payroll and HR functions in early-stage companies, requiring a solid grasp of classification to avoid costly fines.
- Need to confirm proper classification to avoid back-pay and tax issues.
- Collaborate with payroll and legal to maintain compliant policies and procedures.
- Need awareness of overtime rules, recordkeeping requirements, and labor regulations.
- Should understand how misclassification can affect financial statements and tax liabilities.
- Need to be aware of classification requirements to prevent costly mistakes as they scale.
- Should understand the financial and reputational implications of proper employee classification.
- Recognize the critical components of exempt and non-exempt employee classification.
- Understand how to accurately determine employee vs. contractor status.
- Use relevant statistics and case studies to stay alert to common misclassification pitfalls.
- Apply best practices for documentation, audits, and continual monitoring.
- Foster collaboration among payroll, HR, finance, and legal teams to ensure company-wide compliance.
- Understand the importance of accurate employee classification.
- Recognize the implications of misclassification on payroll compliance.
- Learn best practices and utilize key data points/statistics to guide decisions.
- Consequences of noncompliance (fines, litigation, reputational damage).
- Overview of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) role in classification.
- Payroll Manager / Payroll Director: Oversees payroll operations, ensuring compliance with wage and hour laws and accurate employee classification.
- Payroll Specialist / Payroll Administrator: Responsible for day-to-day payroll processing, tracking hours, and handling overtime pay.
- HR Manager / HR Director: Defines and updates job descriptions, manages employee relations, and advises on compensation strategies.
- HR Business Partner / HR Generalist: Works closely with business units to align staffing and compensation decisions with legal requirements.
- Finance Manager / Financial Controller: Monitors labor costs, forecasts budgets, and ensures accurate financial reporting.
- Accounting Manager / Accountant: Tracks wage expenses, manages payroll accounts, and flags potential classification issues that could affect the general ledger.
- Legal Counsel / Employment Attorney: Provides guidance on labor law compliance and risk mitigation; often reviews or advises on classification decisions.
- Compliance Officer / Regulatory Affairs Specialist: Develops and enforces organizational policies, ensuring alignment with federal and state labor regulations.
- Operations Manager / Office Manager: May oversee hiring, vendor contracting, and day-to-day scheduling, impacting classification decisions.
- Business Administrator / Director of Operations: Coordinates cross-departmentally to maintain compliance infrastructure.
- Chief Financial Officer (CFO) or Chief Operations Officer (COO): Champions the strategic approach to compliance, budgeting, and operations.
- CEO / President (especially in small or mid-sized businesses): Sets the overall compliance culture and is ultimately accountable for organizational risks.
- Founder / Owner: Often manages payroll and HR functions in early-stage companies, requiring a solid grasp of classification to avoid costly fines.
Speaker Profile

With over 20 years of experience across sectors like education, real estate, construction, retail, staffing, and technology, Brian Escobar is a distinguished HR and Payroll Director known for his expertise in global payroll operations, regulatory compliance, and HR management. He has led high-impact initiatives, from implementing comprehensive HCM systems and processing over 800,000 paychecks to achieving significant cost savings. A strategic leader, Brian excels in team development, process enhancement, and ensuring data accuracy across complex organizations. As the co-host of a popular payroll podcast, he shares his passion for teaching and advancing payroll best practices, consistently aligning payroll functions with …
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