That leaves all employees with compensation packages that are more performance-oriented than oriented towards rewarding length of service, past contributions, or concepts like employee loyalty. For general counsel or in-house counsel, there is no exception – overall pay is declining, though inflation is raising costs, and even though there is a minor raise in basic pay, incentives and bonus components are getting tighter.
More than ever before, what you take home is tied to both individual as well as company performance, and if you want to change your lot, your only way is to work into a position of business-decision making and contribute wholly. That way, you at least have some control over your stake.
Marking that, over the past year, the total compensation for general counsel has dropped by 2.2 percent, Veta Richardson, the CEO and president of ACC remarked, “The lion's share of compensation, year by year, is at risk, meaning that it's tied to the performance of the company and performance by the individual executive.”
However, even performance-based pay is getting lower, and as the ACC report noted, while the average target incentive for 2011 was at 76.5%, in 2012, by mid-term, the average target incentive has already dropped to 73.9%. On the other hand, in private law firms, associate bonuses and year-end bonuses this year have gone up like anything compared to the preceding years. Cravath senior associate bonuses jumped by almost 60% against year-end-bonuses paid in 2011, and other big law firms are doing likewise.
For general counsel, right now, the only option is to work more constructively and reach a position, where the employer is forced to see the general counsel as a valued resource needed for fulfilling business objectives. Someone, whose service would be difficult to substitute by external service providers.
That said, the CEO of ACC confirmed to the media, “that a significant opportunity exists to be paid based upon performance and delivering results in furtherance of the corporate objective and what it says to me is that these general counsel, as a whole, were highly regarded by their corporations to achieve bonus levels of three quarters of base salary.”
That might be true on many levels, but then again, it is pure compensation strategy brought on by the recession in that employers are no more ready to recognize what you did for an organization in the past. The base salaries for general counsel rose by 1.9 percent from $557,112 in 2011 to $567,924 in 2012. On average, annual cash bonuses dropped by 7.9 percent from $590,040 in 2011 to $543,109 in 2012. The drop in cash bonuses makes the rise in base pay, entirely insignificant.
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See the following articles for more information:
- In-House Counsel Salaries
- The Pressures of General Counsel Jobs Including Salaries
- 2015 LawCrossing Salary Survey of Lawyer Salaries in Best Law Firms