Hopeful, don't drag me into your debate about pay differential (which doesn't belong in this thread, by the way).
There are three things that I know are true:
1. We've lost 3 CFOs in the last four years.
2. They all left for sizeable pay increases.
3. They all had no opportunity to advance within this company.
I would be willing to bet that if we even paid within 30% of market for our execs and had some sort of assurance that Arpey would move within 10 years, we would be able to retain a bit more talent.
So what you are saying is that the bonuses werent needed.
Because when you have plenty of it, "money is not a motivator". Please dont forget the first part about "when you have plenty of it".
These guys dont work for the money per se, they work for the power.
So if they were given millions more they probably still would not stay, so giving them more is a waste of money.
While they may put their pants on one leg at a time like us when it comes to money we are two different species. For us money is a means for survival. Its there to put food on the table, a roof over our heads and if we are lucky something we use to give our children a better life.We work for money, if we had enough we probably would no longer show up at our jobs. To those people however, many of whom never have children, money is about power. Material issues are really not a concern because there is so much money its taken for granted. No matter how much money they have they will still want more because unlike material desires that can be satisfied with money the lust for power can not. Like "The Boss" said, "poor man wanna be rich, rich man wanna be King and a King aint satisfied till he rules everything".
One of the concessions that pretty much slid by without notice to most workers was when they made us turn over 6 uniforms. To the executives, it was an act of humiliation, a display of their power, in that they could literally take the cloths off our back without even a word of protest. To most workers however,since no direct cash loss was seen by surrendering the uniforms it was seen as minor. But to the executives it was a display of their power over us and they probably took more satisfaction out of that than concessions that actually saved the company money.
I think connected one is pretty much dead on this time. In reality his point #3 says it all.We wont lose executives because of pay, we lose them because they dont see the opportunity to move into the top spot. Why do you think all these rich people want to be President of the US? Is it the $200k a year? Pilots make more than that! Its the power and being President of the most powerful country on earth is the ultimate power trip.
Years ago executives made much less than they do today. And thats even when you take inflation into account.
But back then they actually performed better. They provided the country with an increasing living standard and the stockholders with increased equity.
They did their jobs and they didnt need millions to do it.However they sought the same thing todys executives do, the only difference is that back then more executives tried to really live up to the image of respectable businessmen, unlike the scoundrels we have today. Back then if the companies performed badly they accepted blame and sometimes the penalty. Todays executives take all the credit when things go well and blame everyone else when they dont, then they actually have the cajones to demand pay raises or they will leave!!!!! In the past they would have been fired!
My father was a chaufeur for a large chemical company. On the weekends, when he had to work, they used to allow him to bring us with him. At the time a lot of executives were paranoid that they would be the target of kidnapping so the excecs were pretty friendly with the help. One day my father was told to pick up a retired CEO and bring him to the company's new HQ. On the ride home he said " You know I really miss working, its not the money, I have more than I'll ever spend, and this might sound terrible, but I miss the power".
Thats what these people are about. They were pissed off at the fact that they were powerless to prevent workers from getting back some of what we lost over the last twenty years and 9-11 gave them the opportunity to get their revenge.And they did. It didnt hurt that they had the union in their back pocket-that $3.1 million was the best investment ever made.
Let them all leave, the sooner the better.