One aspect of leadership that never ceases to amaze me is the tension between leaders, compensation and performance. Most executives are employees, just like their team members. They can struggle to manage their money, and they can have performance issues. Where the nuance comes in is connecting the two. It’s an important junction, and one that just might hold the key to better executive retention in a market where leadership comes at a premium.
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ToggleThe Connection Between Executive Churn and Compensation
Executive turnover is reaching all-time highs. Some of the shorter tenures and rising churn come from the complexity of modern leadership. But I’m increasingly convinced that another element at work here is misaligned incentives.
It’s easy to point to things like bad fits, culture issues and talent shortages. But what about compensation? No, not the number of zeros on a check. I’m talking about how executives are paid. The pre-tax, post-tax structure of executive compensation is negatively shaping how many leaders lead.
It’s tempting to see executives in their own category, but in many ways, they’re running the same race as other employees. Yes, they’re paid more, but they’re also lifting a heavier weight because of it. Executives have:
- Higher marginal tax rates
- The same pre-tax savings limits as everyone else
- Much higher incomes to manage
This leaves senior leaders with structurally limited fiscal options. In situations where a mid-level employee can defer a meaningful percentage of income pre-tax, executives earning $2M or even $500,000 often cannot. To put it another way, the system wasn’t designed to penalize executives so that it’s hard for them to build financial independence, but it does all the same.
The result? Executives often opt to focus on immediate liquidity over long-term investment in their companies. They don’t think as much about long-term value creation. Instead, they aim for bonuses, equity cash-outs and similar short-term wins.
This isn’t new. It’s been an issue for years. I remember a study back in 2014 that found a “lack of stability of performance metrics [for CEOs] can suggest a short-term focus despite the fact that the incentive plans are supposed to be long-term focused.” The study’s co-author, Mark Van Clieaf, added, “Future value is a key input for value creating [total shareholder return] along with current operating performance.”
Changing Executive Compensation to Shift Executive Outcomes
So, what can companies do when executive compensation becomes transactional instead of strategic? What can they do when traditional payment structures erode loyalty and retention at the top of the org chart?
At a certain level, the answer is simple. Change the compensation structure.
What does that look like? Colin Steinberg, partner at Institutional Architects, got really practical with this. It isn’t rocket science. You just need the right tax tools. Here’s what he recommended: “Wealthy executives work for companies that implement 409A executive deferral plans.”
Without going into too much detail here, a 409A plan lets executives defer a chunk of their salary or bonuses to future years. This helps them bypass 401(k) limits for tax-deferred growth and retention incentives, paving the way for a longer pre-tax savings runway.
“These programs increase net savings, strengthen long-term incentives and improve corporate economics without increasing company spend,” Steinberg added. “Where these plans aren’t yet in place, thoughtful dialogue between leadership is the natural next step.”
The 409A Game-Changer
Simply offering a 409A executive deferral plan can be a game-changer for a company. It can take the same total executive compensation and award it in a format that incentivizes long-term interest, loyalty and strategic thinking from the recipient.
To be abundantly clear, the difference here isn’t pay. It’s structure. Forward-thinking companies can use 409A-compliant executive deferral strategies to improve their executives’ pre-tax savings capacity. This turns these companies into the highest net payer, without having to become the highest gross payer.
Leadership turnover is near an all-time high. The path to better retention isn’t necessarily paying your leaders more than the next guy. In the end, the company that can give its executive the most value after tax is the company that is going to win the talent war.
Leadership Turnover Is a System Design Problem
Leadership turnover is often discussed as a people problem, but increasingly it is a system design problem. Companies invest heavily in leadership development, culture initiatives, and employer branding, yet overlook a core structural issue: how executive compensation actually behaves after taxes. When the system nudges leaders toward short-term liquidity, it quietly undermines the very behaviors organizations say they want—patience, stewardship, and long-term value creation.
This dynamic is especially visible in senior roles where the stakes are highest. Executives are being asked to navigate economic uncertainty, regulatory complexity, and heightened stakeholder scrutiny—all while managing personal financial realities that grow more restrictive as income rises. When compensation structures fail to evolve with these realities, friction builds.
How After-Tax Friction Shortens Executive Time Horizons
One of the most overlooked consequences of after-tax compensation friction is decision compression. When executives feel constrained in their ability to plan financially, they narrow their time horizons. Capital allocation decisions, talent investments, and even risk tolerance can shift as a result. Leaders may prioritize initiatives that generate near-term payouts rather than those that compound value over time.
This isn’t a failure of leadership character. It’s a rational response to incentives. When liquidity is taxed heavily and long-term deferral options are limited, short-term optimization becomes the default. Over time, this pattern can erode strategic consistency and increase leadership fatigue.
Retention Signals Hidden Inside Pay Structures
Compensation always sends a message. When organizations rely heavily on cash bonuses or one-time equity events without offering meaningful pre-tax deferral options, executives receive a subtle but powerful signal: maximize value while you’re here. That mindset fuels churn, particularly in competitive talent markets where experienced leaders know they can move laterally—or up—without long-term financial penalty.
By contrast, companies that implement thoughtful executive deferral strategies communicate partnership and shared time horizons. Leaders who can defer compensation pre-tax are more likely to align their personal financial outcomes with the long-term success of the company.
Becoming the Highest Net Payer Without Raising Costs
One of the most misunderstood aspects of executive compensation redesign is cost. These strategies do not require paying executives more. In many cases, they simply change how compensation is delivered, not how much is paid. That distinction matters for boards and compensation committees under pressure to manage expenses while remaining competitive.
Well-designed deferral structures can improve executive outcomes after tax without increasing company spend. This allows organizations to become the highest net payer—without becoming the highest gross payer. In a tight labor market for senior talent, that difference can be decisive.
The Governance Case for Rethinking Executive Pay
There’s also a governance dimension to this conversation. Boards often focus on aligning executive incentives with shareholder outcomes, but alignment breaks down when executives are forced into after-tax inefficiencies that shareholders themselves don’t face. When leaders lack the tools to plan alongside the long-term success of the business, incentive plans lose credibility.
Over time, this misalignment can erode trust between executives, boards, and shareholders. Compensation design, when done thoughtfully, becomes a stabilizing force rather than a source of tension.
Why Compensation Structure Is Now a Leadership Strategy
As executive turnover remains elevated, organizations should resist the urge to treat churn as inevitable. Much of it is preventable. The companies that succeed will be those that understand how tax structure, time horizon, and human behavior intersect.
Executive compensation is no longer just an HR or finance function—it is a leadership strategy. When pay structures support long-term thinking, executives are more likely to stay, invest, and build. In the end, leadership stability isn’t about bigger checks. It’s about giving leaders the tools to align their personal financial outcomes with the future of the organizations they run.
Featured Image Credit: Photo by Tima Miroshnichenko; Pexels; Thanks!







