CEO Will Live on $70,000 Worker Wage, Thinks His Life Will Be Luxe Enough
Now there may be people who think that i am crazy for this, but I applaude and admire this guy. He sees the issue, and he is focused on his company first. He knows that a company is more than the CEO, it is a sum of all your workers. He's not pulling a20th Century Motors thing, he isn't letting them decide "who needs it", he is sharing it across the board. Very logical, and will make his employees incredibly loyal, as they know he understands what is going on throughout the company.
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First off, he's CEO, not sole owner as far as I know. So he can't take ownership distributions, unless I'm misunderstanding things.
Second off, you can pay people a billion dollars a year, but if they don't get their raise they "deserve" every year, they're going to be pissed. Every single one of the $25,000/year workers will spend their way up to $70,000/year lifestyle within a few short months, and be in WORSE financial shape than they were in before. Then, they'll "need" to make more money, and complain when they don't get it. They won't be able to find work anywhere else at this rate (because they've been coddled for so long in their dead-end job that paid over double market rate), and so they won't be able to leave the company. BUT, they'll be pissed because they're not getting more money and raises like they "deserve", they'll create a horrific environment for those who actually manage to live on that "meager" $70,000/year, drag those guys down into the whining and complaining toilet, and you'll have a company full of pissed off people. AND, chances are, they'll probably complain to a union and get the company to be forced to retroactively pay them raises.
Of course there will be exceptions, but this will be the main group of what you see.
Now, CEO's and companies can afford to "float" a little bit when their yearly revenue gets cut by 40% in a bad year. These employees CERTAINLY will not. Try cutting someone's $70,000/year salary across the board when the guy used to make $65k/year before your little social(ist) experiment. See what he does. AND, try cutting the floor mopper's $70,000/year salary down to $50,000 for the year... see what happens then.
This man is crippling the people who are in dead-end jobs, by saying to the new 19 year old kid "Oh hey, I know you've only developed 5% of your capability, and you're probably high-level manager material, but why don't you just stay there answering the phones and not develop yourself".
AND, you're going to have the actual skilled people at that company who make say 65k now, looking around saying "why the hell am I busting my butt as a manager when I could just answer phones for 70k... screw it"
I look forward to watching this one tank, right out of the book.
Funny how the IRS loves to audit you if they think you didn't pay enough... but I've never seen them come to someone that pays too much and offer to find ways to give them a rebate...
Interesting no one commented that he made a million a year and had the workers using cheap / small laptops and working on what looked like temporary folding tables & chairs all day...
I did the exact same thing. My CPA assures me it's legal. I also use the business to pay for anything I can that is honestly business-related.
At least his income should shoo fly gold diggers
I wish the dude the best of luck.
If I had a large multinational company like an HP or a Dell or an Apple and I needed a new CEO, I would structure the incentive plan such that the CEO took a stock salary the first five years and got deferred options (five-year vestment period) only after the first three. That means that they would have had to run the business well for _eight_ years before they could cash in on the larger payout. Why? Because it takes at least two years for the old CEO's policies to finally leech from the system. Product lifecycle in tech industry is 18-months to two years, meaning that it would only be after four years that you would start to see new products hitting shelves that were completely initiated under the new CEO. Give them a year in the market to judge profitability and there's your five years. Additionally, I want them focused on the long-term - not the cut-and-slash that makes them popular on Wall Street. I want a company that lasts for decades - not a quick blip.
Also, I wouldn't give them the power to hire or fire anyone for the first year. It's a management fad when the top echelons change out to bring along all your hangers-on and establish them as VP's, etc. right off the bat and all it does is create chaos and entice your best people to jump ship. Brain drain is incredibly detrimental to all companies.
They will all be loyal to the paycheck not the employer.
While he is taking a bit of a different twist, he is still "spreading the wealth" evenly regardless of the efforts put in by each contributor, thus making everyone the same. Watch how this implodes.
I know in my ciurcles in IT, about 90% of the REAL work is only done by about 10% of the people. when that 10% "shrugs" because they are not receiving the only recognition that really matters...a wage difference between them and the lazy, his company will start falling apart at the seams.
I know I am going to watch and monitor this so I can throw it in the face of every liberal who loves socialism. Watch the mainstream media ignore the story when his company faces bankruptcy and everyone is unemployed.
Having said that it is HIS company he can do with it what he wants.
It's hilarious how these liberal clowns jump on this like he's the Messiah.
My other thought is that Gravity is basically a small-fry PayPal, he may be in talks to sell it... if that's the case, he doesn't give a hoot, he will cash out and the new owner will stop paying the receptionist and janitor $70k / year pretty quickly anyway.
I, however, find nothing useful in moaning on about how much someone else gets paid. It's pointless. What should matter is what YOU are doing to demonstrate your value.
1) Did the story mention his bonus and equity structure? It may have and I missed it.
2) This is somewhat like those stories you hear from time to time where the CEO takes a $1 annual salary. This is a relatively short term arrangement for him. It goes back to previous levels if the company does better in the next year or two and if the company doesn't do better ... I'm sure something else will change. He is clearly not saying that he has decided that he just needs, and that he is "just" worth $70k per year from this point forward. He basically doesn't need any salary in the short term because ...
3) He has few expenses. It sounds like his house is paid for. He doesn't need a new car in the short term. He has made a more healthy salary over the last n years so I'm sure he has plenty saved and his retirement is probably already secure at age 30. Good for him. Well done.
4) This point is of lesser significance, but he also mentions that the crowd he "hangs" with is wealthy. So again, he can afford to take a year or two with lower salary and still be part of this crowd. Various expenses will be handled by osmosis, in the short term.
5) He started this company when he was 19. It is his baby and I am not surprised that he will pour everything into it to make it successful. And again, good for him - that's what you want out of a CEO. But this fact weakens the premise of the story. Comparing this CEO and his salary structure to all CEOs in general may be a bit like comparing apples and oranges.
I do find the story fascinating, especially for the comments over there on the Yahoo story.
I agree that interlocking directorates artificially inflate pay, but I can see a possible scenario where someone is worth 1 million. If a company's earnings are in the billions and the best manager can improve them by 0.1% over the next best candidate, it makes sense to pay the better manager hundreds of thousands more than the next candidate. In practice, the positions are probably influenced by board politics, as you say, but I wouldn't say it's impossible for someone to bring millions of dollars of value to a large org.
He take $100,000/year as salary. The rest is in Berkshire Hathaway shares.
It's the government's system; these guys just know how to game it. And I'm OK with that.
Good plan. I hope it works out for him.
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