Start-ups no longer handing out the big bucks

Now you have to get results first...

By Ed Frauenheim, 9 August 2004 08:20

NEWS The days of easy money as a tech executive at a start-up are officially over, according to a new study.

Salaries for information technology executives at upstart technology firms plateaued in 2003, after three years of sluggish growth, says a recent report from executive search firm J. Robert Scott, law firm Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr and Ernst & Young.

The report also says a greater portion of the executives' total compensation is now based on performance.

Aaron Lapat, managing director of J. Robert Scott, said in a statement: "As little as four years ago, cash was being distributed rather indiscriminately to start-up companies, and their leadership teams were receiving Fortune 500-level salaries, as well as equity stakes and large cash bonuses. Today, early staged technology firms have returned to offering salaries that are more realistic for start-ups and are paying executives for reaching real performance milestones."

The latest study comes amid other sobering signs in the realm of tech compensation. Many middle managers in the information technology field are seeing their pay drop, according to a recent study from research firm Enterprise Systems. In addition, a report late last year predicted that the starting salaries of IT workers in the United States would fall an average of 1.6 per cent in 2004.

The new survey was conducted between December 2003 and March 2004. More than 900 executives were surveyed across the country - senior executives from 170 private technology companies in five business segments: software; communications; hardware, semiconductors and electronics; IT services, consulting and integration; and content and information providers. The largest participating industry sector was software, representing 51 per cent of respondents, followed by IT services/consulting and systems integration at 18 per cent.

The study found that the average base salary for IT executives increased 1.9 per cent last year. The report characterized this growth as flat, compared to large year-to-year increases of the past. Base salaries increased 2.9 per cent in 2002 and 7.9 per cent from 2000 to 2001, according to the study.

Salaries of executives at the high end of the pay scale, however, increased more dramatically. Those in the top quartile received average total cash compensation increases of 18 per cent, according to the study. Chief executive officers, chief operating officers and sales chiefs each enjoyed a 27 per cent jump in total cash.

The average bonus across all positions and segments increased by 15.6 per cent, according to the study. Over the past four years, the percentage of bonus-to-cash compensation has steadily risen, to 21.9 per cent, up from 15.7 per cent in 2001 and 19.3 per cent in 2002.

Ed Frauenheim writes for CNET News.com

Comments

There is 1 comment. Join the discussion

  1. 1. anonymous

    Hello,
    Good stuff but I noticed the writer never listed what average saleries were so that we could understand how much 2% or 7% really meant.
    Thanks,
    Dennis House

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