Remuneration sends a signal
Every remuneration decision communicates something to the market, employees and shareholders about what an organisation values.
When reward outcomes appear disconnected from broader workforce experiences or company performance, organisations may risk undermining trust, engagement and cultural alignment — regardless of whether outcomes are technically “within policy”.
This is particularly relevant in the current environment, where organisations continue to balance:
- talent retention pressures;
- affordability constraints;
- shareholder scrutiny; and
- growing expectations around fairness and transparency.
The growing role of Board discretion
TRP’s January 2025 Remuneration Pulse found that almost 40% of organisations exercised discretion when determining STI or LTI outcomes over the past year.
In many cases, discretion may be entirely appropriate. However, Boards are increasingly expected to clearly articulate why remuneration outcomes remain fair and reasonable within the context of broader organisational performance and stakeholder experience.
The challenge is often not whether discretion is applied — but whether the rationale behind the decision is culturally and commercially defensible.
Balancing competitiveness with fairness
Maintaining competitive remuneration remains one of the most significant challenges currently facing organisations.
At the same time, employees and stakeholders are paying closer attention to pay fairness, transparency and leadership accountability than ever before.
This creates a difficult balancing act for organisations seeking to:
- attract and retain critical talent;
- reward performance appropriately; and
- maintain alignment between remuneration outcomes and organisational culture.
Final thoughts
Ultimately, executive remuneration does more than determine reward outcomes. It shapes perceptions of leadership, reinforces organisational priorities and influences culture over time.
The organisations navigating this most effectively are often those recognising that remuneration decisions are no longer viewed in isolation — but as part of a broader narrative around performance, fairness and trust.
