Compensation
09/07/2015

What Behavior Does Your Incentive Plan Reward?


Nearly all banks, regardless of size, view growth as a key driver of success. What differentiates Bank A from Bank B are the unique strategies they have formulated to achieve that growth. However, when it comes to compensation, regardless of business strategy, there’s often just a single question asked: “How do my peers pay?”

While it is important to understand market norms regarding pay levels and practices, this information is most impactful when followed by additional questions including “What implications do those practices have for us?” and “How can we use compensation in a way that draws the right talent and ensures success?”

Assessing whether or not an executive compensation program is working requires going beyond market data and compliance to determine the program’s degree of alignment with the bank’s business and talent strategies. The following steps can help compensation committees think through this alignment with their program design.

Step 1: Define Path to Success
The ultimate goal of all banks is to create value for stakeholders over the long term. But in the interim, “success” can be defined as the effective execution of the bank’s chosen strategy. For example, an acquisition strategy often seeks to create higher returns and shareholder value through market share and economies of scale. Examples of strategies include:

Strategy Measure of Success
 Acquisition  Higher returns through market share and economies of scale
 Exit/Liquidity (e.g., Sale, IPO)  Maximize growth through capital infusion
 Organic Growth  Stable and growing returns
 Niche  Profitability through higher margin business

Step 2: Consider Compensation Implications
Compensation committees should consider whether the compensation structure is helping execute the strategy and deliver results. Let’s stay with the example of an acquiring bank. When an acquisition is made, there can be significant noise in the financial statements along with one-time merger costs. If the annual incentive program is formulaic and heavily based on income-related metrics, it could very well discourage management from seeking acquisitions. Further, the plan may not be designed to reward key elements that can determine whether or not the benefits of the strategy are realized. For example, in the near term, it may be entirely appropriate to reward executives for bringing quality deals to the board for consideration. Later, executives should be rewarded for ensuring merger integration is timely and efficient.

The following outlines common compensation design challenges and considerations:

Strategy Challenges Considerations
Acquisition Financial results during the acquisition stage are highly variable Does the annual plan include qualitative measurement to account for variability?

Are there adjustments or exclusions for incentive calculations?

Is there greater weight on equity compensation to reward long-term results?

Exit/Liquidity (e.g., Sale, IPO) Short-term profitability and results related to franchise value are important Does the annual plan focus on profitability and results related to franchise value (e.g., deposit and loan growth)?

Is there greater weight on equity compensation to align interests?

Are implications of the change-in-control agreement terms clear?

Organic Growth Results are driven through increases in market share and cost reduction Is the annual plan focused on profitability and moderate growth in key areas?

Is wealth accumulation through equity, retirement benefits or both?

Niche Achieving profitability through higher margin business Is the annual plan appropriately customized for business lines?

Is differentiation in compensation required to hire and retain specialized talent?

Step 3: Tailor the Program
Using our acquisition strategy example, a compensation program might be redesigned so equity encompasses a larger portion of incentive pay, taking pressure off immediate financial results and incenting deals that are accretive over time.  The annual incentives could play a lesser role and continue to use profitability of the legacy lines of business, but would be complemented with measures that focus on deal flow and integration.

Step 4: Revisit and Refine
Compensation committees should test the outcomes of the compensation program annually and refine as necessary:

  • Did the program attract talent and retain our best people?
  • Were pay and performance aligned?
  • Did our results move us toward our strategic goal? If not, did the compensation program play an unintended role in not achieving objectives?
  • Have milestones and objectives changed in a way that the program should be refined?

Moving beyond market practices to align compensation programs to a specific strategy can provide a competitive advantage when it comes to attracting and retaining your best people and driving business results.  Being mindful of the alignment of strategy and the compensation programs that support those efforts ensures that the bank has the best probability for success.

WRITTEN BY

Laura Hay

Partner

Laura Hay is a partner and lead consultant at Meridian Compensation Partners, LLC.  She has 25 years of experience advising institutions on executive compensation and its related governance.  Specializing in banks, insurance, diversified financials and government sponsored enterprises (GSEs), she believes that financial institutions provide the foundation for a strong economy and that good corporate governance results in long term sustainability and shareholder value.

 

Ms. Hay advises boards and management teams on a broad array of compensation issues.  Recent projects include compensation decision-making related to merger and acquisitions, equity plan strategy, pay and performance alignment, line of business compensation and proxy advisor guideline interpretation and consultation.

 

Ms. Hay is a certified compensation professional (CCP), a senior professional in human resources (SPHR) and a SHRM senior certified professional (SHRM-SCP).