What Happens When You Alienate Vital Support Staff

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Dear Bev,

We are trying to figure out compensation for year-end. As COO, I am in charge of Human Resources and compensation. Our team has outperformed this year in terms of our asset and revenue goals, but not in terms of profitability. Of course, we don’t share all of the details of expenses with our team members because we don’t want them to figure out salaries, among other reasons.

From a top-line perspective it looks like a fantastic year. However, from a bottom-line perspective, we are not left with a lot to bonus out or profit-share. There are a number of factors determining this, not the least of which is large bumps in salary for three of our senior partners. They are hoping to retire in the next three to five years and want to maximize income while they can.

My question might be obvious, but it is about information sharing. I know the team is aware we have done very, very well this year because we share our goals and our achievements. I am thinking they will expect to be sharing in the excess. We don’t have a formal bonus program, but historically, we have always bonused or “shared” profits in years when things were going well. How do we message this?

Anonymous

Dear Advisory Team Member,

This seems to be a situation where you, in your role as COO, need to sit down with the partners and review what’s happened from a financial perspective. You might need to lay out specifically the impact of the increases of salary on the bottom line and the dilemma you are left with as a result. I make this recommendation without knowing anything about the personalities of your senior advisors or the culture of your firm, so please proceed with caution if they are not open to having a discussion like this.

There might be a chance the partners didn’t foresee the impact their decision would have on the rest of the team. Perhaps sharing the numbers could encourage them to “give back” a bit of what they have taken so there is money to share among the rest of the team. In addition to this approach, I’ve also seen senior leaders directly bonus individuals out of their own compensation.

If they are unwilling to do this, you will need to engage them in how they want to message what’s happened to the rest of the team. If your senior people are three to five years away from retiring, I assume they want a thriving, growing firm during this time, so they can continue to maximize income. If team members are outperforming the goals set, but not receiving any “reward” in the form of compensation increases, bonuses or profit-sharing, you might wind up with some disgruntled staff on your hands. If someone is openly disgruntled, that’s one thing. But I would worry that they could quietly start working less, looking for other jobs or just start caring less about team outcomes.

Again, I don’t know your people or your culture. Perhaps they will keep doing what they have been doing without recognition. That’s up to you to know and a risk you might have to take if you are unable to get your senior leaders to engage productively on this issue.