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We celebrated Black Friday...
On Sat, 24 Nov 2007 20:55:53 -0500, Eisboch wrote:
" JimH" ask wrote in message ... Obscene salaries are obscene.......period. It does not matter if they go to janitors or CEO's. Or athletes. Eisboch Never underestimate what Americans are willing to pay to be entertained. The *top* athletes, actors, rock stars, authors, all command incredible pay. Of the lot, I have the least problem with athletes. It's hard to imagine a more competitive profession. Their short careers are built on a lifetime of incredibly hard work. They are the best of the best, and, after all, someone else is willing to sign their checks. Hell, I don't even have a problem with CEOs' pay. I just think it would be nice if their pay was tied to performance, as an athlete's pay is. Think of the $210 million Nardelli was paid to be fired. |
We celebrated Black Friday...
HK wrote:
wrote: On Sat, 24 Nov 2007 20:55:53 -0500, Eisboch wrote: " JimH" ask wrote in message ... Obscene salaries are obscene.......period. It does not matter if they go to janitors or CEO's. Or athletes. Eisboch Never underestimate what Americans are willing to pay to be entertained. The *top* athletes, actors, rock stars, authors, all command incredible pay. Of the lot, I have the least problem with athletes. It's hard to imagine a more competitive profession. Their short careers are built on a lifetime of incredibly hard work. They are the best of the best, and, after all, someone else is willing to sign their checks. Hell, I don't even have a problem with CEOs' pay. I just think it would be nice if their pay was tied to performance, as an athlete's pay is. Think of the $210 million Nardelli was paid to be fired. CEO pay and bonus should never be more than a reasonable multiple of the average worker's salary at the company or corporation. Reasonable is NOT 500 times. Why? What does the average worker contribute to the bottom line of the business? |
We celebrated Black Friday...
BAR wrote:
HK wrote: wrote: On Sat, 24 Nov 2007 20:55:53 -0500, Eisboch wrote: " JimH" ask wrote in message ... Obscene salaries are obscene.......period. It does not matter if they go to janitors or CEO's. Or athletes. Eisboch Never underestimate what Americans are willing to pay to be entertained. The *top* athletes, actors, rock stars, authors, all command incredible pay. Of the lot, I have the least problem with athletes. It's hard to imagine a more competitive profession. Their short careers are built on a lifetime of incredibly hard work. They are the best of the best, and, after all, someone else is willing to sign their checks. Hell, I don't even have a problem with CEOs' pay. I just think it would be nice if their pay was tied to performance, as an athlete's pay is. Think of the $210 million Nardelli was paid to be fired. CEO pay and bonus should never be more than a reasonable multiple of the average worker's salary at the company or corporation. Reasonable is NOT 500 times. Why? What does the average worker contribute to the bottom line of the business? And therein lies the illness that is killing this country. |
We celebrated Black Friday...
HK wrote:
BAR wrote: HK wrote: wrote: On Sat, 24 Nov 2007 20:55:53 -0500, Eisboch wrote: " JimH" ask wrote in message ... Obscene salaries are obscene.......period. It does not matter if they go to janitors or CEO's. Or athletes. Eisboch Never underestimate what Americans are willing to pay to be entertained. The *top* athletes, actors, rock stars, authors, all command incredible pay. Of the lot, I have the least problem with athletes. It's hard to imagine a more competitive profession. Their short careers are built on a lifetime of incredibly hard work. They are the best of the best, and, after all, someone else is willing to sign their checks. Hell, I don't even have a problem with CEOs' pay. I just think it would be nice if their pay was tied to performance, as an athlete's pay is. Think of the $210 million Nardelli was paid to be fired. CEO pay and bonus should never be more than a reasonable multiple of the average worker's salary at the company or corporation. Reasonable is NOT 500 times. Why? What does the average worker contribute to the bottom line of the business? And therein lies the illness that is killing this country. What is killing this country is people thinking that because they ask "do you want fries with that" entitles them to pay equivalent to a CEO. |
We celebrated Black Friday...
On Sat, 24 Nov 2007 22:37:06 -0500, HK wrote:
CEO pay and bonus should never be more than a reasonable multiple of the average worker's salary at the company or corporation. Reasonable is NOT 500 times. Philosophically, I tend to agree, but it is supply and demand run amok. A HR guy once told me, his job wasn't to hire the right guy, it was to make sure he didn't hire the wrong guy. Meaning, he would always make the low risk choice. I tend to think the supply of CEO capable people far outpaces the demand, but if you want to make the low risk choice, you have to pay big bucks for the handful of candidates with a proven track record. If you want to cut costs, CEO pay is a good place to start. CEO pay has been exploding. http://www.epinet.org/content.cfm/we...shots_20060621 |
We celebrated Black Friday...
"HK" wrote in message ... Eisboch wrote: Sorry. Cuba in terms of buying their products or produce. Eisboch I could be wrong, but I don't believe we buy products from Cuba. Just another example of idiotic U.S. foreign policy. China, OK. Cuba, not OK. Exactly. But do *you* believe the trade embargo with Cuba should be dropped and Cuban products/produce be made available to the US market? Eisboch |
We celebrated Black Friday...
wrote in message ... On Sat, 24 Nov 2007 20:55:53 -0500, Eisboch wrote: " JimH" ask wrote in message ... Obscene salaries are obscene.......period. It does not matter if they go to janitors or CEO's. Or athletes. Eisboch Never underestimate what Americans are willing to pay to be entertained. The *top* athletes, actors, rock stars, authors, all command incredible pay. Of the lot, I have the least problem with athletes. It's hard to imagine a more competitive profession. Their short careers are built on a lifetime of incredibly hard work. They are the best of the best, and, after all, someone else is willing to sign their checks. I suppose. But someone else is signing their checks with your money. http://boston.redsox.mlb.com/bos/tic...ng_pricing.jsp Eisboch |
We celebrated Black Friday...
wrote in message ... On Sat, 24 Nov 2007 22:37:06 -0500, HK wrote: CEO pay and bonus should never be more than a reasonable multiple of the average worker's salary at the company or corporation. Reasonable is NOT 500 times. Philosophically, I tend to agree, but it is supply and demand run amok. A HR guy once told me, his job wasn't to hire the right guy, it was to make sure he didn't hire the wrong guy. Meaning, he would always make the low risk choice. I tend to think the supply of CEO capable people far outpaces the demand, but if you want to make the low risk choice, you have to pay big bucks for the handful of candidates with a proven track record. If you want to cut costs, CEO pay is a good place to start. CEO pay has been exploding. http://www.epinet.org/content.cfm/we...shots_20060621 CEO's aren't hired by HR departments. They are usually recruited and hired by the company's Board of Directors. The Board of Directors are responsible to the shareholders. The shareholders demand performance, growth and increased stock value. A candidate for CEO must have qualifications and potential benefit to the company (in terms of raising stock value or dividends) that are consistant with the will of the shareholders. For that, you pay ... in salary, perks and options. Eisboch |
We celebrated Black Friday...
On Sun, 25 Nov 2007 03:59:50 -0500, Eisboch wrote:
wrote in message ... On Sat, 24 Nov 2007 22:37:06 -0500, HK wrote: CEO pay and bonus should never be more than a reasonable multiple of the average worker's salary at the company or corporation. Reasonable is NOT 500 times. Philosophically, I tend to agree, but it is supply and demand run amok. A HR guy once told me, his job wasn't to hire the right guy, it was to make sure he didn't hire the wrong guy. Meaning, he would always make the low risk choice. I tend to think the supply of CEO capable people far outpaces the demand, but if you want to make the low risk choice, you have to pay big bucks for the handful of candidates with a proven track record. If you want to cut costs, CEO pay is a good place to start. CEO pay has been exploding. http://www.epinet.org/content.cfm/we...shots_20060621 CEO's aren't hired by HR departments. Of course they're not, but the same constraints hold true. The HR guy hired the low risk candidate because he didn't want his boss coming at him for hiring, in hindsight, the wrong guy. The Board uses the same conservative thinking. That's one of the reasons many CEOs are retreads. They are usually recruited and hired by the company's Board of Directors. The Board of Directors are responsible to the shareholders. The shareholders demand performance, growth and increased stock value. A candidate for CEO must have qualifications and potential benefit to the company (in terms of raising stock value or dividends) that are consistant with the will of the shareholders. For that, you pay ... in salary, perks and options. Eisboch Yeah, but if you want to look at performance, there really isn't much correlation between high compensation and high performance. For a multimillion dollar CEO, they aren't driven by the money, it's the ego or sense of accomplishment. An example, Bob Nardelli took Home Depot's $210 million, and is now running Chrysler for $1 per year (plus some potential bonuses). I'll say again, cost cutting could start at the CEO level, and without much of a performance hit. |
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