Daily Breeze (Torrance)

CEO's diatribe puts focus on multimilli­on-dollar salaries

Employees beginning to scrutinize executive pay as inflation eats away at buying power

- By Jo Constantz

The head of upmarket furniture-maker MillerKnol­l Inc., known for its iconic Herman Miller office chairs, is under fire for telling employees to leave “pity city'' and stop asking about bonuses.

Those words by Chief Executive Officer Andi Owen have provoked criticism on social media — and they may soon come back to haunt her as Owen's own pay package for the current period likely will be disclosed by August.

The prior financial year she was awarded a salary of roughly $1 million, in addition to about $4 million from mostly stocks and options, an annual incentive plan and covered expenses, like access to a company jet.

Compensati­on is a hot-button topic for both employees and executives, especially when the economy is going through a rough patch, said Tony Guadagni, a senior principal at consulting firm Gartner Inc.

Scrutiny over executive pay levels is intensifyi­ng as surging inflation hits household budgets and the U.S. experience­s widescale staffing shortages, which has emboldened many employees to push for higher wages.

“I think in a time like this, where the news cycle has been dominated by inflation for 18 months, where employees feel their paychecks not going as far as they used to — organizati­onal leadership would be wise to be sensitive to that,'' he said.

The 90-second leaked recording captures Owen chiding staff at the end of a 75-minute internal company meeting for speculatin­g too much about the annual bonus payouts.

“Spend your time and your effort thinking about the $26 million we need and not thinking about what are you going to do if you don't get a bonus,” Owen said in the video, referring to an internal metric. “I had an old boss who said to me one time, `You can visit pity city, but you can't live there.' So people, leave pity city.”

Following the meeting, Owen sent an email to staff and met with leaders across the company to address their concerns, according to a person familiar with the situation.

“Andi fiercely believes in this team and all we can accomplish together, and will not be dissuaded by a 90-second clip taken out of context and posted on social media,” MillerKnol­l spokespers­on Kris Marubio said in an emailed statement.

Other CEOs' salaries have been in the spotlight in recent months in the wake of mass layoffs. Some, like Goldman Sachs Group Inc.'s David Solomon to Morgan Stanley's James Gorman, already have accepted pay cuts, while others have yet to report their most recent compensati­on packages.

Though CEOs make about 300 times the average employee, only about a third of the rank-and-file polled by Gartner thought the wage disparity was unfair. But as economic anxieties grow, there's a chance that employees may become increasing­ly sensitive to the difference in their pay and those in the C-Suite, Guadagni said.

“I wouldn't be surprised if we start to see the tide turn on that a little bit, especially depending on what happens to the economy in the next six to 12 months,” he said.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? CEOs' salaries have been in the spotlight in recent months in the wake of mass layoffs.
GETTY IMAGES CEOs' salaries have been in the spotlight in recent months in the wake of mass layoffs.

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