BEWARE: Tax Executive Compensation Posted Online Is Understated
Although no tax executives are talking about it openly, I am going to educate you about tax executive compensation discussions that are happening privately. Corporate tax executives are talking about compensation behind the scenes and telling them the salaries posted are too low for them to come forward with interest in open tax jobs. This is creating a big problem attracting the top of the tax profession. Many tax executives are disinterested in the tax executive jobs posted online due to the tax job ads posting tax salary ranges which are lower than what they are currently being paid. It is an important issue to address and explain what is happening, so you have a better understanding of the matter. A.I. is simply scooping up compensation disinformation and feeding it into the market. A.I.is littered with A.I. errors.
As an example of proof, I took notice of an article posted on LinkedIn where Deloitte admits to A.I. errors. Deloitte must now issue a partial refund to the government after admitting that artificial intelligence had been used in the creation of a report they paid for was littered with A.I. errors. Using AI in gathering tax salary information is simply spreading salary disinformation. A.I. gathering tax salary information from job boards is garbage in and garbage out.
One of the most important aspects of my job is educating the CFOs who retain me to conduct a high-quality tax executive search is understanding tax executive compensation. If the CFO wants a diamond performer in the Head of Tax role, saving their company millions per year in tax savings, they should not offer them peanuts. We conducted a tax compensation study in the 4th quarter of 2024 and were stunned by the discrepancies in salaries, in fact as much as $250,000- $300,000 in base salaries and anywhere from 25% to 50% (a couple even more at 60% and 75%) as a paid bonus incentive. It was done talking privately to software company tax executives primarily located in California in the 1B to 20B range. We know for a fact that companies with less than 1B annual revenue typically pay less to tax executives and are challenged to attract the top of the tax talent pool.