The Advisors' Blog

This blog features wisdom from respected compensation consultants and lawyers

July 16, 2026

Today’s FREE TheCorporateCounsel.net Webcast: “The SEC’s Proposal to Simplify Filer Status & Reduce Reporting Burdens”

We are offering today’s webcast on TheCorporateCounsel.net, “The SEC’s Proposal to Simplify Filer Status & Reduce Reporting Burdens,” at no charge, even to non-members of TheCorporateCounsel.net. Current members automatically have access. Non-members can register for the free stream here.

Tune in at 2:00 pm Eastern to hear about the SEC’s proposed amendments to simplify the filer status framework and expand eligibility for scaled disclosure and other accommodations currently available to smaller or newly public companies (many of which relate to executive compensation disclosure requirements). Our panel includes seasoned practitioners and senior SEC staff:

– Luna Bloom, Associate Director (Legal and Regulatory Policy), SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance
– Howard Dicker, Partner, Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP
– Raquel Fox, Partner, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
– Dave Lynn, Partner, Goodwin Procter LLP, and Senior Editor, TheCorporateCounsel.net

They will discuss the SEC’s proposed rule changes and explore the practical implications of the new filer definitions and expanded accommodations. Topics include:

  1. Overview and Policy Objectives of the Proposal
  2. Revisions to Filer Classifications and Definitions
  3. Expanded Accommodations and Scaled Disclosure
  4. Initial and Annual Determinations of Filer Status; Transition Rules
  5. Requests for Comments and Potential Changes to the Proposed Rules
  6. Considerations for Companies Considering Scaled Disclosure
  7. Relationship of the Proposal to Other SEC Initiatives

As usual, we will apply for CLE credit in all applicable states (with the exception of SC and NE, which require advance notice) for this 60-minute webcast. You must submit your state and license number prior to or during the live program. Attendees must participate in the live webcast and fully complete all the CLE credit survey links during the program. You will receive a CLE certificate from our CLE provider when your state issues approval, typically within 30 days of the webcast. All credits are pending state approval.

This program will also be eligible for on-demand CLE credit when the archive is posted, typically within 48 hours of the original air date. Instructions on how to qualify for on-demand CLE credit will be posted on the archive page.

If the Reg Flex Agenda is any indication, there’s more to come from the SEC and Corp Fin Staff, and there will be no shortage of things to talk about at our October Proxy Disclosure and Executive Compensation Conferences. Don’t miss our discounted “early bird” rate, which covers in-person and virtual this year. It expires on July 24th! Register online at our conference page or contact us at info@CCRcorp.com or 1-800-737-1271.

– Meredith Ervine 

July 15, 2026

AI Metrics in Practice

I recently noted that only a small group of companies has introduced explicit AI metrics into their incentive plans, and even those have typically weighted these metrics modestly. On the other hand, some select companies are going all in. Salesforce is one such example, and I wanted to share some of its proxy disclosures on AI metrics here, even though I risk stealing this proxy disclosure highlight from Mark and not doing it justice.*

Anyway, here are some snippets of sections of Salesforce’s latest proxy statement that got my attention:

From “Financial Highlights”: In Q4 of fiscal 2026, we introduced Agentic Work Units (“AWUs”) to measure tasks accomplished by an artificial intelligence (“AI”) agent, with 2.4 billion AWUs delivered to date across Agentforce and Slack.

From the Compensation Committee Letter: Previously, the performance-based option tranche was tied 100% to Agentforce & Data 360 ARR. For fiscal 2027, we are splitting that measure equally between Agentic Work Units (AWUs) and Agentforce & Data 360 ARR. This change reflects the evolution of our product strategy: AWUs are a direct measure of agentic activity and customer engagement, not just contracted revenue, and we believe they are among the most important leading indicators of where Salesforce is headed. Cash compensation and the PRSU structure — including the Rule of and rTSR split — remain unchanged.

From the CD&A “Summary Information on Fiscal 2027 NEO Compensation Decisions”: For fiscal 2027, we refined our performance option program to better align executive incentives with our long-term transformation and focus on accelerating Agentforce adoption. To prioritize the scaling of Agentforce, we introduced Agentic Work Units (AWUs) as a new performance metric. AWUs and Agentforce & Data 360 ARR will be equally weighted, with payouts based on fiscal 2027 achievement. Any earned options will remain subject to a four-year vesting schedule to ensure continued long-term alignment.

– Agentic Work Units: Measures discrete tasks executed by AI agents in production across the Salesforce platform, including Agentforce and Slack.

– Agentforce & Data 360 ARR: Measures annual recurring revenue through our Agentforce and Data 360 platform.

In addition, the performance options continue to have a direct tie-in to building stockholder value, as executives only realize value if our stock price increases above the stock price at the time the performance options are granted.

*Compensia’s Mark Borges has been blogging up a storm on his Proxy Disclosure Blog for members of CompensationStandards.com. He provides new, interesting or best-in-class examples of executive- or director-compensation-related proxy disclosures. Give it a follow!

Meredith Ervine 

July 14, 2026

More on ‘Trends in One-Time Awards’

Earlier this month, I shared some data on how companies are using one-time awards and noted that structural considerations are key to mitigating investor concerns. This Semler Brossy article (which Liz blogged about last month) compares the size of a special grant to the likelihood of an “against” recommendation from ISS. Not surprisingly, smaller grants, especially grants made to NEOs other than the CEO, are more likely to fly under the radar (i.e., not raise concerns). 

Proxy advisors generally scrutinize special awards, but they do not uniformly recommend ‘Against’ programs that include them. Most awards are noted but do not have a substantial impact. Award size is a major indicator of whether a particular award will draw an ISS ‘Against’ recommendation. Smaller awards, while not immune from criticism, are accepted as a necessary reality by investors. Larger awards receive significantly less leeway, though those do not guarantee an ‘Against’ recommendation.

Among the awards Semler Brossy reviewed, if the award was less than half of target compensation, ISS recommended ‘Against’ about 25.8% of the time. Once the award was greater than three times target annual compensation, ISS recommended ‘Against’ 68.1% of the time. Many of the smaller awards were not the direct “cause” of the low vote but were instead caught up in broader circumstances, such as a pay-for-performance misalignment or an outsized award for another executive.

Over 1x target compensation seemed to be the level at which ISS was more likely than not to recommend against say-on-pay.

Meredith Ervine 

July 13, 2026

AI Uncertainty is Challenging Goal Setting

Late last month, I shared three approaches to incorporating AI into incentive plans. This FW Cook article in Corporate Board Member also shares thoughts on that topic and predicts that:

As spending on AI leadership, infrastructure and enterprise-wide transformation efforts continue to escalate, investors may begin pressing companies to measure whether those investments are actually creating value. “As companies get clarity around the best way of quantifying returns on AI investment, it will serve as the logical bridge to incorporating related metrics into compensation programs,” says Kaplan. “At that point, the qualitative goals that we are currently seeing in bonus plans will likely morph into quantitative metrics that are more meaningfully integrated into incentive plans.”

It also points out that AI has broad implications for compensation design beyond AI metrics themselves, since, like anything uncertain that is central to corporate strategy, it’s exacerbating the already challenging process of setting multi-year goals.

As companies lean further into AI-driven strategies, the unpredictability surrounding future business models and operating results could make traditional multi-year financial goal setting more difficult, says Kaplan. “An indirect consequence of this may be a shift back toward metrics tied to share price or total shareholder return, or a re-examination of stock options as an equity vehicle, all of which are strategically agnostic and reward for shareholder value creation without relying on precise long-term forecasting.”

In 2022, Liz shared many ways companies grappled with forecasting challenges in response to COVID-19 uncertainty. At the time, she noted that these practices “were carried into the 2021 compensation year – and may linger even longer.” With tariffs, geopolitical conflicts and AI, perhaps Liz’s title, suggesting that some of these practices were “here to stay,” was prescient.

Meredith Ervine 

July 9, 2026

The “Early Bird” Clock is Ticking: Register for Our Fall Conferences Now!

Our 2026 Proxy Disclosure and Executive Compensation Conferences are just around the corner. Our conferences will be held on October 12th & 13th in person in Orlando and will also be available online for virtual participants. Our discounted “early bird” rate expires on July 24th, so you need to act fast to ensure that you don’t miss out!

With an agenda featuring two days of fast-paced, topical panels, an all-star speaker lineup, and Dave Lynn’s interview with Corp Fin’s Deputy Director Christina Thomas, attendees will receive critical insights into the latest SEC rulemaking initiatives and developments in governance, disclosure practices, activism & shareholder engagement, and executive compensation.

If you’ve been following our blogs, webcasts, podcasts and newsletters, you know that the SEC has turned on the rulemaking firehose – and the agency has indicated that there’s plenty more to come! This year more than ever, you can’t afford to miss the insights that our expert panelists will provide on the latest developments.

Register online at our conference page or contact us at info@CCRcorp.com or 1-800-737-1271. Do it today so you don’t miss out on our discounted “early bird” rate!

Liz Dunshee

July 8, 2026

Short-Term Incentives: Do More Metrics Mean More Pay?

Even though we (thankfully) put the pandemic behind us several years ago, we can’t say the same for business complexities and surprises. When it comes to compensation plans, that may be why a few pandemic-era practices have continued.

This memo from ISS Corporate says that compensation committees continue to prioritize flexibility for short-term incentives. They’re doing this by using a greater number of metrics than in pre-pandemic times, including non-financial metrics that may involve subjective measurements. Here’s an excerpt:

Although the growth of metric counts and the use of individual/non-financial metrics has slowed slightly from immediate post-Pandemic levels, neither trend shows signs of returning to pre-Pandemic levels. Short-term incentive program design has thus undergone a paradigm shift: more complex programs and more qualitative metrics are used to mitigate the risk of non-vesting and provide flexible opportunities to ensure vesting independent of performance. That protects executive paydays (and, ideally, executive retention) well after the macroeconomic shocks of the Pandemic have subsided.

Thus, short-term incentive design implies a riskier and more challenging business environment than before the Pandemic, even if not directly due to the lingering effects of the Pandemic. This situation is seen as justifying enhanced executive compensation in ways notably different than pre-Pandemic norms and expectations, both in terms of investor understanding of program design and achievement and the importance of a direct link between pay and performance. Declining rates of say-on-pay failures seem to affirm the investor viewpoint that business now is harder than before the Pandemic and executive compensation focused on outright compensation is more acceptable.

The memo says that companies with more metrics tend to have higher payouts – but those payouts may not translate neatly to higher returns for shareholders. Investors could take issue with that if the short-term incentive plan is supposed to incentivize year-over-year stock price increases. However, the memo acknowledges that this component of compensation programs may be geared more towards retention. Here’s concluding food for thought, which may be helpful in communicating about plan design:

At the same time, these trends are partially explainable by reflecting on the focus of incentivization: if the intent is to promote executive retention by constructing near-term awards that are realistically obtainable — and that remain so even in years of market turmoil such as during the Pandemic — the question of the relationship between payouts and performance takes on a different contour when market participants consider the role of short-term versus long-term incentive compensation.

Whether these trends extend beyond the 2026 annual meeting cycle remains uncertain. In the absence of a significant external disruption comparable to the Pandemic, prevailing market norms are likely to continue favoring more complex short-term incentive structures with reduced reliance on purely financial metrics. Although some trends, such as complexity, appear to have plateaued, emerging practices, once established, can proliferate as companies seek to remain competitive in attracting and retaining executive talent, given the central role of peer benchmarking and comparative assessments in executive compensation decisions. From this perspective, short-term incentive design can be understood less as a direct reflection of company performance and more as an expression of the board’s assessment of, and confidence in, management’s leadership.

Liz Dunshee

July 7, 2026

SEC’s “Reg Flex” Agenda: “Executive Compensation Disclosure Reform” Makes Its Debut

John blogged today on TheCorporateCounsel.net about the SEC’s latest Reg Flex Agenda, which was published late last week and is looking quite ambitious! For this crowd, it’s worth noting that “Executive Compensation Disclosure Reform” is listed at the “Proposed Rule” stage for this fall. The Agenda says:

The Division is considering recommending that the Commission propose rule amendments to Item 402 of Regulation S-K to rationalize executive compensation disclosure requirements.

In addition to proposing changes to Item 402, the Reg Flex Agenda says that – among other things – the SEC is considering proposing rules that would modernize the Rule 14a-8 requirements for shareholder proposals, amend other proxy rules, and rationalize disclosure requirements.

As we’ve shared in prior blogs, the SEC’s May 2026 proposals on filer status and semi-annual reporting could also have big implications for executive compensation disclosure.

As John noted in his blog, the dates tied to these items are aspirational and signify general timeframes versus precise dates. And while the Reg Flex Agenda provides insight into the SEC’s current rulemaking priorities, it isn’t a definitive guide for anyone trying to predict SEC rulemaking for purposes of specific board agendas, budget and workflow. Still, it will be exciting to see what may be in store!

Liz Dunshee

July 6, 2026

Say-on-Pay: Using Your Results to Inform Engagements & Decisions

As Meredith noted last week, we’ve been seeing relatively strong say-on-pay support this year. Average say-on-pay support clocked in at 91% as of June 1st for S&P 500 companies, according to this FW Cook memo. But the memo explains why it’s important for compensation committees and their advisors to look beyond the numbers – for signals that could improve your fall engagements and potentially influence compensation decisions in the coming year. Here’s an excerpt:

Context determines what a result means more than the number itself. Modest erosion from a historically stable baseline reads differently than a fourth consecutive decline. A drop that would look manageable in isolation is more significant when it comes from long-supportive holders, or when the proxy advisor’s critique, shareholder feedback, and vote pattern all point to the- same issue.

Start by taking the vote apart before explaining it. Compare it to prior years. Determine whether opposition was concentrated or broad-based. Review how large holders appear to have voted and connect the result to any concerns heard during pre-meeting shareholder engagement. Low-90s support, and in some cases high-80s support, may not require action, but it may still warrant a closer read if opposition is concentrated, recurring, or tied to known concerns.

When it comes to using voting results to inform off-season engagements, the memo says:

Off-season engagement should start with the questions the Committee needs answered rather than starting with a promise of change.

Ain’t that the truth! The memo shares the types of questions that companies might want to ask depending on their circumstances.

Liz Dunshee

July 2, 2026

Trends in One-Time Awards

ISS recently wrote a piece on say-on-pay outcomes and one-time awards for the HLS Corporate Governance blog. The blog reiterates the continued strength of say-on-pay outcomes, but here’s an interesting tidbit:

Increases in the prevalence and size of one-time awards have not translated into lower support levels or more failures. Rather than reflecting a reduction in the use of one-time awards, companies may be deploying them more selectively or structuring them in ways that mitigate investor concerns.

As far as trends in the use of one-time awards, the blog shares:

Following a post-pandemic peak of nearly 30% of Russell 3000 companies in 2021, the prevalence of one-time equity awards declined steadily through 2024, bottoming out at 25% and reflecting a normalization of compensation practices. However, year-to-date data disclosed for fiscal year 2025 indicates a reversal of that trend, jumping to 27% [. . .]

Most one-time equity awards remained concentrated in modest value ranges, with a majority falling below $5 million. However, the upper end of the distribution has shifted. Among S&P 500 companies, larger one-time awards have become more common, particularly in the $5 million to $20 million range.

Notably, so-called mega grants exceeding $20 million increased in 2025 rising in prevalence by approximately 63% over the previous peak in 2021. These mega grants are most often associated with executive recruitment, retention, or leadership transitions requiring companies to secure or retain key talent.  Although these awards remain rare, the increase suggests more willingness among some large-cap companies to utilize sizable grants. In contrast, companies across the broader Russell 3000 exhibit a more modest distribution, with most awards concentrated below $1 million and fewer in the largest tiers.

All types of one-time awards — sign-on, make-whole, retention, moonshot — get quite a bit of attention from investors and proxy advisors. To some extent, there has been a perception that special awards evidence that the regular annual compensation program isn’t working as intended. But I get the sense that this perception is shifting — maybe because companies have gotten better at communicating their rationale — and there’s greater recognition that there is an appropriate time and place for a special award. The blog says:

One-time awards typically remain a key tool for addressing discrete compensation situations, such as executive retention or transitions. Although prevalence remains below peak levels following the pandemic, the recent increase suggests companies have experienced a greater need to address retention and turnover concerns during the year.

As far as how companies can selectively deploy special awards and structure them in ways that mitigate investor concerns, I’m looking forward to hearing from our speakers on “The Top Compensation Consultants Speak” panel at our fall conferences, who will do a lookback at special awards in the last year and discuss do’s and don’ts.

Before you head out for the holiday weekend, take a few moments to register for our 2026 Proxy Disclosure and Executive Compensation Conferences on October 12th & 13th in Orlando, Florida and via webcast.

Our agenda features two full days of fast-paced, topical panels, an all-star speaker lineup, and Dave’s interview with Corp Fin’s Deputy Director Christina Thomas. Our Fall Conferences will be a great opportunity to get up to speed on the SEC’s latest rulemaking initiatives, as well as other developments in executive compensation, governance, disclosure practices, activism and shareholder engagement.

You can register online at our conference page or contact us at info@CCRcorp.com or 1-800-737-1271. Do it today so you don’t miss out on our discounted “early bird” rate!

Programming Note: Speaking of the holiday weekend, our blogs will be off tomorrow and return on Monday. Have a safe and happy Semiquincentennial Fourth of July.

Meredith Ervine 

July 1, 2026

Compensation Planning: What Will You Wish You Had Done Last Summer?

As you’re making and executing on your summer vacation plans and fun beach reading lists, this Cooley alert suggests, if you’re an executive compensation professional, you don’t forget about what you might wish you had been doing or reading from a professional perspective to feel well prepared for compensation season once the fall arrives. What might that look like? The alert suggests starting with your comp committee meeting checklist and figuring out where you might be better off if you gave yourself the gift of a head start. That might mean you start to:

– Evaluate how in-flight 2026 compensation programs are faring, and, as a result, whether there may be reason to give early thought to changes for the 2027 programs.

– Evaluate whether the existing programs are resulting in any unanticipated risks due to changes in economic and geopolitical circumstances since grant.

– Evaluate whether new-hire practices remain generally appropriate to avoid undue scrambling at the time of hire.

– Evaluate the adequacy of share reserves given dilution projections so that you can start marshaling support for an increase.

– Consider whether any additional clawback protections may be appropriate considering your circumstances.

– Evaluate the adequacy of compensation governance procedures generally and whether changes should be put in place for the coming compensation season.

– Give thought to whether the annual proxy disclosure could benefit from a fundamental refresh, which is a notoriously time-consuming exercise and ill-fitted to a pivot late in the year.

– Make sure any annual stockholder outreach is on track and preferably ahead of pace, whether driven by reason of say-on-pay results or otherwise.

If you don’t yet have such a checklist, the alert also suggests how to start developing one.

Meredith Ervine