Boeing ties employee incentive plan to company-wide performance

SEATTLE (Reuters) – Annual bonuses for more than 100,000 Boeing employees this year will be tied to company-wide performance, rather than by business unit, as in previous years.

Eighty percent of the bonuses are tied to Boeing’s financial performance, with the remaining 20% tied to progress on improving safety and quality, and program execution, according to the 2025 proxy statement filed on Friday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.    

The announced changes come two days after CEO Kelly Ortberg told employees the company’s myriad business units have to work together as part of a wider cultural shift driven in large part by employee feedback that he said he expects to be “brutal to leadership.”

Ortberg’s total compensation in 2024 was about $18.4 million, including a $1.2 million signing bonus and $525,000 in salary since he joined the company in August. He also received $313,000 to relocate to Seattle to be closer to Boeing’s commercial airplane production. The rest of his compensation was in equity grants. 

Former CEO Dave Calhoun received $15 million in total compensation. He left the company in the wake of a mid-air panel blowout on a nearly new 737 MAX, which revealed widespread quality problems.  

(Reporting by Dan Catchpole)

More From Author

Broadcom forecasts strong second quarter on upbeat AI chip demand

Robinhood paying $29.75 million to end US regulator’s probes

Live Market Pulse

The charting technology is provided by TradingView. Learn how to use theTradingView Stock Screener.

Recent Comments

No comments to show.