News & Insights
A Finger on the Scales of Remote Work and Work-Life Balance
A bigger issue may be figuring out to properly pay and reward the most highly productive when you no longer have the ease of patting them on the back or giving them public recognition. There is no doubt that the biggest issue is work-life balance. Solutions to that issue will require new thoughts on compensation succession planning and workforce tools.
Develop Grow Achieve - 3 Tiers for P4P
Usually the drive for pay for performance comes from the top of the company. “We need to have people be more productive.” “I don't want to have to pay people that much, unless they are REALLY doing a great job.” While these are valid concerns, we must be able to better define what people do that makes a company successful.
Compensation and the Squeak of the Hamster Wheel
Round and round it goes, where it stops, everyone knows. Lately, I have been wondering what it will really take to change things in the world of compensation. It would seem that we have more than enough motivation to result in real changes to compensation practices that have been ineffective, or worse, seemingly forever. There seem to be enough incentives to create more successful companies and pay people in a way that allows them to have better lives. A large number of Human Resources and Compensation professionals seem engaged enough to give them the push to make materials improvements. But the hamster wheel keeps squeaking.
Compensation, Covid..It's Been a Bad Hair Year
It’s been a hairy year and it’s time to get out the combs and brushes. Break out your good scissors and clippers. I hate to be the one to tell you, but your compensation plans have “COVID-hair.” We get it. t’s been six months since the last time you sat in the chair of a professional and had your ‘do done. It may have been that long since the last time you covered your roots with someone other than an off the shelf solution.
The Best Performance Goals Are D.U.M.B.
Anyone who has taken a class or performed a Google-search on performance goals has learned about the concept of “SMART” goals. The most common breakdown seems to be: S - Specific, M - Measurable, A - Attainable, R - Relevant, and T - Time-bound. We all seem to know this and yet many still seem to have problems creating successful pay for performance programs. I would like to propose a new D.U.M.B. approach that celebrates the spirit of insanity.
Empathy Leads to Equity
Equity is a term that has become a keystone in the world of compensation. We use it in a wide-ranging list of topics including stock-based compensation, pay transparency, gender, and race. I recently did a presentation about the topic titled “Three Buzzwords and One Truth. The buzzwords being fairness, transparency, and internal equity, the truth is the continued growth in variable (differentiated) pay.
Compensation Planning - You Can't See the Forest for the Trees
As we move into the compensation planning season, I thought it was time for a quick reminder to focus on keeping things simple. Over-complicating the basics of pay, can make it impossible to successfully accomplish the most complex things. So many small and mid-sized companies work so hard to make base pay “perfect” that they have no time or energy to build effective short-term incentive plans or rational equity compensation plans.
Baking is to Science as Cooking is to Art, Pay is a Science and an Art
Executive pay is often more like cooking than baking. You are beholden to the ingredients that are fresh at the time you perform the task. Data sets, like great veggies or herbs, are often only available in small quantities at certain times of the year. Some professionals thrive in this environment, loving the swirl of possibilities and the frequent changes that must still result in predictable success.
Equity Compensation and the Trouble with the Overhang
The reason the client needed help was due to one word…overhang. There was just too much overhang, and the company’s major shareholders said the overhang was already high as it was and adding more shares to the share reserve would only make it worse. The shareholders were right. The overhang was high and adding more shares would only make it worse.
This situation has played out hundreds of times and…
Sales Compensation – The Perfect Compromise
Sales compensation is both the easiest and hardest of incentive compensation. Pay must drive specific behaviors, but it needs to avoid unintentional bad behavior. It must align with success at many levels, but provide ease of alignment for each individual. It must be easy to understand, but flexible enough to adjust to critical unpredictable factors. It must be painstakingly exact, while giving everyone some wiggle room to pay as required. Everything about sales compensation design is a compromise.
Compensation Dentistry
The funny thing is getting that little cavity or other problem fixed quickly usually doesn’t hurt and lets you focus on better things down the road. Compensation programs can often be the same.
Employee Pay and The Truth About Gig Workers
While this seems like a pure HR issue, it is a compensation issue. Paying employees costs more than paying contractors. It’s a fact. Companies are increasingly focused on more aggressive profit margins. The concept of “gig workers” help solve this issue by allowing companies to grow without paying…
Driving Your Compensation Programs in Reverse
Editor's Note: Ever feel like things are a little backward pay program wise? You're not alone, friend! Dan Walter, master of the compensation metaphor, shines a light on the Classic problem we all face at one time or another - particularly those of us who work in or serve smaller, entrepreneurial organizations.
Compensation Professionals, You ARE Being Replaced by AI!
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.
One Reason Pay Is NOT Skyrocketing
For several months many of us have wondered why base pay wasn’t spiking upward out of respect for the historical strong job market. The basics premise of our economy is the strong demand and short supply results in high prices. This is true for peaches, cars, and people. With unemployment at very low levels and a job market continuing to create jobs at a rate of 210,000 per month, we should have been seeing pay rise far faster than our now sad 3% annual increase. It turns out the trickster was simple math.
The Duckbilled Platypuses of Compensation
Editor's Note: You thought hybrid jobs were a challenge! Welcome to the age of the duckbilled platypi. Armed with this Classic "hunting guide," Dan Walter encourages us to embrace and rise to the challenges of today's unique (and often, as a consequence, critical) roles!
Hey, Compensation Professionals! What’s the Intent of that Reward Element?
Here’s a test for you, valued reader. Draw four columns on a piece of paper. In the first write the name of each compensation element. In the second write the purpose of that compensation element. In the third define what happens for the company if that purpose is met. In the last column define what happens if that element fails.
Then sit down with each member of your HR team, and then each member of the executive team. For each element ask them to tell you…
Compensation Professionals, Is That Really a Best Practice?
The real best practices on equity are found at the edges, in the corners and behind the curtains of survey data, trend articles, and recent big winners.
I like to say a good program starts with knowing “who you want to be when you grow up.” The potential future value of the company and the time and number of employees it will take to get there should be a…
5 Reasons We Can’t Fix Executive Compensation
Executive compensation, especially at larger companies, continues to soar ever upward. Headlines in local newspapers and websites around the US are reporting record years, once again. While there are valid arguments for many huge CEO pay packages, there are at least as many that defy explanation. Why can’t we get our arms around this issue?