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Get Started ≫A long-term incentive is variable pay earned over multiple years, usually three or more, delivered as equity (performance rights, options, RSUs) or multi-year cash, and vesting only if service and performance conditions are met. It exists to pay for decisions whose results take years to land.
Why LTIs exist
Annual incentives reward what lands this year, which quietly punishes the decisions that matter most: platform investments, market entries, hard restructures whose payoff arrives in year three. LTIs correct the horizon by making a meaningful slice of pay contingent on multi-year outcomes, aligning senior decision-makers with owners on the timescale owners actually care about. That is why LTI weight rises with seniority: the more someone's choices shape the long term, the more of their pay should live there.
The common structures
Performance rights (shares delivered if multi-year hurdles are met, relative shareholder return and earnings-per-share growth being the listed-company staples), plain time-vested equity (retention-weighted, common below executive level), options (growth-leveraged), and phantom or cash LTIs for private companies that cannot or will not issue equity. Deferral and clawback increasingly ride along, especially in regulated sectors where accountability regimes require variable pay to remain at risk for years.
What to watch in design
Hurdles that measure luck (commodity prices, index movements) rather than management contribution; cliff structures that concentrate everything on one measurement date; and complexity that defeats the purpose, an LTI the executive cannot explain is not changing any decisions. The governance test runs the other way too: an LTI that pays out through a period shareholders experienced as failure will be quoted back at the board for a decade.
Common questions
Who usually receives LTIs?
Executives and senior leaders as standard, extending deeper in equity-rich companies where retention is the goal. Below decision-making roles, time-vested equity usually serves better than performance hurdles.
How is an LTI different from a retention bonus?
Both pay for staying, but an LTI also pays for multi-year performance and is usually equity-linked. A retention bonus rents time; an LTI buys aligned time.
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