}

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

The Elusive Bonus

It is getting to be that time of year again.  You know, the time of year when employees start thinking about possible year end bonuses which may or may not come.

I love it when candidates tell me that their compensation is, say, $100k and then I find out that they are making $85k with a potential to make 20% more in bonus.  Truth is, they are not making $100 and probably won’t.  The operative word here is potential.  Many, many candidates, when I ask about compensation, include either real or imagined bonuses as part of their salary..  They are just wrong.  And it happens at every level, even people who are very, very senior.

I just got an email from a candidate. Here is his quote when I asked him if he had made his expected bonus:  “When they hired me last year (March 15th) they projected sales of 16mm.  In June, they got a little full of themselves and upped the projections to 19mm.  We came in at 18mm and change. Had we stayed with the original numbers, I would have gotten about 22k [Instead, I got nothing.] “ I hear this story all the time.  It even happened to me once.


Years ago, I took a job at a small agency, starting in June.  I was promised a 20% bonus.  In December they gave me a stellar review and a check which represented about 4% - barely two weeks salary.  Their excuse: I only worked there half a year and so, they were giving me only half my pro rated bonus; when I challenged their math, the response was that I had not been there long enough to impact the organization, but I should wait until next year.  I didn’t wait.  I left.  I thought it was sleazy. 

The truth is, bonuses do not have to be given.  They are purely optional, although most people who accept jobs don’t hear the optional part when they take the offer.  You never know whether you will actually receive your bonus until you get it.  There are many companies where bonuses are part of the compensation – the old Messner, Vetere, Berger, McNamee and Schmetterer comes to mind.  MVBMS gave really nice bonuses to everyone for years.  But the they sold to EURO and, after a couple of years, the bonuses program changed.  EURO saved a lot of money.  I am not dissing EURO.  It is perfectly within the right of a company to change its bonus policies.

Most companies that I deal with are very careful about spelling out their bonus policy.  Few will commit to an amount or a percentage, even for senior candidates.  However, candidates tend to hear what they want to hear and often interpret even vague statements as absolute fact, which leads to disappointment.  

But unless you have a contract that specifically spells out the amount of your bonus, it is only a nice add-on, but it is not part of your compensation and should not be expected. Companies have a funny habit of having their bonus pool dry up.  I have heard all kinds of excuses:

-       The company did not have a good year
-       The holding company did not have a good year
-       The overall billings on your brand are down
-       The billings on your client company are down, despite the increases on your specific brand
-       We spent a lot of money chasing new business we did not get
-       You have to be here a full year to get your bonus and you were only here eleven months
-       There is a moratorium on raises and bonuses
-       No one is getting a bonus this year, including management
-       We are reevaluating our bonus plan

I have actually heard about candidates turning down jobs which offer a higher base salary, but they include their theoretical bonus in their current base and conclude that the new job is not paying enough, even though they have never received a bonus from their current company.  Pretty silly, if you ask me. 

You can’t live on a bonus.  It should be banked. And it should never be considered part of your compensation.

Unless a bonus is guaranteed by contract, don’t count on it.

1 comment:

  1. It's a carrot, isn't it? But when bandied about during negotiations in my experience usually indicates a culture of make-believe. At the top. Your article is a good reality check. One of the best ways to show employees they matter is to do the unexpected, simply, without fanfare, across the board. It reduces the cut-throat island tendencies in agencies that dole out preferential treatments. During their meteroric rise, after expanding or winning a big account, CPB used to leave 1000 bucks in envelopes on people's desks on a Friday afternoon, with a simple "thank you." How perfect. Think they all worked even harder and more collaboratively after such? When everyone gets some, all boats rise.


    Paul van Winkle
    Agency Bus Dev/CMO
    Atlanta

    ReplyDelete

I would welcome your comments, suggestions or anything you would like to share with me or my readers.

 
Creative Commons License
.