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Showing posts with label executive retention agreement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label executive retention agreement. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 12, 2022

Executive Retention Packages – Terms and Negotiations

On October 7, 2022, the executive career advancement website IvyExec published an article I wrote on “Executive Retention Packages – Terms and Negotiations.”

This new article is designed for CEOs, CMOs, CSOs, CTOs and other C-suite and senior executives in technology and life sciences, and in other areas of the economy.  This article  might also be of benefit to many directors and mid-level executives.  In each case, this article is directed to executives being recruited and who have now or anticipate soon receiving, an attractive offer to move on, yet who, at the same time, are also critical to their current company.  It is in that circumstance this article suggests how your current company might provide a significant retention package for you to stay or to at least work with them to delay the full impact of your complete departure.

This frequently occurs when the company is “in play”. However, besides this change of control situation, my article discusses a number of other circumstances where executive retention negotiations occur, including where:

  • The company is nearing a critical milestone, necessary for a funding round,
  • The company is planning its IPO and needs an executive lockup,
  • The executive has close relationships with key accounts and the company fears a significant loss of business,
  • The executive has close relationships with key management and performers in the company and fears a significant attrition,
  • The executive as an inventor, innovator and technologist has a critical role in product creation, maintenance or development, or
  • The executive has achieved a level of notoriety such that his or her loss could have a negative impact on perception of the company within the customer or business community where the company operates.

My article also discusses how to raise the issue of executive retention, how to negotiate and frame the executive retention package as a mutually beneficial “win-win” for the executive and the company, and finally the key terms to seek in your executive retention agreement.

To see my full IvyExec career advancement website article, go to LINK: https://www.ivyexec.com/career-advice/2022/executive-retention-packages-terms-and-negotiations/

Or on my website at https://www.executiveemploymentattorney.com/executive-retention-packages-terms-and-negotiations/

IvyExec hosts articles and webinars from experts in the career, leadership, and business spaces who wish to share their knowledge with our audience. In April 2021, I was invited to write for IvyExec since it seeks original content on the topics of career development, leadership, and business strategy as it applies to senior-level and C-Suite professionals. IvyExec blog posts and webinars are shared with its community of more than 2 million members on its website, in its newsletter, and on its social media channels. https://www.ivyexec.com/career-advice/write-for-us/

IvyExec claims a “Community of 2.5M+ Leaders”.

See also – https://www.ivyexec.com/

It is my hope that this article will be helpful to CEOs, CMOs, CSOs, CTOs and other C-suite and senior executives in technology and life sciences, who are being recruited and have now, or anticipate soon receiving, an attractive offer to move on, yet are also critical to their current company, where the current company might provide a significant retention package for the executive to stay. If you or any colleague of yours has a need in this area, please do reach out to me at rob@attorneyadelson.com.

Thursday, August 18, 2022

Executive Sign on Bonus, Retention Bonus and Other Bonuses – Terms and Negotiations

On August 4, 2022, the executive career advancement website IvyExec  published an article I wrote on “Executive Sign on Bonus, Retention Bonus and Other Bonuses – Terms and Negotiations.”

This new article is designed not only for C-level and senior executives, but even for many directors and mid-level executives who when negotiating a new executive job offer or employment contract need to give equal and perhaps greater focus on the structure and terms of bonus as they do to base salary compensation.

My article discusses five (5) key bonus structures:

  • Sign-on bonus to make the executive whole for items given up,
  • Sign-on bonus to compensate for the risks in changing companies,
  • Guaranteed bonus,
  • Performance bonus based on company achievement,
  • Performance bonus based on individual achievement.

The article also suggests other important issues in the determination, calculation and payout of the bonus.

My article also discusses a retention bonus or stay bonus as a one-time payment or a one-time retention agreement for considerations for the executive to commit to staying with the company for a set period of time or through to a planned event (for example, an acquisition).

To see my full IvyExec  career advancement website article, go to LINK:  https://www.ivyexec.com/career-advice/2022/executive-sign-on-bonus-retention-bonus-and-other-bonuses-terms-and-negotiations/ 

Or on my website at  https://www.executiveemploymentattorney.com/executive-sign-on-bonus-retention-bonus-and-other-bonuses-terms-and-negotiations/

IvyExec hosts articles and webinars from experts in the career, leadership, and business spaces who wish to share their knowledge with our audience.  In April 2021, I was invited to write for IvyExec since it seeks original content on the topics of career development, leadership, and business strategy as it applies to senior-level and C-Suite professionals.  IvyExec blog posts and webinars are shared with its community of more than 2 million members on its website, in its newsletter, and on its social media channels.  https://www.ivyexec.com/career-advice/write-for-us/

IvyExec claims a “Community of 2.5M+ Leaders”.

It is my hope that this article will be helpful to CEOs and other senior executives who are considering or re-visiting the executive compensation piece of a job offer or employment contract and need to focus on bonus structure and terms every bit as much as base salary. If you or any colleague of yours has a need in this area, please do reach out to me at rob@attorneyadelson.com.


Wednesday, December 29, 2021

A Change of Control Agreement Saves the Day When Your Company Is In Play

Two and a half weeks ago, on Thursday December 16, 2021, the website Ivy Exec published under executive “Advancing” an article I wrote on “A Change of Control Agreement Saves the Day When Your Company Is in Play”.

This new article is designed not only for C-level and senior executives, but even for many directors and mid-level executives, whose companies are now “in play” — that there may be a sale of the company with new owners and to some extent a whole new successor employer.

executive signing a change of control agreement

My article first discusses this situation faced by the executives, then advocates self-assessment of your role and importance in the pre-deal and post deal environment, and finally the importance of establishing your role and rights in a retention / change of control agreement. Among the key elements of that agreement are the following:

  • Significant equity of the target company to the executive
  • Liquidity for the executive on the levels of liquidity offered owners
  • Properly structured equity, tax favored for capital gain taxation
  • Proper severance in the event of early termination after the acquisition
  • Ability to trigger severance if the executive’s position or responsibilities are reduced
  • Proper structuring to avoid potential excise tax for parachute payments under IRC §280G.


To see my full IvyExec Career Advice website article, go to LINK https://www.ivyexec.com/career-advice/2021/a-change-of-control-agreement-saves-the-day-when-your-company-is-in-play/
Or on my website at https://www.executiveemploymentattorney.com/a-change-of-control-agreement-saves-the-day-when-your-company-is-in-play/

IvyExec hosts articles and webinars from experts in the career, leadership, and business spaces who wish to share their knowledge with our audience. In April 2021, I was invited to write for IvyExec since it seeks original content on the topics of career development, leadership, and business strategy as it applies to senior-level and C-Suite professionals. IvyExec blog posts and webinars are shared with its community of more than 2 million members on its website, in its newsletter, and on its social media channels. https://www.ivyexec.com/career-advice/write-for-us/

It is my hope that this article will be of benefit to VPs, directors and senior executives who have are trying to navigate a change in control in their companies. My article suggests terms and approaches to each of you and thus I hope will provide you a benefit in your negotiations.

Feel free to tweet or share this article. If you or any colleague of yours needs assistance in negotiating a change of control situation, please do reach out to me.


Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Adelson & Associates, LLC: New law firm and address, but Continuity in my Growing Law Practice for 2020 and Beyond

We begin this new year 2020 with a new law firm and a new downtown Boston address, but, at the same time, with full continuity for my growing law practice, which saw its best year in 2019.

Adelson & Associates, LLC logo


Here is more information on the new firm:

Robert A. Adelson is now the Principal of Adelson & Associates, LLC.  For fifteen (15) years, from October 2004 through December 2019, Robert Adelson practiced law as a partner of Engel & Schultz, LLP, and at the same time referred legal work to his associates, that is to trusted and experienced colleagues of Mr. Adelson’s including several of his former law partners. However, in December 2019, the lead partners of the Engel & Schultz LLP law firm announced they would go into semi-retirement, go their separate ways, and the office lease would expire in January 2020.  In response, Robert Adelson formed Adelson & Associates, LLC in December 2019 and commenced the new law firm’s operations on January 1, 2020, with the new law firm, Adelson & Associates, LLC, from that date and going forward, taking over all current Robert Adelson clients and matters, as well as all referral of legal work to associates of Robert Adelson.

Commencing tomorrow, 1/15/2020, the address for the new law firm Adelson & Associates, LLC will be 101 Federal Street, Suite 1900, Boston, MA 02110 (another premier Class A office building across the street from our prior building, One Federal Street, with our new offices, this time, on the 19th floor rather than the 21st floor).
The office phone number (617-951-9980 ext 205) and fax number (617-951-0048) are, for the present, those of Engel & Schultz LLP.  However, by the end of January 2020, it is expected the new office phone and fax for Adelson & Associates, LLC will be in place.  If any question arises in this period, when trying to reach Robert Adelson by phone, please use the direct Mobile phone number which remains unchanged and will continue in full use now and going forward  (617-875-8665).

The email for Robert Adelson ( radelson@engelschultz.com ) is, for the present, his  Engel & Schultz LLP email.  The new domain for Adelson & Associates, LLC has been established, and Robert Adelson’s new email is rob@attorneyadelson.com.  However, the seamless migration of radelson@engelshultz.com to rob@attorneyadelson.com  has not yet been completed.  By the end of January 2020, it is expected that the email migration will be completed.  So, until you are advised that the email migration has been completed or you begin to receive email from the new email address, please continue to use radelson@engelshultz.com for all email communications to Robert Adelson.

Our website remains essentially unchanged, with the same internet address – www.executiveemploymentattorney.com.  In marketing, our new shingle and brand will give greater emphasis to my website and marketing emphasis:  “Adelson & Associates, LLC – Executive Employment Attorney.”  The webpage, established for me at CEOWorld magazine, too will remain largely unchanged.  The web address remains –http://ceoworld.biz/author/robert-adelson/ .  At that address, you will have a link to over twenty-five (25) articles Robert Adelson has written over the last few years and published in CEOWorld magazine.  These are articles on executive job offersrestricted stock and stock options, RSUsexecutive bonus structureschange of controlexecutive retention agreementswrongful termination and constructive termination and many other subjects of interest to CEOs, CFOsCSOs, CTOsCOOs, VPs and other senior executives in industries ranging from financial institutions, retailers and manufacturers to software, medical devices and biotechnology companies.  From his contributions, Robert Adelson has been recognized by the magazine as an opinion columnist and authority in this field for the CEOWORLD Magazine.

At the same time, Robert Adelson continues to represent a number of small companies, company founders, entrepreneurs and independent consultants.  That will not change. Robert Adelson will continue those representations and accept new clients in those areas who seek me out. However, the Adelson & Associates, LLC marketing emphasis and the majority of its law practice growth is expected to occur in the representation of CEOs, C-level and senior executive in executive employmentexecutive equity compensation, retention and separation situations.

It has been our pleasure to serve you over the past 15 years under the firm name Engel & Schultz LLP, and we very much look forward to continuing to serve you under our new shingle, Adelson & Associates, LLC.

If you have a question or comment on my new law firm, please don’t hesitate to call or email Robert Adelson.  Also, if business or pleasure finds you in the Post Office Square area of Boston’s downtown Financial District, and you would like to check out our new offices, please give a call or shoot us an email, and, as Ernie Boch Jr would say, “Come on down!”

Best regards,
Rob Adelson
ROBERT A. ADELSON, ESQ.
Adelson & Associates, LLC / Executive Employment Attorney
101 Federal Street, 19th Floor
Boston, MA 02110
Office: (617) 951-9980 EXT. 205
Mobile :  (617) 875-8665
FAX:  (617) 951-0048
E-mail:  radelson@engelschultz.com
Blog:  https://robadelson.wordpress.com/
Twitter:  @AttorneyAdelson
Webpage : www.executiveemploymentattorney.com
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robert-adelson-b8a1557/

Friday, May 17, 2019

Negotiating Executive Retention Agreement Terms to Protect Your Interests

On April 26, 2019, CEOWorld magazine published an article I wrote on “Negotiating Executive Retention Agreement Terms to Protect Your Interests” The magazine advised me that I can use “Featured in the CEOWORLD magazine” and the CEOWORLD “Logo” on my website. 
This article is designed for CEOs, CMOs, CSOs, CTOs and other C-suite and senior executives in technology and life sciences, who are being recruited and have now, or anticipate soon receiving, an attractive offer to move on, yet are also critical to their current company, where your current company might provide a significant retention package for you to stay.

This frequently occurs when the company is “in play”.  However, besides this change of control situation, my article discusses a number of other circumstances where executive retention negotiations occur, including where:

  • The company is nearing a critical milestone, necessary for a funding round,
  • The company is planning its IPO and needs an executive lockup,
  • The executive has close relationships with key accounts and the company fears a significant loss of business,
  • The executive has close relationships with key management and performers in the company and fears a significant attrition,
  • The executive as an inventor, innovator and technologist has a critical role in product creation, maintenance or development, or
  • The executive has achieved a level of notoriety such that his or her loss could have a negative impact on perception of the company within the customer or business community where the company operates.
My article also discusses how to raise the issue of executive retention, how to negotiate and frame the executive retention package as a mutually beneficial “win-win” for the executive and the company, and finally the key terms to seek in your executive retention agreement.

To see my full CEOWorld magazine. article, go to LINK:  https://ceoworld.biz/2019/04/26/negotiating-executive-retention-agreement-terms-to-protect-your-interests/
Or on my website https://www.executiveemploymentattorney.com/executive-retention-agreement/

With more than 12.4+ million-page views, CEOWORLD magazine is the world’s leading business magazine written strictly for CEOs, CFOs, CIOs, senior management executives, business leaders, and high net worth individuals worldwide.

It is my hope that this article will be helpful to CEOs, CMOs, CSOs, CTOs and other C-suite and senior executives in technology and life sciences, who are being recruited and have now, or anticipate soon receiving, an attractive offer to move on, yet are also critical to their current company, where the current company might provide a significant retention package for the executive to stay.   If you or any colleague of yours has a need in this area, please do reach out to me at 
radelson@engelschultz.com.


Representative cases of executive retention and change of control agreements


Robert A. Adelson, Esq. is a business and tax attorney, and partner in the firm Engel & Schultz LLP in Boston, MA.  He has an advanced LLM degree in the law of Taxation from NYU and has for more than 20 years represented CEOs, C-Suite and senior executives across the country in issues of senior executive employment including terms of equity, executive compensation packageseverance agreement, change of control, restrictive covenants and other key executive issues. 

Thursday, December 27, 2018

Change of control agreements – A quick guide for CEOs, CFOs, and other senior executives


You are a C-suite officer or senior executive and your company is "in play" and may be acquired.  How do you protect yourself  or even advance your position in the event of a "successful" acquisition and change in control of your company?

My article on this subject was published March 1, 2016 by CEOWorld magazine.

The article first discusses this situation faced by CEOs. COOs, CTOs, CMOs and other C-Suite and senior executives, then advocates self-assessment of your role and importance in the pre-deal and post deal environment, and finally the importance of establishing your role and rights in a retention / change of control agreement.

Among the key elements of that agreement are the following:
  • Significant equity of the target company to the executive,
  • Liquidity for the executive on the levels of liquidity offered owners
  • Properly structured equity, tax favored for capital gain taxation
  • Proper severance in the event of early termination after the acquisition
  • The ability to trigger severance if the executive's position or responsibilities are reduced
  • Proper structuring to avoid potential excise tax for parachute payments under IRC §280G.
To see my full article, go to LINK: http://ceoworld.biz/2016/03/01/change-of-control-agreements-a-quick-guide-for-ceos-cfos-and-other-senior-executi

or my website at https://www.executiveemploymentattorney.com/change-of-control-agreements-a-quick-guide-for-ceos-cfos-and-other-senior-executives/

If you or one of your colleagues is in a change of control situation, I am glad to assist.  Please do reach out to me at radelson@engelschultz.com.

Robert A. Adelson, Esq. is a corporate and tax attorney and partner at Engel & Schultz LLP, Boston, Massachusetts. He represents C-Level executives and key employees in negotiations over executive employment terms, equity, compensation, relocation, retention and separation agreements, severance packages, and where necessary suits over wrongful termination