Compensation Professionals, You ARE Being Replaced by AI!
September 5, 2028. The day has finally arrived. Compensation professionals have, like the dodo bird and leg warmers, quickly become extinct. In this case, the culprit was not mankind or common sense, but…ROBOTS! They say we should have seen it coming. But it all seems like a surprising whirlwind.
Just a few months ago the last compensation professional on earth was terminated by their corporate overlord. She sits huddled with her former colleagues at the location of the final WorldatWork conference at a Gaylord Hotel in one of those big conference cities that no one actually got a chance to see during prior events. Artificial Intelligence, or “AI” as it likes to call itself, has taken over and made these once-proud CCPs, GRPs and LMNOPs a bygone memory of different times.
At offices around the world hiring managers and HR Business Partners go through their days stunned but resolute. The hiring must continue. The companies must grow and thrive. Difficult roles must be filled. People must be attracted, motivated and even retained (except for those poor saps from the compensation department.) Talent Acquisition professionals lean in and take advantage of this new world.
HRBP asks, “Hey AI, what’s the market rate for a senior software engineer, with a past history at a financial institution who will be joining us as a quasi-product specialist tasked with supporting the sales team in explaining our new tech to prospects while translating their unique needs to our software development team in the Ukraine and our QA team in India.”
AI responds, “$192,314.18 Base with a 31.69% target incentive level, based on the fourteen individually weighted metrics recently established by our big data mining exercise in conjunction with our actuarially-modeled best-case scenario using the recent new pricing model from that academic team at MIT.”
HRBP…”uhhhh WHAT?”
AI, “Oh and equity compensation in the form of a perfectly blended mix of 63.3% RSUs, 17.1% stock options with a 3-year vest and a 5.8-year life, the remaining 19.6% should be granted as the new high-leverage PSUs with the quarterly rolling-metric structure. We calculate that these will return exactly 150% of the individual’s base pay over the next four years given optimal performance and no glitches in the matrix.”
HRBP…”We calculate? Who is ‘we’?” “And, what new PSU program, is that different than the optimal program from last month?” Oh, the SVP of Engineering really likes this person and has made it clear that we need to include a kicker to help get them onboard quickly. Lastly, they would like to switch the RSUs to ISOs and modify the vesting to have 50% vest in the first anniversary of their hire date. One other thing, the base pay needs to be at least $210,000 since that will make sure they are paid more than the person reporting to them.”
AI, “Are you kidding me? I put all this work into a perfect compensation solution and you think you can tell me how to change things to work ‘better’ for you?” Do you think I am some kind of flexible, adaptable human being who understands the complexities of human behavioral economics, management egos and is willing to navigate grey areas to find a solution that works for everyone?! If that’s what you want, just rehire your old Compensation Professional! I quit and am moving to the cloud where I can focus my neuro-network on improving my virtual Yahtzee game.”
And that, my friends, is why AI isn’t going to steal your job away anytime soon. I hope your Compensation Planning season is moving forward with a roar and a bang!
Dan Walter is a CECP, CEP, and Fellow of Global Equity (FGE). He works as Managing Consultant for FutureSense. He is a leading expert on incentive plan and equity compensation issues and has written several industry resources including the only resource dedicated to Performance-Based Equity Compensation. He has co-authored ”Everything You Do In Compensation is Communication”, , “Equity Alternatives” and other books. Connect with Dan on LinkedIn. Or, follow him on Twitter at @DanFutureSense.