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Answer Upon - New Year's Resolutions - Executive Compensation Style
Understanding Laser Marking and Laser Etching Systems achieved than dramatic changes. Don’t resolve to overhaul the entire executive compensation program in one all-encompassing action; rather, evaluate each portion of the package in a logical sequence over a period of months. Some other thoughts for making resolutions stick:Laser marking and laser etching are becoming more and more important in a growing number of industries. The basic reasons to laser marking or laser etch your products include:• The mark is extremely durable, permanent and in most cases cannot be removed without destroying the product itself, this is true for laser marking, laser etching, or laser annealing.• The laser marking process is accurate, 100% repeatable, fast, with very clear sharp results.• The laser mark or laser etch can quickly and easily be changed without any machine change over, and, without replacing any tools. The changing of a laser marking or laser etch is a simple drag and cli · Look at the roadmap: Review the organization’s compensation philosophy to ensure it is consistent with the business strategy and driving the appropriate performance. · Don’t fix what isn’t broken: If a plan is achieving the goals of the organization and is motivating executives to perform optimally, don’t change it. · Prioritize needs starting with the most critically challenged areas: Don’t focus on annual incentives if long-term programs are suffering. · Seek the guidance of outside advisors: Professional service firms can be utilized to assist in making resolutions happen, allowing the Board and Compensation Impact of FDI in Retail in India We all succumb to the annual ritual of making a bunch of resolutions about how we will change our lives with the start of the New Year: eat better and healthier foods, exercise more, reorganize our rather hectic and stressful lives in order to live longer, and learn to enjoy what we have. In most instances, regardless of how dedicated we are to these resolutions, most of our good intentions give way to the realities and pressures of everyday living, and before we know it, we are pretty much back to where we were on December 31.The opening up of retail trade for foreign direct investment (FDI) promises to usher in revolutionary changes to the Indian consumer market in the days to come.Recently, in a significant step towards liberalizing India's retail trade, the government had decided to partially open the retail sector by announcing 51 percent FDI in single brand retailing – a move that should pave way for big names like Nike, Versace, Addidas, Marks & Spencer to set up their own stores in India.This means that foreign companies willing to enter the Indian market will now be able to invest up to 51 percent in setting up production facilities, distribution network and retail shop Executive compensation is, in many ways, treated very much the same way. Boards and their Compensation Committees set forth their resolutions on how they will tighten up the criteria for governing and determining executive compensation going forward. Some of this idealism is internally generated based on reasonableness and a strong sense of responsibility on the Board’s part. Unfortunately, this desire to tighten up the decision-making process emanates from external pressures, namely the shareholders, investors and their “watchdog groups”, and various governmental agencies and their “knee jerk” regulations, including recent changes in accounting and tax rules. After all, the basic premises behind executive compensation has always been to maximize the value to the individual while minimizing the taxes to the executive and company, along with minimizing any negative accounting issues for the corporation. These are over and above the basic objectives of any compensation program, which are four-fold: 1. To provide the competitive package necessary to attract qualified talent; 2. To assist in retention of that talent, the proverbial “golden handcuff”; 3. To provide the motivation needed to achieve desired results, in effect, the “golden ring”; and lastly, 4. To focus the employee’s attention on specific business objectives, so that what is achieved is consistent with the business strategy. Just as New Year’s resolutions are all too often sidestepped when realities of every day pressures are confronted, the Board’s resolve to “do the right thing” is sometimes forgotten when undue pressures, whether competitive or self-induced, are encountered. For example, in the case of long-term incentives, we have seen the Compensation Committee give in and provide an award, such as stock options, even though the performance goals were not met and no incentive award was warranted. The explanation often given is that “it was out of the hands of the executives, and we can’t afford to lose our top people”. In reality, the Board’s actions have weakened their own policies, and ignored the reality that there may be more capable individuals available in the marketplace that could achieve the stated business objectives, despite the costs involved in recruiting them. Similarly, a recent example where a Compensation Committee probably did not fulfill its duties to the shareholders, Board or itself, was one in which the Committee provided a severance payment in excess of $5 million to an executive who was forced out for poor performance. Not only did the Committee fail in its duty as the arbitrator of fair and justifiable compensation, but it also set a precedent for others. The mixed message is that the executives will be rewarded, regardless of whether or not they achieve the company’s business objectives. How, then, can the Board and Compensation Committee ensure that their “resolutions” result in real and lasting changes? As with personal resolutions, changes should be realistic and within the Board’s capabilities to accomplish. Incremental steps are much more palatable and more easily achieved than dramatic changes. Don’t resolve to overhaul the entire executive compensation program in one all-encompassing action; rather, evaluate each portion of the package in a logical sequence over a period of months. Some other thoughts for making resolutions stick: · Look at the roadmap: Review the organization’s compensation philosophy to ensure it is consistent with the business strategy and driving the appropriate performance. · Don’t fix what isn’t broken: If a plan is achieving the goals of the organization and is motivating executives to perform optimally, don’t change it. · Prioritize needs starting with the most critically challenged areas: Don’t focus on annual incentives if long-term programs are suffering. · Seek the guidance of outside advisors: Professional service firms can be utilized to assist in making resolutions happen, allowing the Board and Compensation C Exploring New Product Innovations fortunately, this desire to tighten up the decision-making process emanates from external pressures, namely the shareholders, investors and their “watchdog groups”, and various governmental agencies and their “knee jerk” regulations, including recent changes in accounting and tax rules. After all, the basic premises behind executive compensation has always been to maximize the value to the individual while minimizing the taxes to the executive and company, along with minimizing any negative accounting issues for the corporation. These are over and above the basic objectives of any compensation program, which are four-fold:Now more than ever, your options for trade show exhibiting are virtually endless. New products are being introduced rapidly, and competition has driven display manufacturers and vendors to offer more flexibility such as rentals and easily changeable displays. Trade show exhibitors’ needs, as well as union and exhibit hall regulations, have also driven display companies to make displays lighter and easier to assemble. Even large island displays have been revamped using lightweight truss systems to help ease the load of shipping and assembly. A few of the latest new product innovations are listed below.Fabric Panel DisplaysIn the last few years, comp 1. To provide the competitive package necessary to attract qualified talent; 2. To assist in retention of that talent, the proverbial “golden handcuff”; 3. To provide the motivation needed to achieve desired results, in effect, the “golden ring”; and lastly, 4. To focus the employee’s attention on specific business objectives, so that what is achieved is consistent with the business strategy. Just as New Year’s resolutions are all too often sidestepped when realities of every day pressures are confronted, the Board’s resolve to “do the right thing” is sometimes forgotten when undue pressures, whether competitive or self-induced, are encountered. For example, in the case of long-term incentives, we have seen the Compensation Committee give in and provide an award, such as stock options, even though the performance goals were not met and no incentive award was warranted. The explanation often given is that “it was out of the hands of the executives, and we can’t afford to lose our top people”. In reality, the Board’s actions have weakened their own policies, and ignored the reality that there may be more capable individuals available in the marketplace that could achieve the stated business objectives, despite the costs involved in recruiting them. Similarly, a recent example where a Compensation Committee probably did not fulfill its duties to the shareholders, Board or itself, was one in which the Committee provided a severance payment in excess of $5 million to an executive who was forced out for poor performance. Not only did the Committee fail in its duty as the arbitrator of fair and justifiable compensation, but it also set a precedent for others. The mixed message is that the executives will be rewarded, regardless of whether or not they achieve the company’s business objectives. How, then, can the Board and Compensation Committee ensure that their “resolutions” result in real and lasting changes? As with personal resolutions, changes should be realistic and within the Board’s capabilities to accomplish. Incremental steps are much more palatable and more easily achieved than dramatic changes. Don’t resolve to overhaul the entire executive compensation program in one all-encompassing action; rather, evaluate each portion of the package in a logical sequence over a period of months. Some other thoughts for making resolutions stick: · Look at the roadmap: Review the organization’s compensation philosophy to ensure it is consistent with the business strategy and driving the appropriate performance. · Don’t fix what isn’t broken: If a plan is achieving the goals of the organization and is motivating executives to perform optimally, don’t change it. · Prioritize needs starting with the most critically challenged areas: Don’t focus on annual incentives if long-term programs are suffering. · Seek the guidance of outside advisors: Professional service firms can be utilized to assist in making resolutions happen, allowing the Board and Compensation Balancing the Personal and Professional You the employee’s attention on specific business objectives, so that what is achieved is consistent with the business strategy.Keeping your personal and professional lives balanced can be tricky when you are in sales or running your own business. While every person has a different definition of what living a balanced life means, every definition includes some variation of having enough time for family, community, and, of course, work.It has been said many times that if your life is in balance, your checkbook will not be. The people who feel this way are often the ones who sit at their desk at the end of the day looking at their unfinished work. Instead of closing the laptop and heading home, they pick up the phone to call their spouse, letting them know they will not be home for dinne Just as New Year’s resolutions are all too often sidestepped when realities of every day pressures are confronted, the Board’s resolve to “do the right thing” is sometimes forgotten when undue pressures, whether competitive or self-induced, are encountered. For example, in the case of long-term incentives, we have seen the Compensation Committee give in and provide an award, such as stock options, even though the performance goals were not met and no incentive award was warranted. The explanation often given is that “it was out of the hands of the executives, and we can’t afford to lose our top people”. In reality, the Board’s actions have weakened their own policies, and ignored the reality that there may be more capable individuals available in the marketplace that could achieve the stated business objectives, despite the costs involved in recruiting them. Similarly, a recent example where a Compensation Committee probably did not fulfill its duties to the shareholders, Board or itself, was one in which the Committee provided a severance payment in excess of $5 million to an executive who was forced out for poor performance. Not only did the Committee fail in its duty as the arbitrator of fair and justifiable compensation, but it also set a precedent for others. The mixed message is that the executives will be rewarded, regardless of whether or not they achieve the company’s business objectives. How, then, can the Board and Compensation Committee ensure that their “resolutions” result in real and lasting changes? As with personal resolutions, changes should be realistic and within the Board’s capabilities to accomplish. Incremental steps are much more palatable and more easily achieved than dramatic changes. Don’t resolve to overhaul the entire executive compensation program in one all-encompassing action; rather, evaluate each portion of the package in a logical sequence over a period of months. Some other thoughts for making resolutions stick: · Look at the roadmap: Review the organization’s compensation philosophy to ensure it is consistent with the business strategy and driving the appropriate performance. · Don’t fix what isn’t broken: If a plan is achieving the goals of the organization and is motivating executives to perform optimally, don’t change it. · Prioritize needs starting with the most critically challenged areas: Don’t focus on annual incentives if long-term programs are suffering. · Seek the guidance of outside advisors: Professional service firms can be utilized to assist in making resolutions happen, allowing the Board and Compensation Choosing a Hotel Whilst On Business the stated business objectives, despite the costs involved in recruiting them. Similarly, a recent example where a Compensation Committee probably did not fulfill its duties to the shareholders, Board or itself, was one in which the Committee provided a severance payment in excess of $5 million to an executive who was forced out for poor performance. Not only did the Committee fail in its duty as the arbitrator of fair and justifiable compensation, but it also set a precedent for others. The mixed message is that the executives will be rewarded, regardless of whether or not they achieve the company’s business objectives.Traveling on business can be a bit of a drain on resources so you might need to choose the correct hotel. The business traveler needs to keep the following in mind if he doesn't know how to choose a hotel.A hotel located near an airport is ideal for efficient, business-prone travelers. While not as scenic, it's easier to meet a business entourage, do some catch-up work in the business center, and fly out in a hurry. These hotels must have some type of internet access to be business-friendly. Wireless hotspots, direct room modem access, or free terminals in the business center are not just amenities anymore; they're becoming adopted as necessities.Custom How, then, can the Board and Compensation Committee ensure that their “resolutions” result in real and lasting changes? As with personal resolutions, changes should be realistic and within the Board’s capabilities to accomplish. Incremental steps are much more palatable and more easily achieved than dramatic changes. Don’t resolve to overhaul the entire executive compensation program in one all-encompassing action; rather, evaluate each portion of the package in a logical sequence over a period of months. Some other thoughts for making resolutions stick: · Look at the roadmap: Review the organization’s compensation philosophy to ensure it is consistent with the business strategy and driving the appropriate performance. · Don’t fix what isn’t broken: If a plan is achieving the goals of the organization and is motivating executives to perform optimally, don’t change it. · Prioritize needs starting with the most critically challenged areas: Don’t focus on annual incentives if long-term programs are suffering. · Seek the guidance of outside advisors: Professional service firms can be utilized to assist in making resolutions happen, allowing the Board and Compensation The Watchful Eye Of An Employer Can Invade The Employee's Privacy achieved than dramatic changes. Don’t resolve to overhaul the entire executive compensation program in one all-encompassing action; rather, evaluate each portion of the package in a logical sequence over a period of months. Some other thoughts for making resolutions stick:Employers can be liable for secretly placing a video camera in an employee‘s office, even if the employer does not view any of the video. An employer must control his watchful eye and use it in limited circumstances.A California employer, who operates a residential facility for abused children, placed a camera in an office to determine who was accessing pornographic websites at night. The camera was activated at all times in the office. The employer told a few employees about the camera, but not the female employees occupying the office, because the employer feared that these talkative employees may inform the perpetrators. While the camera was activated, a · Look at the roadmap: Review the organization’s compensation philosophy to ensure it is consistent with the business strategy and driving the appropriate performance. · Don’t fix what isn’t broken: If a plan is achieving the goals of the organization and is motivating executives to perform optimally, don’t change it. · Prioritize needs starting with the most critically challenged areas: Don’t focus on annual incentives if long-term programs are suffering. · Seek the guidance of outside advisors: Professional service firms can be utilized to assist in making resolutions happen, allowing the Board and Compensation Committee to focus on its most important responsibilities. · Don’t expect changes to happen overnight: Lasting changes, especially behavioral ones, should happen slowly, giving time for adjustment and refocus. Ultimately, change should begin at the source. The Board and Compensation Committee should evaluate the Committee’s charter to ensure that responsibilities are clearly defined, so that the document can serve as the baseline for how it will conduct its duties relative to executive compensation. Contact: Paul R. Dorf, Ph.D., APD 877-934-0505 · Fax: 201-934-0737 ###
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