View All | March 2017 Newsletter Edition

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With the SEC requiring greater transparency with regard to executive compensation, many organizations — not just public corporations that are bound by SEC disclosure rules — have begun to rethink the issue. Shifting public expectations are causing organizations to redefine how, and to what extent, executive initiative and leadership is rewarded.

At most organizations, base salary is merely the starting point of a compensation package. And as the executive compensation debate has raged on, two of the most noteworthy issues that have been brought under a microscope are severance pay and executive perks. There are numerous examples of excess when it comes to each type of compensation.

Executive Perks: A Bygone Cliché?

When the public learned of the many alleged transgressions of former Tyco CEO Dennis Kozlowski, one of the excesses that became symbolic of his reign was a video of his wife’s million-dollar, company-paid birthday party. Even Jack Welch, a public figure with a good reputation as an executive, came under public scrutiny when his perks from G.E. were revealed as a result of his divorce battle.

The public debate that has ensued since that time — along with SEC Disclosure Rules requiring certain types of benefits be declared as a form of compensation by public corporations — has caused many organizations to re-evaluate the breadth and depth of their policies.

The reconsideration of fringe benefits has been true for public corporations, private companies and not-for-profit organizations. The re-evaluation has run the gamut from considerable perks, such as private planes, to moderate perks, like country club memberships and company cars. It has even extended to a re-evaluation of mini-perks as well. For example, according to a proxy filed with the SEC in 2007, Cigna Corp. eliminated paying for executive memberships in a book-of-the-month club.

Executive Severance Packages: Going, Going, Gone?

Another compensation issue that has come under scrutiny — particularly with regard to public companies — is the escalation of executive severance packages.

When Bob Nardelli was ousted from The Home Depot, for example, he left with a severance package in excess of $200 million. Hank McKinnell of Pfizer received a payout of approximately $200 million.

These payouts are often negotiated as part of a benefits package prior to a CEO being hired. The above instances not only raised eyebrows, they raised the attention of the SEC, which now requires that potential severance packages for corporate executives to be detailed in proxy reports as a part of executive compensation disclosure.

In a letter to Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. shareholders, Chairman of the Board Warren Buffett made the following criticism:

“Getting fired can produce a particularly bountiful payday for a CEO…Forget the old maxim about nothing succeeding like success: Today, in the executive suite, the all too-prevalent rule is that nothing succeeds like failure.”

Such criticism may result in a trend toward downsizing severance packages.

Creating a Balanced Approach

When deciding what works best for your organization, keep in mind these examples of excess and try to strike a balance between rewarding leadership and having an executive compensation policy that will satisfy shareholders and/or the public at large.

An executive compensation policy should both attract the best talent possible while remaining defensible and rational.

Copyright 2017