Berkonomics

Would you pay a high achiever more than yourself?   

Here’s a case study for yourself:

Recently I was asked to review an offer letter for a senior director of business development. The CEO was concerned that he was offering far too much in the form of incentive compensation, with bonuses that could greatly exceed the base salary if all the bonus items were achieved. 

The critical question…

I asked the CEO to imagine what the company would look like if all those bonus-expensive items were completely achieved in one year.  Upon reflection, he stated that revenues could double the following year, and that the company’s reputation among larger customers would be so greatly enhanced that the company could become the leader in its niche.  My obvious retort: “Then why not offer this candidate the moon if he can achieve this?”  The offer was sent and the CEO was much happier, dreaming of the possibilities, not the incremental cost.

Have you experienced this in your business?

I love to point out that my top several salespeople were making more than anyone else in the company, including their boss.  These outstanding achievers worked for salaries below those of their engineering peers and had to put it all on the line every day to earn their keep, let alone excel.

How to align your goals with those of your managers.

[Email readers, continue here…] The best way to encourage alignment between your managers and the company’s goals is to create a bonus plan for each, with its payments made based upon the key performance indicators established for them and for their areas of responsibility, all in turn based upon the tactics and strategies contained in the company’s strategic plan. 

Exceeding expectations…

It is amazing how few company CEOs grasp the concept that executives and managers should be compensated not just for doing their named job, but for exceeding expectations while advancing the corporate goals.  To align everyone in the organization in exactly the same direction is a task, one that is a powerful driver for growth.  People should be compensated well for such outstanding contributions.

 What is the general rule for such a bonus plan?

Provide no more than five key performance indicators derived from the strategic plan and fitted to the specific job of the manager.  Set time-based goals for each.  Provide bonus opportunities that add to approximately 50% of the base salary if all are achieved within the year.  Meet and measure progress truthfully each quarter.  Perhaps pay a portion of the bonus upon completion of these meetings.  Do not make the usual mistake of ignoring or passing on the progress of any of these items by just paying a part of the bonus at yearend because no-one carefully reviewed progress, or because circumstances changed, and the bonus item could not be completed as written.

Incentives are powerful tools when used well and reviewed often.  They are a major part of a good manager’s work and should be treated as such by the CEO and all senior managers.

  • FRank Singer

    I had this “dilemma” many years ago when I was running a Honeywell division in San Diego. I had a salesman who was terrific. I paid him a percentage of what he sold. He sold a lot and I had no problem that he often made more than me. Of course, it made me look good to my boss at headquarters and I never had a problem that he made more than me.

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