You received a job offer for your dream role at your target company. Now comes the salary negotiation phase. Salary negotiation is one of the most stressful and confusing aspects of the job search process. READ MORE
Before You Make an Employee a Salary Offer, Consider What They're Really After
Despite what you might hear, compensation is not the primary motivator for most people. Sure, as I have written about before, some people are what I call "coin-operated." These are the folks that make great salespeople because they are motivated by making more money.
But many people aren't like this. You can think of their motivation as a thermostat. They don't want it too hot or too cold--most people want to be paid at a level that seems fair to them. There are other intrinsic factors that are more important to high performers, like the company mission. READ MORE
Biden tax increases would hurt US competitiveness, slow wage growth, CEOs say
A majority of the nation's top CEOs agree that President Biden's plan to raise the corporate tax rate in order to pay for his nearly $2.3 trillion spending proposal will hurt business competitiveness and slow wage growth. READ MORE
Jim Cramer Says He Would 'Absolutely' Take Compensation in Bitcoin
Stock market expert and television pundit Jim Cramer was asked this morning if he would be willing to take compensation in Bitcoin while talking about the news of MicroStrategy (MSTR) paying board members in the crypto.
"Yes absolutely. I think it is a store hold of value. I think this is a $2 trillion market cap maybe going to $3 trillion," said Cramer during an interview this morning on CNBCs Squawk Box. READ MORE
Illinois Employers Must Report Gender, Race, Ethnicity and Compensation Data and Practices
Under amendments to the Illinois Business Corporation Act and the Illinois Equal Pay Act, certain corporations will be required, beginning in 2023 and continuing thereafter, to report data concerning the gender, race, and ethnicity makeup of their workforces, along with information about their compensation practices and efforts to comply with equal pay laws. Much of this information will become public, and failure to report the necessary information can lead to significant penalties. READ MORE
Crafting Human Capital Goals for Executive Comp in an ESG World
Human capital management disclosure rules issued by the SEC last year are expected to strengthen the trend toward tying executive compensation to diversity and inclusion goals. Baker Botts attorneys discuss how companies can craft actionable goals and draft disclosures to shareholders and others. READ MORE
Shareholder Service ISS Slams WarnerMedia CEO’s 2020 Pay Package; Recommends Vote Against AT&T Compensation Plan At Annual Meeting
Influential proxy advisor Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) is recommending stockholders vote against AT&T’s executive compensation plan at its April 20 annual meeting after the company granted WarnerMedia CEO Jason Kilar a stock award valued at $48 million. READ MORE
CEOs of public U.S. firms earn 320 times as much as workers. Even some CEOS say the gap is too big.
Last August, Jamelle Brown, a technician at Research Medical Center in Kansas City, Missouri, contracted Covid-19 while on the job sanitizing and sterilizing rooms in the facility's emergency department. Luckily, his case wasn't severe, and after having quarantined, he was back at work.
Upon his return, Brown was named Employee of the Month in his unit and given a gift voucher for use in the hospital cafeteria. The amount: $6. READ MORE
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg's base pay stays at $1, but total compensation rises to $25.3 million
Facebook Inc. F, -0.72% Founder and Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg's base pay in 2020 remained at $1, which it has been since 2013, and he again received zero in bonuses and stock awards. However, his total compensation rose 8%to $25.29 million from $23.42 million in 2019, with all but $1 of that total being in the form of "all other compensation," according to the social network company's proxy statement filed late Friday. For Zuckerberg, all other compensation includes $13.44 million for costs related to personal security at his residences and during personal travel, a $10.00 million allowance to cover additional costs related to personal security for Zuckerberg and his family, and $1.85 million for costs related to personal use of private aircraft. Facebook's stock, which fell 0.8% in morning trading Monday, has rallied 23.4% over the past three months while the S&P 500 SPX, -0.20% has tacked on 8.4%. READ MORE
Google founders are now worth more than $100 billion
Google cofounders Larry Page and Sergey Brin are now worth more than $100 billion thanks to surging tech stocks.
Page and Brin join six other current centibillionaires: Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, Tesla CEO Elon Musk, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gate, LVMH CEO Bernard Arnault, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, and Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett. READ MORE
'Six Degrees' star Mike Rowe weighs in on minimum wage debate
Mike Rowe's new show "Six Degrees with Mike Rowe" is premiering on Discovery Channel after debuting on Discovery+ in January.
The Emmy-winning TV host's series aims to prove how the world is more connected than we think. READ MORE
Masters 2021: Here's the prize money payout for each golfer at Augusta National
The spoils of winning the Masters are numerous and overwhelming, as 2021 champion Hideki Matsuyama is about to find out. There’s the green jacket, of course, and the Masters trophy, plus the chance to tee it up every April at Augusta National for the rest of your life. You have a seat reserved at the Champions Dinner each year and a space in the Champions locker room whenever you’re back down Magnolia Lane. Oh, and your golf legacy is fairly secure, “Masters champion” mentioned any time you’re introduced in public. READ MORE
Revisiting withholding on equity compensation
Employers have various tools to attract and retain talent: cash, equity, fringe benefits, and others. Equity compensation has dual benefits of tying key employees' compensation to the company's performance while often offering such employees a tax deferral. Many employers may have looked to equity compensation during the COVID-19 crisis to retain valued employees who are vital in helping the company rebound from a downturn, while also benefiting the company's cash position. READ MORE
Advantages and Disadvantages of Raising Federal Minimum Wage to $15
In January 2021, legislators introduced the “Raise the Wage Act of 2021,” to increase the federal minimum wage from $7.25 an hour to $15 an hour by 2025. If passed, it would be the first increase in more than a decade, the longest stretch since 1938. READ MORE
Tax Court Rules S Corp Payouts Are Wages
Frequently, S corporation owners treat wages as other forms of payment, such as distributions of payment to reduce their overall tax bite. But the IRS is quick to contest these claims and the Tax Court recently stepped in to offer some clarity. READ MORE
Chuck Schumer Eyes a Second Shot at Raising the Minimum Wage Through Reconciliation
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is considering putting a $15 minimum wage into the next reconciliation package, which will be focused on infrastructure, multiple sources familiar with the New York senator’s thinking told The Intercept. READ MORE
Don’t Let Misalignment in Executive Compensation Create Your Own “Black Sox Scandal”
In many companies, executive compensation is determined or negotiated according to an established compensation structure that is derived from their talent acquisition and retention strategy which in turn is driven by their business goals. Typically, a company would identify key growth indicators and ensure that each key executive’s incentives are aligned with company success. READ MORE
A look at efforts to tie executive compensation to ESG in North America
If certain ESG metrics have a material impact on a business’ performance – which is widely accepted – then it follows that investors, regulators and proxy advisers will likely seek assurances that executives are incentivized to meet expectations. READ MORE
Supreme Court Weighs Whether NCAA Is Illegally 'Fixing' Athlete Compensation
As March Madness heads into its final days, college athletes are playing on a different kind of court: the Supreme Court. On Wednesday the justices heard arguments in a case testing whether the NCAA's limits on compensation for student athletes violate the nation's antitrust laws. READ MORE
New Analysis Reveals 20 Years of Stagnant Wage Growth
American workers have seen their real earnings grow by less than 10% over the last two decades, with a growing racial gap where gains by Black workers are half that of their White counterparts, according to new earnings data released by the Ludwig Institute for Shared Economic Prosperity (LISEP).
LISEP today launched a new measure of economic performance called the True Weekly Earnings (TWE) report, which is designed to provide a clearer picture of worker earnings than the Median Weekly Earnings Report released quarterly by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). Unlike the BLS report, LISEP includes all members of the workforce – including unemployed and part-time workers – to arrive at a more realistic measure of worker median earnings and their growth over time. READ MORE
