Savvy Strategies for Executive Compensation: Part 2

Ken Hargreaves, CFP®, AIF®, AWMA®, CRPC®

In Part 1, we saw how Andrew Carnegie’s oversized bonuses helped prove one of capitalism’s primary principles: incentives shape behavior. Since then, compensation in privately held companies has evolved from straightforward salary-plus-bonus into purpose-built structures—deferred comp, SERPs, and other designs—that keep executives and owners chasing the same outcome. Part 2 moves the story into the world of “synthetic” equity: phantom stock and Stock Appreciation Rights (SARs) that share value growth without issuing real shares. 

We’ll also look at Long-Term Incentive Plans (LTIPs) as a parallel path for rewarding multi-year performance. Different structures, same objective: keep key executives thinking like owners while you keep the ownership cap table exactly where you want it.

Phantom Stock & Stock Appreciation Rights (SARs)

Phantom stock plans and SARs are inventive ways to give employees a stake in your company’s success without issuing actual stock. You create an imaginary ledger of shares for an employee, and down the road, you pay them a bonus based on how those phantom shares performed. A SAR (Stock Appreciation Right) is a close cousin: it only pays the increase in value of a share over time. In other words, phantom stock can mimic full stock value (including the base price and growth), while a SAR strictly rewards growth.

How do these work? Say your company’s stock value is $50 today. You grant a key manager 1,000 phantom shares. Five years later, if those shares are valued at $80, the manager gets a cash bonus of 1,000 × $80 = $80,000 (under a full-value plan) or perhaps 1,000 × ($80–$50) = $30,000 (if it’s an appreciation-only plan). With a SAR, you’d typically just owe the $30,000 gain. No actual stock certificates change hands – it’s all on paper until the payout. That means no new shareholders to deal with and no dilution of your ownership.

Phantom Stock vs. Stock Appreciation Rights

Feature
Phantom Stock
Stock Appreciation Rights (SARs)
What It Pays
Can pay full share value (initial value + appreciation)
Pays only the appreciation in value
Ownership Impact
No actual share ownership or voting rights
No actual share ownership or voting rights
Payout Timing
At vesting date or triggering event (e.g., company sale)
At vesting date or triggering event (e.g., company sale)
Cash Requirements
Higher (pays full share value)
Lower (only pays the appreciation)
Tax Treatment
Ordinary income to employee at payout; deductible expense for company
Ordinary income to employee at payout; deductible expense for company
Ideal For
Family businesses wanting to reward non-family executives
Companies focused specifically on rewarding growth

From a business owner’s perspective, both shine when you want to share the company’s success without sharing ownership. This is a big deal if you’re a family business owner who wants to keep equity in family hands – phantom stock lets your key non-family execs feel like owners in the economic sense, so they’re motivated, yet you maintain full control.

These plans typically come with vesting schedules or “golden handcuffs”. For example, a phantom stock grant might vest only if an exec stays for five years and the company hits performance goals. Leave early or miss targets, and the payout vanishes. That keeps your talent in their seats and laser-focused on long-term wins, which is exactly what you want if your endgame is a lucrative sale or handing the business off to the next generation.

Of course, we can’t ignore taxes and costs. The tax-efficiency angle here is mainly about timing and deduction. As the employer, you get a tax deduction when you cut that bonus check at the end of the plan. The employee, on the other hand, defers their taxation until they receive the payout (which is taxed as ordinary income). There’s no capital gains treatment for the employee (since they didn’t actually own stock), but deferral itself can be valuable, especially if the payout coincides with a high-growth period of the company (and presumably a stronger ability to pay). 

One note of caution: if your company’s value skyrockets (nice problem to have!), be ready for the cash obligation. Big phantom/SAR payouts can dent your cash flow if you haven’t planned ahead. 

Long-Term Incentive Plans

Moving on from the stock-mimicking world of phantom shares, let’s talk about Long-Term Incentive Plans (LTIPs). An LTIP is a multi-year bonus program tied to your company’s big goals. You sit down with your executive team and say, “If we grow our revenue 50% over the next three years and increase our profit margin by 5 points, you’ll each earn a significant bonus (or equity award) at the end.” That’s a performance-based LTIP in action. It’s generally not about handing out rewards for one good quarter or a one-time win. Rather, it’s about incentivizing sustained, long-term performance that drives up shareholder value.

How LTIPs Work 

Generally, you establish an LTIP by setting specific performance targets and a time horizon (usually 3 to 5 years is common). The targets can be financial metrics such as cumulative earnings, revenue growth, or return on equity. Alternatively, they can be about strategic milestones – e.g., expanding to 50 stores or successfully launching a new product line. Many companies use a mix of metrics to capture what “increased shareholder value” means for them. For instance, a plan might require hitting Total Shareholder Return (TSR) and Earnings Per Share goals, and maybe a customer growth number. 

Typical LTIP Timeline
YEAR 0: Plan Creation

Establish performance metrics, targets, and time horizon (typically 3-5 years). Communicate plan details to key executives.

YEAR 1: Performance Tracking

Begin measuring performance against established KPIs. Regular updates to participants on progress toward goals.

YEARS 2-3: Continued Measurement

Ongoing performance tracking. Executives remain focused on long-term goals rather than short-term gains.

END OF PLAN: Performance Evaluation

Final assessment of achievement against targets. Determination of payout amounts based on results.

PAYOUT

Distribute earned rewards (cash, stock, or other compensation) based on achievement level. Potentially establish next LTIP cycle.

In practice, LTIPs can be paid in different ways. Public companies often use actual equity for LTIPs (like performance shares or stock options that vest based on the results). Private companies may instead use cash-based LTIPs or even phantom equity. The downside, of course, is that cash for bonuses must come from the company’s coffers, so you need to ensure the incentive is affordable based on your financial projections (again, modeling is key).

Let’s not forget tax and cost efficiency here as well. Typically, any payouts under an LTIP are tax-deductible to the company, since they’re compensation. The executives will pay income tax on cash bonuses or on the value of stock they receive (there are nuanced timing rules if stock is involved, but that’s beyond today’s scope). The real benefit, tax-wise, is that you’re timing these payouts to when performance has been achieved, meaning your company should have the profits or liquidity to justify the expense (and the tax deduction).

Conclusion & Call to Action

Executive compensation can be complex, but it’s also one of your most powerful levers as a business owner. The strategies we’ve covered – from Deferred Comp and SERPs in Part 1 to Phantom Stock, SARs, and LTIPs here in Part 2 – are all about aligning incentives with long-term outcomes. When your compensation plan is aligned with your vision of the future, amazing things can happen. You can motivate growth, retain the talent that fuels that growth, and simultaneously pave the way for your own financial freedom and legacy.

Are you confident that your company’s executive compensation plan is pulling its weight in your broader financial plan? Does it dovetail with your retirement timeline, your tax strategy, and the future you want for your family? If you’re hesitating, it’s probably time to get a second opinion. I’d be happy to review your situation and, if necessary, realign your plan to keep your best people laser-focused and ownership firmly in your own hands.

Sources:

  1. https://www.globalshares.com/insights/long-term-incentive-plan-design-what-you-need-to-know/
Disclosures

Different types of investments involve varying degrees of risk, and there can be no assurance that any specific investment or strategy will be suitable or profitable for a client’s portfolio. All investment strategies have the potential for profit or loss. Information presented is believed to be factual and up-to-date, but we do not guarantee its accuracy and it should not be regarded as a complete analysis of the subjects discussed. All expressions of opinion reflect the judgment of the author/presenter as of the date of publication and are subject to change and do not constitute personalized investment advice.

A professional advisor should be consulted before implementing any investment strategy. WealthGen Advisors does not represent, warranty, or imply that the services or methods of analysis employed by the Firm can or will predict future results, successfully identify market tops or bottoms, or insulate clients from losses due to market corrections or declines. Investments are subject to market risks and potential loss of principal invested, and all investment strategies likewise have the potential for profit or loss. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

Please note: While we strive to provide accurate and helpful information, we are not Certified Public Accountants (CPAs). The information in this article is intended for informational and educational purposes only and should not be interpreted as tax advice. It is crucial to consult with a CPA or tax professional to discuss you

Author

  • A Florida native, and full-time Sarasota resident, Ken founded WealthGen Advisors, LLC after spending more than fourteen years in the financial advisory industry. Ken holds multiple industry designations, as well as a master's degree in Financial Planning. Prior to founding WealthGen Advisors, Ken spent almost a decade in New York and then Texas as Vice President at The Capital Group, a $2T global investment manager serving institutional clients and pension funds.

    View all posts

Join Our Newsletter

We send updates regularly. Get notified when new resources and financial insights are available.

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Latest Posts

Latest Video

Tariffs & Your Portfolio: What History Teaches Us About Today's Trade Tensions

Free Resources

Our Blog

Insightful articles that reflect our low-cost, "stay the course" investment philosophy.

Our Videos

Free videos that cover complex topics in an easy-to-digest explainer style.

Choose your advisor

Ken Hargreaves - Wealth ManagerKen Hargreaves - Wealth Manager

Ken Hargreaves
CFP®, AIF®, AWMA®, CRPC®

Founder, Wealth Manager
Shane Klemcke - Wealth ManagerShane Klemcke - Wealth Manager

Shane Klemcke
CRPC®

Wealth Manager