The bonus is a central part of most executive pay packages — and how it is structured shapes what a leader focuses on. Here is how executive bonuses typically work.
What an executive bonus is
An executive bonus is the variable, performance-related part of pay — distinct from the fixed base salary and from longer-term incentives. Most commonly it is an annual bonus, earned against targets set for the year, and expressed as a percentage of salary that rises with seniority. It rewards delivery against what the business asked the leader to achieve, and forms a significant part of total compensation for most senior roles.
What bonuses are measured against
Bonuses are typically tied to a mix of measures: financial performance (such as profit or revenue against plan), specific strategic objectives, and often personal or team goals. The blend matters — a bonus weighted entirely on short-term financials drives different behaviour than one balancing financial, strategic, and leadership measures. Well-designed bonus structures align the leader's rewards with what genuinely matters to the business.
Structure signals priorities
Perhaps the most important point is that how a bonus is structured tells a leader what to prioritise. Measures included in the bonus get attention; those left out often do not. This makes bonus design a genuine strategic tool, not just a reward mechanism — a way of directing focus toward the outcomes the business most needs. Thoughtful businesses design bonuses deliberately, around the behaviours and results they want to encourage.
Annual bonus versus long-term incentive
The annual bonus rewards near-term delivery; a long-term incentive rewards sustained performance over several years, often through equity. Together they balance short-term results with long-term value creation. Getting the balance right — so leaders are motivated to deliver now without sacrificing the future — is part of designing a sound overall package. Specifics vary widely, and expert advice is worthwhile when structuring senior pay.
Structuring an executive package?
We advise on compensation as part of securing the right leader — from base to bonus to long-term incentives.
Explore Executive Compensation →Frequently asked questions
How do executive bonuses work?
An executive bonus is variable, performance-related pay — usually an annual bonus earned against defined targets (financial, strategic, and often personal), expressed as a percentage of salary that rises with seniority. It rewards delivery against what the business asked the leader to achieve.
What are executive bonuses based on?
Typically a mix of financial performance (profit or revenue against plan), specific strategic objectives, and often personal or team goals. The blend matters, because the measures included in a bonus signal what the business wants the leader to prioritise.
Related: Executive Compensation Structures Explained · What Is an Equity or LTI Package? · Negotiating an Executive Offer

