Benefits and Compensation

Pay for Performance: The Big Bang Theory

For at least 10 years, the practice of managing compensation has been caught in a black hole pulling organizations towards “sameness,” say experts Myrna Hellerman CCP and Jim Kochanski. In today’s Advisor, they discuss how some Big Bang companies broke out of sameness to do what was right for the business.

The Forces of ‘Sameness’

Many factors have created the strong pull towards sameness in compensation:

  • Talent shortages in 1996-1999, 2004-2007
  • Greater availability of data
  • More effective tools to manage data comparisons
  • Regulations and government scrutiny (Why do you pay the way you do? The easy answer is we do it like everyone else, Kochanski says.)
  • Shareholder scrutiny (Shareholders are increasingly and vocally interested in compensation issues.)

Combined, these factors have pulled organizations towards common compensation practices, payout levels, and program offerings, say Hellerman and Kochanski, who are Sr. Vice Presidents at Sibson Consulting. They offered their tips at WorldatWork’s Total Rewards Conference and Exhibition, held recently in San Diego.

For some organizations, sameness became an entitlement. (“When you get a reward more than once, and you don’t know why, that’s entitlement,” Hellerman says.)

Then came the economic downturn. Suddenly “sameness” was no longer the main consideration. Organizations started moving apart in compensation practices, payout levels, and program offerings. Hellerman and Kochanski call it the Big Bang.


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What Are the Characteristics of Big Bang Companies?

Sibson Consulting did a study on pay for performance in an effort to understand what happens when organizations break away from sameness and move to business-based rewards. Over 100 organizations across the country gave in-depth interviews. The findings:

  • Return to sameness is a strong force
  • Breaking-away from sameness is difficult, but doable. (Approximately 20% of the surveyed companies, The Big Bang Companies, succeeded)
  • When breakaway is successful, business-based rewards positively sculpt an outcomes-oriented culture that rewards the “what” and the “how”

Hellerman offered a graphic to illustrate how “Big Bang” companies break away from “sameness.”

 

Characteristics

Sameness

Big Bang

Pay vehicles

Standard model pay vehicles

More and uniquely designed pay vehicles

Execution of pay decisions

HR process focused; Opportunities to “game” the system

Business-based pay decisions

Big Bang Companies Use More and Uniquely Designed Pay Delivery Vehicles

Big Bang companies, Hellerman says,  effectively transform standard pay vehicles and protocols into a portfolio of tools to differentiate and reward performance.

 

Sameness

Big Bang

The philosophy

All for one/one for all, i.e., “we all get some or we all get none”

Known individual achievement expectations to be considered for base pay increase

If there is no base pay increase budget

No increase for anyone

– some high achievers still may get increases

If there is a base pay increase budget:

A “little something for everyone;”
A “little bit more” for some

Nothing for some; Significant amount for the highest achievers

At Big Bang companies, the rule is incentives, not bonuses. The business-based incentive awards are earned, not “gifted.”

Sameness    

Big Bang

Incentive=Bonus: A payment (“gratuity”)over and above salary given to an employee

Incentive: compensation earned as a reward upon achieving specified goals or milestones

Loose targets

Known targets

Hidden formula

Known drivers/metrics

Large discretionary component in award determination

Limited discretionary components in award determination

Low or no individual component

Mix of business and individual factors


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Incentives That Disregard Traditional Formulae

At big Bang companies, incentive plan performance measurement periods as well as payout timing and form, “fit” the needs and realities of the business. For example, Kochanski says, in a company that wanted to focus on profitability, you might set a stretch goal with three payout possibilities:

  • If the profitability goal is met by the end of the first year, the payout is two times the established bonus.
  • If profitability goal is achieved by the end of the second year, the payout is one times the established bonus,
  • If profitability goals are not achieved until the third year, the bonus pays one-half of the established amount.

Meanwhile another program can start each year, so they overlap.

Another example is the long-term incentive “break-away” design. Multiple performance outcomes are rewarded in different ways, including stock options based on total sales revenue, restricted stock units (RSUs) based on EBITDA, Performance Unit Plan (PUP) payments based on other performance goals.

The plan is designed to share performance risk and increase retention. Vesting schedules are designed to provide continuous release of value. So, for example, options might vest yearly, PUPs after 4 years, and RSUs after 5 years.

Payout forms are also varied, that is, some cash, some stock options, and some full-value shares.

In tomorrow’s Advisor, Hellerman and Kochanski’s take on promotions and carve-outs, plus an introduction to a unique 10-minutes-at-a-time training system for your supervisors and managers.

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