SlideShare a Scribd company logo
How to Build a Small Business
Bonus Plan
22
7700 Irvine Center Drive, Suite 930  Irvine, CA 92618  949-852-2288
www.VLadvisors.com  www.PhantomStockOnline.com
Today’s Presenter:
Tom Miller
President
(949) 265-5700
tmiller@vladvisors.com
2
Vision: Help Businesses Build and
Sustain a Performance Culture
Accelerate performance capabilities by designing
pay strategies that transform employees into
growth partners.
3
If you do that…
• Quality of talent will improve.
• Employee engagement will expand.
• Performance will be magnified.
• Business growth will be accelerated.
• Shareholder value will increase.
4
55
Today’s Focus
Bonus Plan:
 Premises:
 What makes a plan successful?
 Goals
 Metrics
 Communication
5
66
If you don’t have a bonus plan . . .
 Either you don’t think you’re
ready
 Or you don’t have the
confidence you can do it
right
6
77
Incentive Plan Denial
(for companies that do have a plan)
Two categories of companies :
 Those that know they have bad bonus
plans
 Those that think they have good plans
but actually have bad ones.
7
88
The Data
World at Work 2016 Survey
Only 10% of responders indicated they
felt their annual incentive plan was
effective.
These responders were, generally,
representatives of larger, successful
companies. If large companies can’t get
it right (i.e., those with access to high-
paid consultants and experienced
executive leadership), what chance do
smaller companies have?
99
VisionLink’s Experience
 Hundreds of plans
 Based on the standards embraced by major industries,
consultants, and HR professionals for nearly a century
 When examined—not proving effective (not improving
productivity)
9
1010
Why?
“…when financial incentives are
applied to increase…motivation,
intrinsic motivation diminishes. A
meta-analysis of 128 independent
studies conclusively confirmed this
effect.”
(“Stop Paying Executives for Performance,”
HBR, February 23, 2016)
10
1111
Hmmm…
 Traditional bonus plans
aren’t effective
 But you have a commitment
to your employees
 Can you simply raise salaries
and compete for talent . . .
and create a pay-for-
performance culture?
So, what are you to
conclude?
11
1212
Resolving the Paradox
Cause & Effect:
Most bonus plans fail
precisely because they
attempt to impact
behavior. The data are
complementary, not
contradictory.
12
1313
What to do?
Build a partnership relationship
with employees by sharing
financial value with those who
help create it.
13
1414
Promoting a Partnership Relationship
Key to:
1. Avoiding manipulation
2. Eliminating entitlement
3. Stimulating innovation and
stewardship
4. Creating alignment
1515
Premises, Premises
A premise is defined as “a
proposition supporting or
helping to support a
conclusion.”
One adopts a premise (believes
in a concept or principle) and
then acts in accordance with it in
the hope of achieving a certain
result. However, the desired
outcome can only be fulfilled
(presumably) if the premise is
correct.
1616
The Wrong Premise (the typical one)
Influence Behavior Through Careful
Selection of Plan Metrics
Reward your employees for achieving
results that are as close as possible to their
job duties. This typically includes the effort
to “select the best metrics” for each
employee or at least for every department.
Then assume that all the collective mini-
improvements will roll up into shareholder
value creation.
16
1717
Metrics Focus
8 Problems
1. Impossible to link every metric to true
value creation.
2. Multiple KPIs create confusion and sap
motivation.
3. A focus on behavior incentives can lead
to the opposite behavior.
4. Difficult to find metrics for every
position.
5. Results may be manipulated or
loopholes exploited.
6. Impossible to equalize metrics across
individuals and departments.
7. Unintended and unanticipated negative
consequences.
8. Pursuit of “perfect” metrics is a time
waster.
1818
Results, not Methods
"You cannot hold
people
responsible for
results if you
supervise their
methods.“
(Stephen R. Covey)
18
1919
The Right Premise
Reward employees for
achieving the
shareholders’ most
important financial
results and treat them
as growth partners.
2020
Change in Terminology & Mindset
Value-sharing instead
of paying incentives.
20
2121
Shareholder’s Most Important Result
Sustainable and growing
profitability
21
2222
Central Metric
(for funding the plan)
Focus on One of These:
 Profit
 Increase in Profits (% or $)
 (Sometimes: Revenue Growth)
22
2323
Not Just Profit but Productivity Profit
Productivity profit is
that surplus that can
be attributable to
the productivity of
your people, not just
your capital at work.
2424
Case Study
24
2525
Keith Williams  Assumed leadership of
UL in 2005
 Company carrying
considerable debt
 Losing market share
 Low employee morale
 UL had become
bureaucratic and “siloed”
25
2626
Core Changes Shift from “Incentives” to
“Value Sharing”
 Took away local measurements
driving management incentive
plans—all paid on same metrics
 “We live together and we die
together”
 Aligned everyone behind
company success
 “I call it ‘pay the company first.’ ”
26
2727
How do you apply this in a small co?
 Identify your most
important “profit” metric
 Select the threshold
amount of that profit that
justifies employee
bonuses
 Begin sharing value above
that threshold
2828
“Basically, up to the
company’s operating
profit target, all of the
profits go to the
company; and only after
that target is met, do we
start funding the
incentive pool.”
Example: If UL’s target is
$80 million--
 100% of first $80 in
profit goes to company
 The next $20 million
goes to the incentive
pool
 From there on, 50/50
between company &
incentive pool
Pay the Company First
2929
Pay the Company First
Once value creation is defined,
compensation can follow a formula
for sharing value in a way that
aligns key producers with the
company’s business plan and
priorities.
29
3030
Setting Payout Thresholds
 Base
 Target (budget)
 Superior
30
3131
Other Metrics
Minimum profit thresholds
must be met first. Then…
 Department or team metrics
 Non-correlated factors
(customer retention, customer
or client increase, etc.)
 Individual performance
metrics
3232
Org Unit Performance
 Overall company performance should be primary objective
 Org Unit performance can be a secondary objective
▪ Some of the best incentive plans in
the world are only tied to company
performance
▪ Org units should be utilized when
employee line of sight is heavily (if
not solely) focused on the org unit
3333
 Allocation to plan participants
contingent on:
 Company Performance – Employees
should have all or a majority portion of
their bonus based on company
performance
 Org Unit Performance – A portion of an
employee’s bonus can be allocated based
on department, location, division,
or business unit
Plan Weighting/Allocation
3434
Plan Weighting/Allocation
 Make overall company performance the
primary objective (e.g. ~60 - 100%)
 Organizational unit success should be
secondary objective (e.g. ~40 - 20%)
 Weight the overall incentive:
3535
Individual Performance
 Trend is to disconnect performance from incentive pay
 Performance Management is still important
 Managers more likely to be honest about performance if
incentives are not directly correlated to performance
rating
 If performance is deemed “Unacceptable” discretion
should be utilized to eliminate incentive payment
35
3636
Headlines
Performance
Management
36
3737
Plan Discretion
What about employees who made
special contributions over the
course of the year?
 Create a discretionary reserve
inside of plan funding
 Reserved for “exceptional”
performers only
 Often held at the top of the
organization (not cascaded
down to individual managers).
 Nomination process.
 Don’t wait until the end of the
year to recognize performance.
 Essentially, these are funded
“spot” awards
3838
Is the “Right” Premise Always Right?
Exceptions
 Sales Compensation
 Project Specific
Incentives
 Time Periods or Projects
with no Projected Profits
 Revenue Instead of
Profits
3939
Remember the Core Principle
The core principle behind
the right premise is to avoid
trying to micromanage
behavior through an
incentive program (“do this
and you get that”).
4040
Let’s Restate the Principles
behind a Successful Plan
 Adopt the Right Premise
 Treat employees like partners
 Focus on outcomes, not behaviors
 Trust and engage
 Don’t over-engineer through key performance
metrics (a sure indicator of failure)
 Build the Funding around Profitability
 No payment if Base not achieved
 Emphasize Target and Superior
 Use Org Units as a Secondary Component
(if you use at all)
 Use Individual Performance Prudently
 Reflect employee performance in the merit program
 Allow for some discretion in the value-sharing plan
 One last very important thing (see next slide)
40
4141
 Crucial to the success of the plan
 Employee communication
statements should communicate
incentive target opportunity
 Regular performance updates
during the plan year
 “Partners” understand basic
company performance
 Private companies don’t typically
disclose all financial information to
all employee “Partners”:
 Financial performance in private
companies communicated via
percentage against target
 “After Q1 we are tracking 95%
against our ‘Target’ financial
performance”
4242
Reinforce Line of Sight
Rewards
What’s in it for
me?
Vision
Where?
Strategy
How ?
Roles and
Expectations
My Contribution?
Rewards
What’s in it
for me?
42
4343
Market a Future that’s Relevant
 Communicate desire for a growth
partnership
 Demonstrate commitment
 To the future business
 To key contributors
 Promote, don’t just communicate
 Be consistent
43
4444
Market a Future that’s Relevant
 Here’s our future
 Here’s how we’re going to get
there
 Here’s the role we picture for
you
 Here’s how we encourage our
people to grow and contribute
 Here’s our philosophy
about pay and rewards
 Here are our specific
pay programs
 Here’s how our pay
programs could work
for you if we achieve
our plan
44
4545
Employee Value Statement
Year 1 2 3 4 5
Targeted
Results
100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
Salary $160,000 $166,400 $173,056 $179,878 $187,177
STVS $64,000 $66,560 $69,222 $71,991 74,871
LTVS
(EOY)
-- $74,000 $186,000 $311,000 $448,000
401(k)
@7%
$17,120 $36,123 $57,169 $80,428 $106,086
Total
Cash
$224,000 $232,960 $242,278 $251,970 $262,048
Wealth
Accrual
$17,120 $110,123 $243,169 $391,428 $554,086
Total
Value
$241,120 $567,083 $942,407 $1,342,636 $1,767,343
45
4646
Chronology for Building a
Successful STIP
1. Follow the Right Premise by establishing a basic plan approach
(scope, funding parameters, company only or departments)
2. Select your participants and organize them by group (tier or level)
3. Create a budget (total value of the pool at various performance
thresholds); allocate pool levels by employee tier
4. Assign your metrics (the Key Performance Indicators that produce
awards)
5. Allocate employees’ awards between company and business unit
results
6. Study, test, and confirm values
46
4747
Vitals for Operating a Successful
Short-term Incentive Plan
1. Communicate the plan details early and often
2. Demonstrate the plan value opportunities on an individual basis
3. Reveal plan progress throughout the year (at least quarterly)
4. Create plan “rules” and live by them
5. Be flexible and recognize special contributions periodically (keep a
reserve)
6. Review and renew the plan quickly at the end of the year
47
4848
How doesVisionLink help?
We employ an
interactive online
tool and teach you
how to use it.
We show you how
to communicate
and manage the
plan effectively.
We build your
plan with you
(as a DesignTeam).
How Does VisionLink Help?
48
4949
www.BonusRight.com
www.BonusRight.com
49
50
What will it do?
5151
Indicate on survey if you
would like more
information including a
demo.
5252
Today’s Presenter:
Tom Miller
President
(949) 265-5700
tmiller@vladvisors.com
7700 Irvine Center Drive, Suite 930  Irvine, CA 92618  949-852-2288
www.VLadvisors.com  www.PhantomStockOnline.com
ThankYou!
7700 Irvine Center Drive, Suite 930  Irvine, CA 92618  949-852-2288
www.VLadvisors.com  www.PhantomStockOnline.com  www.BonusRight.com

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How to Build a Small Business Bonus Plan

  • 1. How to Build a Small Business Bonus Plan
  • 2. 22 7700 Irvine Center Drive, Suite 930  Irvine, CA 92618  949-852-2288 www.VLadvisors.com  www.PhantomStockOnline.com Today’s Presenter: Tom Miller President (949) 265-5700 tmiller@vladvisors.com 2
  • 3. Vision: Help Businesses Build and Sustain a Performance Culture Accelerate performance capabilities by designing pay strategies that transform employees into growth partners. 3
  • 4. If you do that… • Quality of talent will improve. • Employee engagement will expand. • Performance will be magnified. • Business growth will be accelerated. • Shareholder value will increase. 4
  • 5. 55 Today’s Focus Bonus Plan:  Premises:  What makes a plan successful?  Goals  Metrics  Communication 5
  • 6. 66 If you don’t have a bonus plan . . .  Either you don’t think you’re ready  Or you don’t have the confidence you can do it right 6
  • 7. 77 Incentive Plan Denial (for companies that do have a plan) Two categories of companies :  Those that know they have bad bonus plans  Those that think they have good plans but actually have bad ones. 7
  • 8. 88 The Data World at Work 2016 Survey Only 10% of responders indicated they felt their annual incentive plan was effective. These responders were, generally, representatives of larger, successful companies. If large companies can’t get it right (i.e., those with access to high- paid consultants and experienced executive leadership), what chance do smaller companies have?
  • 9. 99 VisionLink’s Experience  Hundreds of plans  Based on the standards embraced by major industries, consultants, and HR professionals for nearly a century  When examined—not proving effective (not improving productivity) 9
  • 10. 1010 Why? “…when financial incentives are applied to increase…motivation, intrinsic motivation diminishes. A meta-analysis of 128 independent studies conclusively confirmed this effect.” (“Stop Paying Executives for Performance,” HBR, February 23, 2016) 10
  • 11. 1111 Hmmm…  Traditional bonus plans aren’t effective  But you have a commitment to your employees  Can you simply raise salaries and compete for talent . . . and create a pay-for- performance culture? So, what are you to conclude? 11
  • 12. 1212 Resolving the Paradox Cause & Effect: Most bonus plans fail precisely because they attempt to impact behavior. The data are complementary, not contradictory. 12
  • 13. 1313 What to do? Build a partnership relationship with employees by sharing financial value with those who help create it. 13
  • 14. 1414 Promoting a Partnership Relationship Key to: 1. Avoiding manipulation 2. Eliminating entitlement 3. Stimulating innovation and stewardship 4. Creating alignment
  • 15. 1515 Premises, Premises A premise is defined as “a proposition supporting or helping to support a conclusion.” One adopts a premise (believes in a concept or principle) and then acts in accordance with it in the hope of achieving a certain result. However, the desired outcome can only be fulfilled (presumably) if the premise is correct.
  • 16. 1616 The Wrong Premise (the typical one) Influence Behavior Through Careful Selection of Plan Metrics Reward your employees for achieving results that are as close as possible to their job duties. This typically includes the effort to “select the best metrics” for each employee or at least for every department. Then assume that all the collective mini- improvements will roll up into shareholder value creation. 16
  • 17. 1717 Metrics Focus 8 Problems 1. Impossible to link every metric to true value creation. 2. Multiple KPIs create confusion and sap motivation. 3. A focus on behavior incentives can lead to the opposite behavior. 4. Difficult to find metrics for every position. 5. Results may be manipulated or loopholes exploited. 6. Impossible to equalize metrics across individuals and departments. 7. Unintended and unanticipated negative consequences. 8. Pursuit of “perfect” metrics is a time waster.
  • 18. 1818 Results, not Methods "You cannot hold people responsible for results if you supervise their methods.“ (Stephen R. Covey) 18
  • 19. 1919 The Right Premise Reward employees for achieving the shareholders’ most important financial results and treat them as growth partners.
  • 20. 2020 Change in Terminology & Mindset Value-sharing instead of paying incentives. 20
  • 21. 2121 Shareholder’s Most Important Result Sustainable and growing profitability 21
  • 22. 2222 Central Metric (for funding the plan) Focus on One of These:  Profit  Increase in Profits (% or $)  (Sometimes: Revenue Growth) 22
  • 23. 2323 Not Just Profit but Productivity Profit Productivity profit is that surplus that can be attributable to the productivity of your people, not just your capital at work.
  • 25. 2525 Keith Williams  Assumed leadership of UL in 2005  Company carrying considerable debt  Losing market share  Low employee morale  UL had become bureaucratic and “siloed” 25
  • 26. 2626 Core Changes Shift from “Incentives” to “Value Sharing”  Took away local measurements driving management incentive plans—all paid on same metrics  “We live together and we die together”  Aligned everyone behind company success  “I call it ‘pay the company first.’ ” 26
  • 27. 2727 How do you apply this in a small co?  Identify your most important “profit” metric  Select the threshold amount of that profit that justifies employee bonuses  Begin sharing value above that threshold
  • 28. 2828 “Basically, up to the company’s operating profit target, all of the profits go to the company; and only after that target is met, do we start funding the incentive pool.” Example: If UL’s target is $80 million--  100% of first $80 in profit goes to company  The next $20 million goes to the incentive pool  From there on, 50/50 between company & incentive pool Pay the Company First
  • 29. 2929 Pay the Company First Once value creation is defined, compensation can follow a formula for sharing value in a way that aligns key producers with the company’s business plan and priorities. 29
  • 30. 3030 Setting Payout Thresholds  Base  Target (budget)  Superior 30
  • 31. 3131 Other Metrics Minimum profit thresholds must be met first. Then…  Department or team metrics  Non-correlated factors (customer retention, customer or client increase, etc.)  Individual performance metrics
  • 32. 3232 Org Unit Performance  Overall company performance should be primary objective  Org Unit performance can be a secondary objective ▪ Some of the best incentive plans in the world are only tied to company performance ▪ Org units should be utilized when employee line of sight is heavily (if not solely) focused on the org unit
  • 33. 3333  Allocation to plan participants contingent on:  Company Performance – Employees should have all or a majority portion of their bonus based on company performance  Org Unit Performance – A portion of an employee’s bonus can be allocated based on department, location, division, or business unit Plan Weighting/Allocation
  • 34. 3434 Plan Weighting/Allocation  Make overall company performance the primary objective (e.g. ~60 - 100%)  Organizational unit success should be secondary objective (e.g. ~40 - 20%)  Weight the overall incentive:
  • 35. 3535 Individual Performance  Trend is to disconnect performance from incentive pay  Performance Management is still important  Managers more likely to be honest about performance if incentives are not directly correlated to performance rating  If performance is deemed “Unacceptable” discretion should be utilized to eliminate incentive payment 35
  • 37. 3737 Plan Discretion What about employees who made special contributions over the course of the year?  Create a discretionary reserve inside of plan funding  Reserved for “exceptional” performers only  Often held at the top of the organization (not cascaded down to individual managers).  Nomination process.  Don’t wait until the end of the year to recognize performance.  Essentially, these are funded “spot” awards
  • 38. 3838 Is the “Right” Premise Always Right? Exceptions  Sales Compensation  Project Specific Incentives  Time Periods or Projects with no Projected Profits  Revenue Instead of Profits
  • 39. 3939 Remember the Core Principle The core principle behind the right premise is to avoid trying to micromanage behavior through an incentive program (“do this and you get that”).
  • 40. 4040 Let’s Restate the Principles behind a Successful Plan  Adopt the Right Premise  Treat employees like partners  Focus on outcomes, not behaviors  Trust and engage  Don’t over-engineer through key performance metrics (a sure indicator of failure)  Build the Funding around Profitability  No payment if Base not achieved  Emphasize Target and Superior  Use Org Units as a Secondary Component (if you use at all)  Use Individual Performance Prudently  Reflect employee performance in the merit program  Allow for some discretion in the value-sharing plan  One last very important thing (see next slide) 40
  • 41. 4141  Crucial to the success of the plan  Employee communication statements should communicate incentive target opportunity  Regular performance updates during the plan year  “Partners” understand basic company performance  Private companies don’t typically disclose all financial information to all employee “Partners”:  Financial performance in private companies communicated via percentage against target  “After Q1 we are tracking 95% against our ‘Target’ financial performance”
  • 42. 4242 Reinforce Line of Sight Rewards What’s in it for me? Vision Where? Strategy How ? Roles and Expectations My Contribution? Rewards What’s in it for me? 42
  • 43. 4343 Market a Future that’s Relevant  Communicate desire for a growth partnership  Demonstrate commitment  To the future business  To key contributors  Promote, don’t just communicate  Be consistent 43
  • 44. 4444 Market a Future that’s Relevant  Here’s our future  Here’s how we’re going to get there  Here’s the role we picture for you  Here’s how we encourage our people to grow and contribute  Here’s our philosophy about pay and rewards  Here are our specific pay programs  Here’s how our pay programs could work for you if we achieve our plan 44
  • 45. 4545 Employee Value Statement Year 1 2 3 4 5 Targeted Results 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% Salary $160,000 $166,400 $173,056 $179,878 $187,177 STVS $64,000 $66,560 $69,222 $71,991 74,871 LTVS (EOY) -- $74,000 $186,000 $311,000 $448,000 401(k) @7% $17,120 $36,123 $57,169 $80,428 $106,086 Total Cash $224,000 $232,960 $242,278 $251,970 $262,048 Wealth Accrual $17,120 $110,123 $243,169 $391,428 $554,086 Total Value $241,120 $567,083 $942,407 $1,342,636 $1,767,343 45
  • 46. 4646 Chronology for Building a Successful STIP 1. Follow the Right Premise by establishing a basic plan approach (scope, funding parameters, company only or departments) 2. Select your participants and organize them by group (tier or level) 3. Create a budget (total value of the pool at various performance thresholds); allocate pool levels by employee tier 4. Assign your metrics (the Key Performance Indicators that produce awards) 5. Allocate employees’ awards between company and business unit results 6. Study, test, and confirm values 46
  • 47. 4747 Vitals for Operating a Successful Short-term Incentive Plan 1. Communicate the plan details early and often 2. Demonstrate the plan value opportunities on an individual basis 3. Reveal plan progress throughout the year (at least quarterly) 4. Create plan “rules” and live by them 5. Be flexible and recognize special contributions periodically (keep a reserve) 6. Review and renew the plan quickly at the end of the year 47
  • 48. 4848 How doesVisionLink help? We employ an interactive online tool and teach you how to use it. We show you how to communicate and manage the plan effectively. We build your plan with you (as a DesignTeam). How Does VisionLink Help? 48
  • 51. 5151 Indicate on survey if you would like more information including a demo.
  • 52. 5252 Today’s Presenter: Tom Miller President (949) 265-5700 tmiller@vladvisors.com 7700 Irvine Center Drive, Suite 930  Irvine, CA 92618  949-852-2288 www.VLadvisors.com  www.PhantomStockOnline.com ThankYou! 7700 Irvine Center Drive, Suite 930  Irvine, CA 92618  949-852-2288 www.VLadvisors.com  www.PhantomStockOnline.com  www.BonusRight.com