July 15th, 2011 by Ken Gibson
Many of the business leaders we work with struggle to find the right metrics for measuring acceptable growth in their companies. In a recent article at Strategy+Business entitled “Total Shareholder Returns”, authors Ken Favaro and Greg Rotz offer some great insights in this regard. Although the article addresses issues primarily relevant to public companies, the principles discussed have broad application. It’s worth the read so check it out.
Towards the end of the article, the authors make this point as it relates to managing strategy and execution towards improving Total Shareholder Returns:
“Only two factors determine the value creation path of any company: the distinctiveness of its strategies and the execution of those strategies. We often hear statements such as, ‘A great strategy is worth nothing without great execution’ or ‘I’d rather have great execution with a mediocre strategy than the other way around.’ The reality is that strategy and execution are two sides of one coin. Is Southwest Airlines or Tesco or Wells Fargo the product of great execution or of great strategies? Yes. Both are needed to produce consistently superior shareholder returns.
“What, then, will enable your company to have and sustain distinctive strategies and execution? In our experience, this achievement requires proficiency in both the formal and the informal aspects of a company’s management. On the formal side are corporate strategy, business strategies, strategic planning, resource allocation, performance management, incentive compensation, organizational design, and role of the corporate center. On the informal side are leadership behaviors, peer-to-peer networks, teaming norms and skills, nonfinancial motivators, pride, and a strong sense of the business’s purpose.”
As it relates to VisionLink’s approach to compensation, we refer to the formal and informal aspects as the “structural” and “mindset” impact of pay decisions. Much of what this article discusses helps identify the kind of structural issues that need to be properly defined if a strong rewards strategy is going to be tied to them. If the structure is not properly built, it will be difficult for employees to understand that to which they are devoting their minds and hearts, and how it will be measured.
For more help on this topic, check out our webinar recording entitled: “How Shareholders Should View Compensation.”
Tags: breakthrough success, compensation and the recession, compensation philosophy and strategy, Culture of Confidence, incentives, long-term shareholder value, Pay for performance, profitability, Sustained Results
Posted in Business Growth & Compensation, Business Growth and Rewards, Compensation Planning, Current Pay Trends and Topics, Incentive Planning, Key Talent Compensation, Recession Strategies | No Comments »
June 29th, 2011 by Ken Gibson
It’s summer and we’re all ready for simple solutions to things. Easy meals to fix. Inexpensive ways to entertain our kids. Fastest routes out of town for long weekends. And so on. In that same spirit, here are a few suggestions to simplify your company’s compensation life this season and have significant impact in the process.
- Form a Compensation Committee. Include members of the leadership team best positioned to impact decisions related to compensation. Make sure it is headed by the CEO of the company. Establish as its charter to treat compensation as both an investment that generates a measurable return and a strategic tool that impacts company growth. Establish a regular meeting schedule.
- Create and Publish a Rewards Philosophy Statement. You don’t have to be able to fulfill the philosophy with concrete programs yet, but it will communicate the direction you plan to go and get you moving in the right direction. Consider having a philosophy statement that commits the company to being at somewhere between the 40th and 50th percentile in terms of guaranteed compensation (salaries) but perhaps at the 70th percentile or above in total compensation. In other words, commit to a philosophy that will begin putting a larger amount of compensation at risk.
- Innumerate 4 to 5 Results Your Company is Seeking to Realize. These might be divided between short-term (12 months or less) and long-term (over 12 months). They could be revenue or sales goals, profit or margin targets, new product development, market expansion or any number of key performance factors your company is seeking to improve. Ask the committee to consider how, if at all, any of the present compensation strategies of the company are reinforcing those results as priorities to employees right now.
- Identify the Individuals or Groups Best Positioned to Impact those Results. As you examine that list, begin formulating in your mind the “type” of compensation that will best communicate to employees their role in achieving those results. Think in terms of how much of their compensation should be tied to those outcomes and how much should be short-term versus long-term.
- Make a List of the Obvious Missing Pieces in Your Comp Strategy. The previous four steps should make this apparent. For example, if you determine one of the key results you are seeking is to double revenue in the next three years, but your compensation package includes only salary and a quarterly bonus, then a long-term incentive plan is an obvious missing component at this stage.
Now, going through this exercise will not (yet) alter your overall rewards approach. What it will do, however, is transform your thought process. And changing the way you think about pay is the first step in transforming compensation in your organization.
If you can engage in these simple steps over the course of the summer, by the fall you will be positioned to begin developing specific strategies that will bring your rewards philosophy to life and fulfill the results your company seeks to realize. Compensation will then become a strategic tool helping to drive growth rather than an impediment to the sustained success you desire.
Here’s to a simplified summer.
For more information on this topic, view our webinar broadcast entitled “How Do I Create a Competitive Advantage with Our Compensation Programs.”
Tags: Compensation Committees, compensation philosophy and strategy, Culture of Confidence, Growth, incentives, long-term shareholder value, Pay for performance, profitability, rewards, Sustained Results
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May 27th, 2011 by Ken Gibson
CEOs have a lot to worry about. (Okay, forgive my stating the obvious before even gettng started!) As a result, effective chief executives provide strategic oversight but empower others to make decisions and carry out the company’s business model and plan. Ideally, that person has set up accountability systems that are both effective and efficient in their ability to provide relevant feedback to guide him or her in making adjustments and course corrections as necessary.
I recognize there’s nothing new in that introduction. However, it’s an important foundation for setting up a discussion about the CEO’s role in compensation development and management. Here’s why.
The leadership orientation just described, while typical and necessary, often puts the CEO too far out of touch with an essential role he or she needs to play in the compensation discussion. Pay is a strategic tool, not merely an expense that needs to be contained. It is an investment that needs to be properly allocated and the CEO should assume as much responsibility for the return the company achieves on that capital commitment as any that is made in the enterprise. In fact, given that compensation and benefits are usually the largest budget item on any company’s financial statements, one could argue that the CEO should pay even more attention to ROI results being generated in this area than almost any other the company measures and manages.
At the end of the day, the person at the helm is primarily responsible for making sure that both financial and human capital are generating an appropriate return for shareholders–and then holding people accountable for performance levels that will ensure that outcome.
If this is true (and I submit it is), then exactly what role should the CEO play in the compensation discussion–and where (if anywhere) should handoffs (delegation) occur? Here are some suggestions and guidelines:
- Establishing Pay Philosophy. A chief executive officer must lead the philosophical discussion about pay. Given the performance outcomes demanded of that role, the person at the helm must make clear what the company will pay for–and how that philosophy will be manifest in practice. Where should company salary levels be vis a vis market pay? What balance should the company strike between guaranteed and at risk pay? How much of performance-based pay (incentives) should reward for short-term results (monthly, quarterly or annual) and how much should be tied to long-term results (more than 12 months)? Certainly, a CEO can solicit imput from key leadership members in this discussion (as well as outside consultants), but this is a core issue for which he or she must assume primary responsibility. Every other discussion about pay will cascade from this foundational stage and the groundwork that is laid by establishing a clear pay philosophy.
- Defining Strategic Outcomes. Specific pay programs may be developed under the direction of individuals given that stewardship by the CEO. However, in making that handoff, the person ultimately responsible for the “bottom line” must be able to clearly define the strategic outcomes and priorities the company is focused on. Every rewards plan that is developed must have a purpose statement–and that purpose must be tied to a specific, measureable result the business seeks to achieve. What is the role of the pay plan if not to drive the business model and strategy of the company? CEOs will be left wondering why they aren’t getting better results from their people if they aren’t paying attention to and fully engaged in this part of the process.
- Establishing Framework for Discussion. Compensation development and management is not a static activity. A company can’t develop a plan, role it out and then “let it ride” forever more (although some companies do, by default, adopt this approach). As a result, the CEO needs to provide the organizational framework within which best practices for envisioning, creating and sustaining world class compensation strategies can emerge and thrive. He or she should decide who is essential to the compensation discussion, organize a committee to fulfill the oversight role and (with the help of those committee members) establish a schedule and agenda for ongoing management and monitoring.
- Determining Roles and Responsibilities. Related to area number three above, this category implies that those involved with developing a best practice approach to building and sustaining world-class compensation strategies for their company understand their specific stewardships. For example, who is ultimately responsible for administering a given plan? Who will take the lead in developing a promotion and communication strategy for the overall rewards strategy? Who will make sure successes are celebrated appropriately and in a timely fashion? Who will monitor any legal requirements associated with the plan(s)? How and under whose direction will the success of given pay programs be measured and monitored? What financial information, requirements and procedures have to be tracked and managed–and who will assume that responsibility? And so on. The CEO doesn’t have to make everyone of these assignments, but he or she does need to ensure that these roles get defined and that there is accountability for their fulfillment.
- Approving Metrics and Measures. Compensation design is an outcome based endeavor. In many ways it’s also an exercise in reverse engineering. We project forward certain results we anticipate achieving based on certain assumptions (revenue growth, expenses, manpower, etc.). We determine how such growth will impact shareholder value. We then determine what amount of that additional value we are willing to share to achieve that outcome. We then “reverse engineer” that future value to a present context so we can clearly state how employees will participate in the value they help create. In that process, the CEO must help define thresholds of performance (revenue growth, profit margin, ROE, etc.) that need to be achieved before the company will be comfortable sharing value. Specific measures and metrics for company wide performance, department or team performance and individual performance will ultimately need to be determined. While the CEO won’t independently set the levels in each of these areas, he or she cannot disengage from the decisions that have to be “signed off on” if the plans developed are going to be financially viable and protect shareholders’ interests.
- Insisting on a Clear Message. CEOs set a tone. They can make or break a meeting or announcement based on the level of attention it receives, the passion that surrounds it and the clarity that is provided. Likewise, a CEO must ensure that any message involving any aspect of the largest budget item on the company’s financials (compensation and benefits) is clear and helps reinforce the organization’s vision and mission as well as it’s business model and plan. This doesn’t mean the CEO needs to deliver every message about compensation. It does mean, however, that he or she knows what messages are being communicated and they are consistent with the compensation philosophy statement that was established and articulated at the start, under the chief executives direction.
- Leading the Celebration. While managers at all levels of a business should help their teams celebrate the successes they experience, the CEO needs to be the cheerleader in chief. That role carries a weight that can’t be duplicated by others. When employees hear from the person at the top, there is a different priority level that message attains. CEOs should “pick their spots” but then be sure their voices are heard when good things happen. This can be done in writing, in meetings, on intranet postings, on Facebook pages and through “tweets.” Whatever the channel, the CEO must engage in this activity.
- Measuring Productivity. Perhaps the most important question to be asked about a given compensation strategy is whether or not it made the workforce more productive. Did people become more engaged as a result of how they were being paid? Is execution improving. If so, are there measurable results to prove it? Having mechanisms in place that isolate the return on investment that the company is achieving through its human capital are critical to evaluating the effectiveness of its rewards strategies. While a CEO does not have assume the task of coming up with the specific means of making a productivity assessment, he or she must insist it be measured and consistently review the trends the analysis portends.
- Holding People Accountable. If a rewards strategy isn’t working, the CEO needs to know that. And someone has to be accountable for the lack of results being generated. If the other areas outlined in this article are properly addressed, this will be an easy step to take. Roles and outcomes will have been clearly defined. Accountability in this arena means that everyone in those roles understands what will happen if the outcomes intended aren’t being realized through the specific pay programs for which they have charge. When results fall short, it will not always mean that the specific plan in question is bad or not performing properly. However, those responsibile need to be able to “account” for why results are what they are.
Our experience has been that in companies where this level of engagement (in the compensation discussion) from the CEO exists, performance occurs at an accelerated pace. Presumably, this happens because alignment has a greater possibility of occuring in organizations where the person at the top understands the essential and strategic role of compensation in creating a unified financial vision for growing the business.
To learn more about this issue, please view our webinar recording entitled “Why CEOs Should Drive Compensation Strategy.”
Tags: breakthrough success, ceo, compensation and the recession, compensation philosophy and strategy, Culture of Confidence, Growth, long-term shareholder value, rewards, Sustained Results
Posted in Business Growth & Compensation, Compensation Planning, Current Pay Trends and Topics, Incentive Planning, Key Talent Compensation, Managing Talent, Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
March 18th, 2011 by Ken Gibson
Okay, let’s get something out of the way at the outset. At VisionLink, we don’t consider wealth to be a dirty word. Nor do we believe that those who pursue it are somehow less noble than the rest of humanity.
In fact, most of our client interaction is with financially successful people. We have found that the majority of them (yes, there are exceptions) view wealth creation as a means of serving multiple “worthy” ends, expanding their ability to “make a difference” in people’s lives and to otherwise have a postive impact within their sphere of influence. At a minimum, because some actively pursue a superior level of economic well being (wealth), many others (employees, suppliers, customers, communities and so on) are able to meet their cash flow, standard of living, security and/or wealth accumulation needs and goals.
In short, wealth creates opportunities and options where the lack of it diminishes them. So…let’s hear it for wealth.
Given that view, we conisder our core work at VisionLink to be one of enabling business leaders to grow from being simply wealth creators to becoming wealth mulipliers. A wealth creator is really anyone that is running a profitable business. Wealth multipliers, on the other hand, are those that are able expand both the level of economic benefit that is created and the number of people that participate in it. In simple terms, this means that not only shareholders but all stakeholders in an organization participate in the benefits of expanded value creation.
Done correctly, this is a key role that compensation can and should play in an organization. It is a strategic tool that a business owner or CEO should be using to create a more unified financial vision for growing the business. If this is going to occur, the rewards strategies–especially incentives–should be constructed in a way that communicates the following to all who have a vested interest in the company’s success:
- Growth. We see tomorrow’s company as bigger and better than today’s. It will be different in size and scope and influence.
- Meaning. We recognize that you have a personal vision for the future that is bigger and better than today’s as well. We don’t expect you to be interested in helping us fulfill our vision if we don’t help you fulfill yours.
- Partnership. As a result of our interdependent visions, we see you as a key partner in what we are creating. We recognize that the combined unique abilities and visions of each of our employees is what creates the unique culture that makes us successful.
- Clarity. Because our goals are connected, we need to have a shared vision of what it means to create value. As a result, we want you to have a clear perspective about the outcomes we must achieve and the results we need to drive to get there.
- Value Creation. Finally, we will adopt a rewards philosophy that communicates our commitment to share value with those who help create value. We recognize that this commits us to a self-reinforcing cycle of growth. The greater the value we are able to share, the more evidence we have that our shared vision has been achieved.
It is our strong view that companies that work from this core, philosophical premise find dealing with compensation issues a completely different experience. The process of developing specific metrics and measures for a given pay plan are easier to navigate if we understand that, at the end of the day, we are simply trying to move from being mere wealth creators to becoming wealth multipliers. When that occurs, everyone wins.
If this concept appeals to you, you should sign up today for our webinar next Tuesday entitiled: “Does Your Compensation Strategy Drive or Hinder Growth?” I hope you can join us.
Tags: breakthrough success, compensation philosophy and strategy, Culture of Confidence, Growth, incentives, long-term shareholder value, Pay for performance, Sustained Results
Posted in Business Growth & Compensation, Business Growth and Rewards, Compensation Planning, Current Pay Trends and Topics, Incentive Planning, Key Talent Compensation | No Comments »
February 25th, 2011 by Ken Gibson
It is certainly cliche to say that change will be an ever present part of business life in the 21st century–and beyond. However, cliche or not, many businesses haven’t surrendered to this truth enough to create a plan for managing change and finding the appropriate role of rewards in that process. The reality is, most business leaders know how to talk about change, but don’t know how to build an integrated approach to addressing it through all levels of the organization. And when it comes to compensation issues, these same leaders either put too much of a burden on rewards strategies to engineer the new culture they seek or they isolate the issue so completely that it can have no real measureable bearing on execution and results.
In a recent article in Booz & Co.’s Strategy + Business Magazine entitled “Making Change Happen and Making it Stick,” authors Ashley Harshak, DeAnne Aguirre, and Anna Brown posit five key success factors to making change work in an organization. I find this list to be in harmony with VisionLink’s philosophy about all of the elements that have to come together if any kind of purposeful, productive transformation is going to take hold in a company’s culture. Let’s look at their list and the corresponding role rewards should play in bringing about the improved outcomes you seek.
Five Key Success Factors
- Understand and spell out the impact of the change on people. Good leaders know how change impacts individuals and can speak to how a course alteration or revision will affect different populations within the organization. Creating clarity around this issue and relating it to the personal visions of employees is essential to alignment. Leadership must must also communicate how the proposed changes relate to the shared vision and values of shareholders and other stake holders. Similarly, rewards strategies that are introduced need to be relevant to the core philosophy guiding the change; and, if the new direction impacts pay, employees need to know how the new approach will affect their cash flow, security and/or wealth accumulation opportunities.
- Build an emotional and rational case for change. Most CEOs are pretty good at conveying the rationale behind the change that is being initiated. They are less effective, however, at appealing to the emotional reasons employees should embrace a new direction. In their book Switch, the Heath brothers use the analogy of an elephant, a rider and a path to make a similar point. The rider is the rational part of our reaction to change, the elephant is our emotional core and the path is clarity about the course we need to follow. In a compensation context, we encourage companies to make sure they build a rewards gameplan that will address both structure issues (impact on strategy, cost, productivity) and mindset issues (impact on clarity, partnership and engagement). By doing so, they appeal to all three elements: the rider, the elephant and the path.
- Ensure that the entire leadership team is a role model for the change. If companies want to nurture a performance culture, they must make sure that it starts at the top. That’s why when we speak with companies about building a pay for performance approach to rewards, we suggest it begin with leadership and cascade down from there. Change, if it is effectively engineered, should improve a company from being merely a wealth creator to becoming a wealth mulitplier, one where it becomes clear to everyone how value is magnified then shared. This can’t happen if leadership doesn’t hold itself accountable, and management won’t feel fully accountable unless a good portion of their pay is subject to clear performance standards. Ultimately, those performance standards need to be aligned with the new course the company needs to take.
- Mobilize your people to “own” and accelerate the change. Here, I quote from the authors directly: “The blunt truth is that most change initiatives are done ‘to’ employees, not implemented ‘with’ them or ‘by’ them. Although executives are pushing behavior change from the top and expecting it to cascade through the formal structure, an informal culture left to instinct and chance will likely dig in its heels.” I can’t imagine how an organization can expect to affect meaningful change if its rewards systems and strategies make no attempt to help the workforce think more like owners. This doesn’t mean equity needs to be shared. It does mean, however, that how employees are paid should help them better understand what’s at “stake” and how they should think and execute as a result.
- Embed the change in the fabric of the organization. In this step, leadership needs to communicate the various people-oriented elements of the change and not just the structural components. Continuity maps are good for this–charts and explanatory material that draw clear relationships between the different parts of the change effort and the role each person has in that process. Compensation’s role in this is to help employee’s understand the complete value proposition that is associated with the “future organization” so there is a sense of partnership about bringing about its fulfillment. We encourage companies to construct a Value Statement for key people in particular that brings together in one place all of the elements of their pay package (salary, short-term incentive, long-term incentive, retirement plan, etc.) with a five to 10 year projection of the opportunity. This helps cement the concept of partnership and provides real clarity about what the future holds. Such an approach embeds a vision of “what’s coming” in the minds and hearts of the company’s human resource. Meaningful and measurable change will not occur if this vision doesn’t take hold.
As you consider the multitude of changes your business will need to live with over the coming years, I recommend you consider these guidelines in navigating your course. I don’t promise it will be easy, but my experience is that world class performers learn to integrate this kind of approach consistently and effectively. In the words of Machiavelli: “Whosoever desires constant success must change his conduct with the times.”
Tags: breakthrough success, compensation and the recession, compensation philosophy and strategy, Culture of Confidence, Employee Trust, incentives, key people, long-term shareholder value, Pay for performance, profitability, Sustained Results
Posted in Business Growth & Compensation, Business Growth and Rewards, Compensation Planning, Current Pay Trends and Topics, Incentive Planning, Key Talent Compensation, Managing Talent | No Comments »
February 4th, 2011 by Ken Gibson
The answer is yes…and no. Some interesting research outlined in two recently published books offers evidence that key talent might not be so great were it not for the environment and resources offered by the company for whom they work.
In their book Clever, authors Rob Goffee and Gareth Jones make the point that talented people are as dependent upon the organizations in which they work as those entities are on them. Their premise is that while premier people are not easily replaced in an organization, those individuals often fail to recognize that it is the company’s resources–other team members, intellectual capital, research access, etc.–that allows them to perform at the level they are and to find the fulfillment they enjoy.
In his book Chasing Stars, The Myth of Talent and the Portability of Performance, Boris Groysberg embellishes on this point with even more detailed research. His findings indicate that performance is not as portable as individual talent sometimes thinks and a key employee’s results often sharply diminish when he or she leaves the business for “greener pastures.”
Therefore what? What influence should such findings have on the way companies approach their rewards systems?
I believe these findings support the VisionLink premise that all good compensation strategies should address the two, interdependent visions that exist within every business. There is an ownership vision and an employee vision. Because both have to be realized for the company to experience sustained success, high performing companies develop compensation strategies that build a sense of partnership with employees. These organizations have a philosophy statement that indicates how value that is created in the organization will be shared and what balance will be struck between guaranteed and at risk pay, and short-term versus long-term incentives. Specific plans growing out of such an environment reinforce the interplay between talent, resources and results, and tie rewards to appropriate outcomes that can’t be achieved solely through individual performance.
For more information on how to address the question posed here from a compensation perspective, tune into our upcoming webinar entitled, “How to Build Long-Term Value for Key Producers.” The webinar will be broadcast on February 22. Click here to enroll.
Tags: compensation philosophy and strategy, Culture of Confidence, Employee Trust, key people, long-term shareholder value, Pay for performance, Sustained Results
Posted in Current Pay Trends and Topics, Incentive Planning, Key Talent Compensation, Managing Talent | No Comments »
January 5th, 2011 by Ken Gibson
As a follow up to the blog I posted at the end of last year, I would like to offer some hints for avoiding costly mistakes in your compensation planning for 2011. This post is intended to “fill in the blanks” on the three imperatives I introduced in my last writing.
Over the course of our careers, my partners and I have been in literally hundreds of businesses. Through that combined experience, we have seen much that is good–but probably more that, well…isn’t. Here’s what we’ve learned you must do to avoid the eight most common mistakes businesses make when developing pay strategies.
- Have a Clear Plan Purpose. The question that should be asked before you engineer any new compensation strategy is: “How can we ensure a plan design that will positively contribute to the fulfillment of our company’s vision and strategic plan?” The mistake to be avoided here is having no strategic context for your plan.
- Create a Well-Defined Plan Blueprint and Tested Financial Model. Once you are ready to begin the construction of a new plan design, you should ask the following question: “What will ensure the plan will properly address all financial and legal considerations without forfeiting creativity and innovation?” The mistake to be avoided here is a lack of creative value in your plan and untested or measured outcomes.
- Have a Celebratory Plan Launch. When you get ready to roll out your new plan, be sure you are able to answer this question: “How can we know that the plan rollout reinforces the company vision while building participant confidence and enthusiasm?” Here, the mistake to be avoided is a lack of employee enthusiasm and buy-in as well as having no context for the plan.
- Define a Clear Operations Strategy. Once a plan has been introduced, the first of five new issues to be addressed evokes this question: “What roles and procedures have to be defined and communicated to ensure effective internal communication and administration of the plan?” Here you are seeking to avoid the mistake of an unnecessary or unanticipated burden on the company’s administrative team.
- Institute an Effective Plan Communications and Marketing Strategy. This is the second of the five post-rollout issues that have to be addressed. At this stage, the question to be answered is: “What can be done to ensure meaningful, ongoing communication of the value of the plan to all participants?” The mistake to be avoided by answering that question is disenchanted employees.
- Develop a Compliance Plan. This is number three on our post-rollout “to do” list and the question that needs to be answered is: “How can we be sure that we are fulfilling all legal and regulatory responsibilities for the plan?” The obvious mistake to be avoided by addressing this issue is running afoul of regulatory requirements that can lead to stiff penalties or worse.
- Have Consistent Financial Oversight of the Plan. This is our fourth post-rollout imperative and it is set up by answering the following question: “How will we ensure the plan is being managed financially and is producing an appropriate return on our investment?” Here, the company is hoping to avoid the mistake of having no real measure of its return on human capital or its compensation investment.
- Measure Line of Sight Consistently and Frequently. This is the last of the issues to be addressed once a plan has been launched and leads to one of the most important questions of all: “How will we be sure to keep the plan in line with the evolution of the company vision and business strategy?” With this final step, you are trying to avoid the mistake of having the plan move off course and lose its relevance and impact.
So, there you have it. A sure way to avoid the pitfalls too many fall into. Easier said than done? Of course–but achievable.
To learn more about these eight steps, consider tuning into our webinar broadcast later this month. It will address this topic in detail in a one hour session on January 25. Click here to register now for this event.
Tags: breakthrough success, compensation philosophy and strategy, Culture of Confidence, Employee Trust, Pay for performance, Sustained Results
Posted in Compensation Planning, Current Pay Trends and Topics | No Comments »
December 22nd, 2010 by Ken Gibson
I would like to make a plea before we close out 2010. As you examine your compensation and benefit strategies for the new year, please consider three outcomes your approach should (dare I say, must?) include. I would even go so far as to call these imperatives for any company hoping to have a workforce that drives growth in 2011 and beyond.
- Strategy–ask yourself this question: “Do our compensation and benefits strategies drive execution of key strategic initiatives and make the achievement of the company’s growth goals more likely?” For this to happen, at a minimum there must be alignment between the business plan of the company and rewards. Your pay and benefits strategies should also reflect a philosophy that creates appropriate ties between pay and performance in a way that nurtures a sense of partnership with the workforce and instills an ownership mindset.
- Cost–in this regard, the question to be asked is: “Do we institute practices that ensure we create greater compensation and benefits efficiencies and lower or eliminate unnecessary expense?” Here the issue is establishing the means by which a company routinely examines the cost structure of all its plans, introduces appropriate cost sharing arrangements, expands/inplements flexibility of benefits, increases education on fiscal practices and institutes “well-being” initiatives that help lower overall health benefit costs and decrease time away from work.
- Productivity–with this final imperative, the critical question to be answered is: “Do we generate a measurable, positive return on the company’s human capital investment?” To accomplish this, companies should ensure that their approach to incentive planning is self financing, involves sound metrics and that programs are only implemented once they have been appropriately modeled and tested. The company must then institute appropropriate measurement tools to track its real return on the compensation and benefit dollars that have been paid out.
As you examine these areas and institute changes accordingly, please share your successes and frustrations in the comments section of this blog so others can benefit from your experience. You can also email me with your thoughts at kgibson@vladvisors.com.
For more information on how some of these things can be successfully accomplished, please check out the Information and Resources section of our website or the webinars we have archived on our site.
Tags: compensation philosophy and strategy, Culture of Confidence, Growth, incentives, key people, Pay for performance
Posted in Business Growth & Compensation, Business Growth and Rewards, Current Pay Trends and Topics, Incentive Planning, Uncategorized | No Comments »
October 29th, 2010 by Ken Gibson
I lead a management society group that puts on a special conference once a year in the Fall. Entitled, “The Performance Breakthrough Conference,” this event features a keynote speaker followed by a series of breakout sessions on a range of topics, all led by a cadre of outstanding business professionals. The event relies on the generosity of some in the business community to donate their time on behalf of people looking for tools, resources and/or inspiration to reach the next performance “breakthrough” in their lives, personally or professionally.
This year’s event was held last month. It was an extraordinary success primarily because of the efforts of our outstanding presenters, each of whom is a consummate professional with significant value to offer. As an acknowledgment of their contribution to this year’s conference, I’d like you to be aware of them and their businesses, each of whom I can recommend.
Kevin Hall was our keynote speaker. Kevin is a business coach and wordsmith that has authored an incredible book entitled Aspire. The book talks about the power of words to transform our lives and understand our true purpose. Kevin is a nationally renowned speaker who also coaches executives and other leaders on purpose related issues.
Molly Wendell is President of Executives Network, a unique association for “C” level executives in transition. Molly helped attendees learn about what “Results Oriented” networking is about and how it’s done effectively. Check out Molly’s website for information on her book, The New Job Search.
Jason Lavin is CEO of Golden Communications, a firm that does web design, search engine optimization and social networking strategies. Jason also conducts a seminar series entitled Excel-Your-Business, which helps business leaders learn how to optimize the results they are getting from their websites through search optimization strategies and techniques. He shared that same information with attendees at our conference.
Rod McDermott is co-founder and Managing Partner of McDermott and Bull, an executive search firm headquartered in Irvine, CA. Rod helped attendees understand how they can best prepare for the “next” career opportunity they are seeking, whether that is finding a job or upgrading their position. Most of McDermott and Bull’s work is done representing companies that are looking for premier “C” level talent.
Mark Kohler is a partner in the law firm Kyler, Kohler, Ostermiller and Sorenson, a business and estate planning law firm. Mark is an attorney and CPA with dynamic presentation skills and an unique ability to help navigate complex legal and tax issues, and develop effective strategies for both. He is an outstanding speaker in high demand. He helped attendees learn about the issues they should consider when starting a new business.
Kate Peters is a vocal coach that teaches “C” level executives how to become more powerful communicators by understanding vocal dynamics and how they impact one’s image and message. She helped attendees learn how to “find their voice” and make it heard more effectively in all of the forums where communication is essential. Check out Kate’s website for information on her book, Can You Hear Me Now?
Please take a moment to pursue the links to these outstanding professionals. My thanks goes out to each of them for their contribution to our conference and their generosity in sharing their time and talents.
Tags: breakthrough success, Culture of Confidence, Employee Trust, Sustained Results
Posted in Business Growth and Rewards, Recession Strategies, Uncategorized | No Comments »
August 11th, 2010 by Ken Gibson
Jack Welch once said: “If you pick the right people and give them the opportunity to spread their wings and put compensation as a carrier behind it you almost don’t have to manage them.”
What did he mean?
Well, I certainly don’t claim any cosmic ability to “channel” Jack Welch. That said, I think some assumptions can be made about the point he is trying to make. He means that when you effectively link the roles and expectations of good people to the company’s business plan, compensation–when properly engineered–naturally becomes a key driver of results. “As a carrier” means this occurs through an unforced yet strategic process of alignment. When that happens, a stewardship culture emerges; one in which your best talent takes ownership of outcomes. This occurs because your people feel like partners in the company’s success; they helped create growth and the compensation system subsequently rewarded them for it.
This concept is completely consistent with VisionLink’s view of incentives. They are not tools of manipulation, rather key ingredients of a unified financial vision for growing the business. They unleash rather than suppress the intrinsic motivators we all possess.
To ensure that your compensation becomes a “carrier,” the following five things must consistent occur once you have created then launched a specific pay program:
- Communicate and Promote–don’t assume the plan is understood and remembered. Remind, celebrate, explain and reinforce.
- Administer Effectively–so people feel they have ready access to information and it’s clear from whom it can be obtained.
- Stay Compliant–so there are no legal or financial surprises for either the participants or the company, especially where ERISA, IRS or other statutory guidelines apply.
- Model and Monitor–anticipate ahead of time what the financial commitment will be and then consistently measure actual results against targets; then adjust the plan accordingly.
- Measure ”Line of Sight”–so you know whether you’re creating effective links between vision, strategy, roles, expectations and pay.
Follow this pattern and you are on your way to a world-class approach to compensation that is a true “carrier.”
Tags: compensation, compensation philosophy and strategy, Culture of Confidence, Employee Trust, Growth, incentives, Pay for performance, Sustained Results
Posted in Business Growth & Compensation, Business Growth and Rewards, Current Pay Trends and Topics, Incentive Planning, Uncategorized | 1 Comment »