Salary transparency laws are slowly rolling out across the country; but, as of right now, many job postings do not include a salary range. This is an immediate red flag for a good portion of job seekers, with 33% saying they would not go to a job interview without first knowing the salary the employer is willing to offer READ MORE
Executive Compensation Soars in Pandemic’s Wake
Compensation for chief executive officers increased substantially in 2021 after small or negative growth in 2020 and 2019. That’s one major takeaway from Gallagher’s CEO and Executive Compensation Trends: 2022 Edition, an annual report that this year provides a baseline for assessing the pandemic’s impact on executive compensation. READ MORE
Managing stock-based compensation in private companies
If you are an employee of a private company, part of your compensation may be paid in stock, restricted stock units, stock options, or other company securities. Since your company is private there often is no good way to convert that stock or option into cash until there is a liquidity event (usually a recapitalization, a sale of the company, or going public).
However, that doesn’t mean that there’s nothing you can do to maximize the value of your stock-based compensation. No matter what strategy you consider, it is important to make sure to be compliant with SEC rules and your company’s policies. READ MORE
Employers Get Innovative with Compensation
Compensation innovation is within every organization's reach. But what form that innovation takes will depend on a variety of factors.
Some companies have made headlines by allowing employees to allocate their pay package as they see fit. READ MORE
Implications of the SEC’s Final Executive Compensation Recovery Rule
Whereas companies were able to implement other Dodd-Frank compensation-related rules without fundamentally changing their pay plans (such as the CEO pay ratio disclosure requirements), the clawback rule requires the NYSE and NASDAQ to update their listing standards and issuers to adopt a specific policy that affects the amount of compensation executives will ultimately take home. The rule was published in the Federal Register on November 28, 20221, and exchanges have 90 days to publish their revised listing standards to – be effective no later than November 28, 2023. READ MORE
What to know about salary trends in 2023
Compensation is always an important part of the employer arsenal, but in 2023, that might be more true than ever. Fueled by a confluence of factors—rising inflation and changing employee expectations among them—HR leaders are planning to turn to larger-than-usual salary increases in 2023, data indicates. READ MORE
Workers say they’d take a pay cut to keep their jobs if recession hits
The U.S. may not officially be in a recession, but that may not matter to workers. Forty-one percent of respondents to a Conference Board survey conducted in July and August said they felt the country was already in a recession — before the well-publicized layoffs at large tech companies, like Amazon and Meta. READ MORE
A roundup on the state of compensation strategy
A whirlwind couple of years — from steep COVID-19 layoffs to a hiring frenzy to a recession on the horizon — may have left both employers and workers dizzy in trying to interpret compensation trends. But while hiring freezes and a rash of layoffs across tech and a few other industries may have employees nervous, research by groups like WTW and Salary.com suggest pay will keep going up — and at record levels. READ MORE
Only about 1 in 3 people think their pay is fair, but it’s not about the money—here’s what they’re missing in their workplace
If bosses thought keeping employees happy with their salaries was about the money, there’s actually more to it than that.
Only one-third of workers in the U.S. think that they are getting fair pay, according to a new study from Gartner, a consulting firm, which surveyed 3,523 people between April and June. But the study also found how employees viewed their pay was closely linked to how much they trust their organization. READ MORE
In times of economic stress, pay practices take a front row seat
It’s no surprise that pay is now the most important factor in satisfaction at work. This is according to Mercer’s 2022 Inside Employees’ Minds study, which surveyed more than 4,000 full-time employees working in organizations with 250 or more employees.
The 8.2 year-over-year rate of inflation has eroded any wage gains seen over the past two or three years. Consequently, the study shows that employees are currently much more focused on their financial health, as compared to results in 2021. The 2022 study showed that meeting monthly expenses, having the ability to retire and personal debt are now among employees’ greatest concerns. READ MORE
Should We Link Pay To ESG Measures?
According to this report by The Conference Board, in collaboration with Semler Brossy and ESGAUGE, the vast majority (73% in 2021) of companies in the S&P 500 are “now tying executive compensation to some form of ESG performance.” To be sure, some companies have long tied executive comp to particular ESG measures, such as diversity, customer satisfaction, employee and product safety and anticorruption programs. That has now expanded to a wider use of various ESG metrics, which the report attributes to a new intensified focus on ESG “driven by investors, employees, consumers, business partners, ESG rating agencies, and regulators,” together with “the shift to a multi-stakeholder form of capitalism.” The expanded use of ESG measures in executive compensation offers the obvious benefit of incentivizing and rewarding behaviors needed to achieve goals that so many stakeholders view as critical. READ MORE
What You Should Know About A Compensation Consultant
It can be hard to get an easy answer for employee compensation. This is true for businesses of all sizes and shapes. Whether you are increasing your operations and facing employee retention problems or simply intend to audit and re-evaluate what you offer your employees, the right employee compensation is crucial. The problems in that compensation needs are always changing. Therefore, to stay competitive and find the best talent, you need to check the economy and the job market to find similar positions. READ MORE
Employees Are Using Job Offers to Win Big Raises From Their Employers
When Michelle Reisdorf started off in the recruiting business 26 years ago, it was pretty much a given that people who interviewed for a new job would take it, assuming they got the right offer. But these days, Reisdorf has found, that's no longer true. More and more, candidates are applying for jobs with no intention of jumping ship. They're just looking to land an offer that they can use to force their current employer to give them a raise. READ MORE
Fewer than one-third of employees believe their pay is fair
Poor communication and transparency may be the biggest culprits behind workers’ suspicions regarding a lack of fair pay. Gartner itself noted this in its press release, pointing to findings from a May survey of workers that found only 38% understood how their pay was determined, and fewer than half consulted co-workers about pay or used third-party pay sites to analyze their salary. READ MORE
Sales Compensation Does Not Stand Alone
When asked, sales leaders list “improving sales productivity” as their top priorityOpen in a new tab. This means increasing sales yield per salesperson. The objective is to grow sales volume at a faster rate than the growth in sales costs, thus improving return on sales investment. When possible, do both: Grow sales and decrease the absolute cost of selling. READ MORE
Remote work options are still surging among high-paying jobs
Positions that allow remote work continue their upward incline: According to data from Ladders, a career site for positions that pay $100,000 or more, 36% of all professional jobs are now remote. That’s a huge jump over the past couple of years. Prior to the pandemic, only about 4% of high-paying jobs were available remotely. By the end of 2021, that jumped to 18% and now, at the end of 2022, that number has doubled. READ MORE
What’s Driving the Record Number of Say-on-Pay Failures This Proxy Season?
The 2022 proxy voting season sees say-on-pay failures at an all-time high, according to a recent article by Willis Towers Watson. As of Sept. 30, 2022, there were 78 say-on-pay failures for companies in the Russell 3000, an increase over last year’s previous record of 71. The increase indicates that pay adjustments made during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic are starting to get a heavy degree of scrutiny. We spoke with Brian Myers, governance team lead, North America, and director of executive compensation at Willis Towers Watson, to explore the factors contributing to a record number of say-on-pay failures, shareholder preferences on performance-based incentives and more. READ MORE
Fight Poverty, Not Income Inequality
Wealth and income inequality have recently gone down in the US and other parts of the West, and the decline has been going on for the better part of the last decade. Yet it is not clear, to me at least, whether this is something to celebrate. READ MORE
Incentives can lead employees to cheat or lie at work
In 2020, Wells Fargo paid $3 billion to settle claims that employees had committed widespread consumer abuses, including opening millions of unauthorized or outright bogus accounts, forging signatures, and moving money from real accounts to fake ones. READ MORE
Should we link pay to ESG measures?
According to this report by The Conference Board, in collaboration with Semler Brossy and ESGAUGE, the vast majority (73% in 2021) of companies in the S&P 500 are “now tying executive compensation to some form of ESG performance.” To be sure, some companies have long tied executive comp to particular ESG measures, such as diversity, customer satisfaction, employee and product safety and anticorruption programs. READ MORE