But then how do you account for a decreased in performance due to factors which are out of your control. A CEO would say it was unfair that his pay was decreased if the company takes a loss if, say, the economy went into a recession that year.
And that differs from your bonus rating, etc., of any rank-and-file employee already how? It's already in place for the underlings so adding the same boilerplate verbiage to an exec's pay structure is easy. What are you? Some "consultant" who makes mountains out of common-sense molehills?
Fine - don't tie BASE compensation to it. If the company doesn't pay the people who actually do the front-line jobs keeping the customers happy a bonus because, you know, "it was a tough year and we faced unexpected challenges" then the LAST person that should get a bonus is some C-level or board-level executive. And last I checked - most of them get princely sums when the company does well, and still rather fat bonuses when they do poorly.
And my apologies. As a consultant I get to sit in on board meetings when "major decisions are wrestled with by the big dogs" and I have to admit - there isn't a SINGLE decision any exec has made that couldn't have just as easily been made my a mid-level manager who understands the process and has a modicum of intelligence.
Those same underlings upon whose shoulders the C-level and board executives stand, provide all the executive summaries (if they're good) and all the exec has to do is accept or reject it. 90% of the decisions are common sense and the other 10% is industry knowledge and luck.
This whole elevated stratum that we put "executives" in saying "oh, they get paid to make the tough decisions" is ************. They're no different than some rank-and-file managers who managed to make some key decisions to be in the right place at the right time to get to be part of the "in" crowd.
Am I biased? Of course! But as a consultant I make an awful lot of money just re-packaging and distilling the facts from the whining I get from the underlings to give the C-level guys and gals the perfect powerpoint and administrivial drivel to "make the obvious choices"... And yeah - some of the people I interview are WAY good at their jobs - they just lack the people skills necessary to pull a "Tim Cook" and have the stones, the drive and the leadership ability to pull things off.
Yep. I'm one of the "Bobs". It's a great job and yes - I sleep rather well at night - except when I realize some of the people I recommend getting axed are only there because the MANAGERS and DIRECTORS made the poor choices to throw bodies at every little problem and pulled them in to begin with. A few of those I was actually able to find positions at other companies where I knew needed the help and they thrived. But sadly I have only been able to sharpen my blade against the throats of only a few of the most obvious bottom-feeding executives. They are notoriously hard to kill and have very thick leather-like skins that can deflect all but the sharpest blades.
But when I am able to bag one of those cancerous growths? I do it with skill and subtlety that would make Machiavelli proud.
...However I think I'll retire and be a lawyer. Those guys get paid whether companies succeed or fail in the broadest sense...
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