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  • This week is my least favorite part of the work year. I’m a manager and we have to spend 4+ hours in meetings ranking people and fighting for or challenging bonus numbers. On the plus side I fought for (and I think got) a bigger bonus for my most senior and productive report. On the downside I (voluntarily) put in a smaller bonus for a promising junior report who had a bad quarter. The next layer of management above me gets to do the same thing debating bonuses for me and my peers.

    • That sounds terrible.

      We don't compare people, we just evaluate how they did relative to their goals at the start of the year. We give a number 1-5:

      1. Not meeting expectations
      2. Partially meeting expectations
      3. Meeting expectations
      4. Exceeding expectations
      5. Rockstar

      Bonuses are based on a mixture of that number, department performance, and company-wide performance. Before submitting ratings officially, we normalize them across business units to ensure everyone is rating people similarly, and each department has a bonus figure that gets split relative to that number (e.g. if most people get 4s, the 4s will be similar to 3s in other departments).

      It's relatively simple and fairly objective, so I like it as a manager. I would hate having to rank my report against each other, that just sounds awful.

      • Apologies for the wall of text, I started describing my company's review and bonus process... and realized how foreign it might sound from an outside perspective.

        In principle our review process is similar to yours. In practice... it's bat shit convoluted. We effectively have a profit sharing scheme. People are awarded bonus "units" annually. One third of company profits feed into a bonus pool, there's slightly more nuance here but not worth going into. These bonus units are entirely separate from company equity... which is a thing they also offer to senior people, but that's outside my purview.

        We have employee levels which represent seniority. Each level has a bonus unit target (i.e. level 1 = 10, level 2 = 25, level 3 = 50, etc). We compare all people in each level and rank them. We have to challenge and defend these rankings. People will often get ticked up or down. The end result is that bonus awards will be on a distribution around each level's target (i.e. a level 3 person can technically get anything between 25 to 75 units though at the extremes they'll likely just get promoted or demoted). There are several layers of these review meetings to normalize ratings across groups and layers of management.

        Complicated enough yet? There's more! The average value of these bonus units has been increasing over time so there's active pressure from upper management to decrease the number units being award. Big picture it make sense that they don't want to pay a multiplier of market rate, but it's a shit message to deliver to people. The other nuance is that these bonuses are large, especially at higher levels. For my senior report, for instance, his bonus will be more than half his total compensation.

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