Go Back Up

Back to Blog

How Do We Redesign Incentives So Pay Is Tied to Performance and Retention?

(June 08, 2026) • By Ken Gibson

Redesigning incentives requires aligning what employees are paid for with the value they create today and the long-term results that increase enterprise value over time.

In many mid-market companies, incentive plans evolve reactively as the company grows. A sales bonus is added here, a management bonus there, and eventually the compensation model becomes a patchwork of short-term rewards that do not consistently reinforce company strategy or long-term retention.

CEOs often notice inconsistent performance, entitlement thinking, or top performers questioning whether extra effort is worth it. These symptoms usually indicate that incentives are rewarding activity or tenure rather than measurable impact and sustained contribution.

VisionLink’s work with growth-stage leadership teams frequently reveals that incentive systems reward what is easiest to measure instead of what actually drives value. The solution is not simply increasing variable pay, but redesigning the incentive architecture so performance metrics, payout mechanics, and long-term value sharing reinforce each other.

  • Leaders observe uneven performance and rising turnover among high contributors.
  • The underlying issue is misalignment between incentives and value creation.
  • The strategic shift is to build a compensation model that links short-term results and long-term retention to measurable business outcomes.

Why Incentive Design Determines Both Performance and Retention

Incentive design determines performance and retention because employees consistently respond to the behaviors and outcomes that compensation rewards.

Incentive architecture is the framework that connects employee actions, performance metrics, and financial rewards. When that framework emphasizes short-term output only, employees focus narrowly on hitting quarterly targets. When it ignores long-term value, high performers often leave after realizing they are not participating meaningfully in the company’s future success.

Across VisionLink engagements, companies that improve both performance and retention typically align three elements:

  • Clear, measurable metrics employees can influence directly.
  • Meaningful upside tied to differentiated performance.
  • A long-term value-sharing component that rewards sustained contribution.

This integrated model turns compensation into a growth driver rather than a fixed expense. Many CEOs address this by working with VisionLink advisors to redesign their incentive architecture around measurable value creation.

How Do We Tie Short-Term Incentives to Real Performance?

Short-term incentives should be tied to a small number of metrics that directly reflect the economic drivers of your business.

Mid-market companies often overload bonus plans with too many goals, which dilutes focus and creates confusion. When employees cannot clearly see how daily actions affect payouts, motivation declines.

Effective short-term plans typically:

  • Focus on 3–5 measurable outcomes.
  • Balance company-wide metrics with role-specific performance.
  • Differentiate payouts meaningfully between average and exceptional performance.

Pay-performance misalignment occurs when incentives are disconnected from operational reality, which weakens accountability and erodes trust in the system. VisionLink frequently helps CEOs diagnose and correct this type of compensation misalignment through structured redesign efforts and frameworks such as those outlined in How to Effectively Link Compensation to Results.

How Do We Design Long-Term Incentives That Improve Retention?

Long-term incentives improve retention when they allow key contributors to share in the value they help create over multiple years.

Retention rarely improves through salary increases alone because fixed pay does not build ownership mentality. Long-term incentive plans (LTIPs) align financial upside with enterprise value growth, encouraging leaders and high-impact contributors to think beyond annual results.

Common long-term vehicles for mid-market companies include:

  • Phantom stock or value-based units tied to company valuation.
  • Performance-based cash plans linked to multi-year goals.
  • Deferred incentive arrangements with vesting schedules.

VisionLink’s compensation strategy work often includes evaluating which long-term model best fits ownership goals, capital structure, and leadership depth. Resources such as 4 Keys to Choosing the Right LTIP and the LTIP options for growth guide outline the trade-offs CEOs must consider.

When employees see a clear path to sharing in long-term value, discretionary effort and loyalty tend to increase because future rewards are tied to sustained contribution.

How Should We Balance Base Pay and Variable Pay?

The right balance between base and variable pay depends on how much performance variability exists in the role and how directly employees influence results.

Higher variable pay works best where impact is measurable and controllable. Higher base pay is more appropriate where performance variation is limited or heavily influenced by external factors.

  • Roles with direct revenue or margin impact can support higher incentive leverage.
  • Strategic leadership roles often require a mix of annual and long-term incentives.
  • Operational roles may emphasize stability with modest performance-based upside.

VisionLink often helps CEOs calibrate this balance so incentive leverage matches business risk and growth goals. This type of calibration is central to building what VisionLink describes as a high-impact compensation strategy in Principles that Should Guide Compensation Design.

What We See in Practice

  • VisionLink’s experience shows that many companies introduce bonus plans before defining clear success metrics, leading to confusion and inconsistent payouts.
  • Across compensation redesign projects, gaming behavior often appears when metrics are poorly defined or disconnected from financial outcomes.
  • High performers frequently disengage when incentive differentiation between average and exceptional results is minimal.
  • Organizations that integrate short-term incentives with long-term value sharing tend to build stronger ownership mentality across leadership teams.
  • The most sustainable improvements occur when CEOs treat compensation as a strategic growth lever rather than an HR program.

This pattern often emerges during VisionLink’s compensation strategy assessments, where incentive plans are evaluated not only for competitiveness but for their ability to generate measurable return on compensation investment.


Should incentives be tied to individual or company performance?

Incentives should usually combine individual and company performance metrics to reinforce both accountability and shared outcomes.

Individual metrics drive personal ownership, while company metrics align teams around collective success. The right mix depends on role influence and organizational maturity.

Do incentive plans really improve retention?

Incentive plans improve retention when they provide meaningful upside tied to sustained contribution and long-term value.

Short-term bonuses alone rarely anchor top talent, but multi-year value-sharing plans create financial and psychological commitment to the company’s future.

How often should we redesign our incentive plans?

Incentive plans should be reviewed annually and structurally reassessed whenever strategy, growth stage, or ownership objectives change.

Compensation models that lag company growth often create misalignment, which is why many CEOs periodically conduct formal compensation strategy reviews to ensure pay continues to drive performance and retention.


Ready to Get Started?

When it comes to building a compensation strategy, you can trust that VisionLink knows what works and what doesn’t. We are ready to share that knowledge with you.

Ken Gibson

Ken is Senior Vice-President of The VisionLink Advisory Group. He is a frequent speaker and author on rewards strategies and has advised companies for over 30 years regarding executive compensation and benefit issues.