On 25 August 2022, the Securities and Exchange Commission adopted final rules (Final Rules) implementing the “pay versus performance” disclosure requirement set forth in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, marking the most significant executive compensation disclosure development in the last decade. READ MORE
"Act Your Wage": Several US Workers Embracing "Quiet Quitting", Says Report
They are drawing a line at the 40-hour work week, limiting after-hours calls and emails and generally, if softly, saying "no" more often -- some American workers are embracing the concept of "quiet quitting" as they push back against what some see as the stifling trap of constant connectivity.
Maggie Perkins -- who lives in Athens, Georgia -- was racking up 60-hour weeks as a matter of course in her job as a teacher, but the 30-year-old realized after her first child was born that something was wrong. READ MORE
Income Inequality Is Rising. Are We Even Measuring It Correctly?
Income inequality is on the rise in many countries around the world, according to the United Nations. What’s more, disparities in global income were exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, with some countries facing greater economic losses than others. READ MORE
New SEC Rules Heighten Scrutiny Over Executive Pay
On August 25, 2022, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) adopted final rules imposing new mandatory “pay for performance” disclosures for most public companies (foreign private issuers, emerging growth companies and registered investment companies are excluded). These rules implement Section 953(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act, which provided for the SEC to adopt pay for performance rules requiring disclosure in a “clear manner” of the relationship between executive compensation “actually paid” and the company’s “financial performance” taking into account changes in stock value, dividends and distributions. READ MORE
How Compensation Leaders Can Seize the Pay Transparency Opportunity
The Colorado Equal Pay for Equal Work Act, which went into effect at the beginning of the year, mandated publication of pay ranges for new openings for all job positions in the state, including remote positions. READ MORE
As tech giants increase stock compensation to retain talent, can startups take advantage?
Large tech companies including Zillow Group and Amazon are turning up the dial on stock compensation in a bid to reduce churn.
There are a bevy of factors incentivizing employers to increase the amount of stock they are providing tech workers, including the ongoing war for talent, the Great Resignation, and a shaky stock market.
The compensation changes could be a boon for startups. READ MORE
Salary Expectations: What Gen Z & Millennials Want From Their Employers
When it comes to the salary expectations of the younger generations of workers, Gen Z holds employers to a slightly higher standard. A recent GOBankingRates survey asked over 1,000 Americans about their minimum salary needed to be happy, and the majority of Gen Z adults said they would need to make between $80,0001 and $100,000. Meanwhile, the majority of millennials said they would need to make between $60,001 and $80,000 to be happy. READ MORE
SEC Adopts Pay Versus Performance Disclosure Effective for 2023 Proxy Season
More than seven years after issuing proposed rules, on August 25, 2022, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) adopted final rules implementing the pay versus performance disclosure requirement mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act. Beginning with the 2023 proxy season, public companies will be required to include in proxy or consent solicitation material for an annual meeting of shareholders additional disclosure showing the relationship between executive compensation actually paid and the company’s financial performance. READ MORE
Neither Pay nor Performance
Section 953(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act[1] requires the Commission to adopt rules mandating public companies to describe clearly the relationship between compensation the company actually paid to its executives and the company’s financial performance.[2] Today’s rulemaking will elicit costly, complicated, disclosure of questionable utility. Accordingly, I am unable to support this rule. READ MORE
Starbucks illegally denied pay and benefits to thousands of unionized workers, says NLRB
The National Labor Relations Board has sided with workers who claim Starbucks broke labor law by withholding wages and benefits from unionized stores—the latest blow to its handling of baristas’ intensifying union drive. READ MORE
How Much Does the President Make? US Presidents’ Salaries During and After Office
The office of the President of the United States is arguably the most important job in the country. Compared to the salaries of executives of Fortune 100 companies, however, it may appear that the compensation doesn’t keep up. While it’s true that the president’s salary is modest, there are other perks that go along with the job, and it often leads to far greater earnings after the term has ended. READ MORE
SEC Adopts Pay Versus Performance Disclosure Rules
The Securities and Exchange Commission today adopted amendments to its rules to require registrants to disclose information reflecting the relationship between executive compensation actually paid by a registrant and the registrant’s financial performance. The rules implement a requirement mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act. The Commission proposed pay versus performance disclosure rules in 2015 and reopened the comment period on the proposal in January of this year. READ MORE
Setting Your Equity Compensation Strategy
Once you’ve decided to take your company public, building an equity compensation strategy is a top priority.
"Whether to provide some form of equity-based compensation is a critical decision a company can make as it develops its plan to go public," says Andy Welt, SVP and broad based rewards practice leader with Fidelity Workplace Consulting.
Setting a compensation strategy and pay philosophy isn't just important — it can be complex. Here are key considerations executives should keep in mind during the process. READ MORE
How to Motivate Your Team with Equity Compensation: What Startup Companies Need to Know
Cash-strapped startup companies often find themselves looking for creative ways to engage and retain qualified people. One common way is to offer different types of equity compensation. READ MORE
Median U.S. lawyer income dropped over past two decades, economists find
Lawyers are making less money today than they were in 2001 when accounting for inflation, a new study has found. READ MORE
Despite flexibility, gig work and insecure income prove harmful to U.S. workers, according to study
Insecure income associated with nontraditional employment known as 'gig work' has a negative impact on the overall health and well-being of U.S. workers, according to a new article READ MORE
How employers are rethinking salary, benefits as turnover continues
Although rising inflation and the changing economic climate are causing some employees to worry about job security, employers for the most part are still experiencing turnover and sweetening the compensation and benefits pot to hang onto their workers.
A new survey of more than 4,000 organizations from consulting firm Gallagher finds that employers are turning to pay increases as well as more diverse benefits to capture the interest of current and potential workers. READ MORE
Consider "Stock Swapping" Your Incentive Stock Options
Congratulations! During a recent promotion or employment change, you were awarded with Incentive Stock Options (ISOs). This new compensation arrangement sure looks great on paper, but if you don’t know how to properly monetize your ISOs, it can get rather messy.
Here’s what to do—and when!—so you don’t miss out on any lucrative (or conversely, costly) opportunities. READ MORE
The Surprising Salary That Makes Gen Z Happy
Gen Z adults are currently in college or recently out of it. And despite what this generation’s reputation may be, they seem to have realistic — or even low — expectations for their ideal salary.
GOBankingRates asked adults ages 18 to 24 what minimum salary they would need to make to be happy. Here’s what they said. READ MORE
How to Answer, ‘What’s Your Expected Salary?
When you’re asked, “What is your expected salary?” it’s not a trick question—it’s a real one. And the answer to that question depends on who you are, what you do, and how much money you want to make.
Do you know how to answer the question “what is your expected salary?” If you’re like most people, you’ll probably say something along the lines of “I don’t know.” READ MORE