Five reasons why Chief People Officers should have a seat at the partner compensation table

compensation committees decision-making processes partner compensation partner profit-share partnerships strategy

April 2025


Allocating profit shares to partners ranks among the most consequential decisions a professional services firm makes each year. Profit allocations recognize partners for their achievements and reinforce for the partnership at large what results the firm truly values. Given their profound impact on culture, talent and long-term performance, it is both logical and necessary for the most senior Human Resources leaders - the stewards of the firm’s human capital - to be actively engaged in their firm’s partner compensation.

Increasingly, leading organizations in the professional services sector and beyond (Accenture, alphabet, IBM, just to name a few) are recognizing talent as their top governance priority.  Some are evolving their traditional “Compensation Committees” into broader “Talent and Compensation Committees,” reflecting the reality that a firm’s compensation strategy is inherently linked to its talent strategy and therefore a core lever for driving business success. This priority will also increase as artificial intelligence changes how we deploy human capital in knowledge-led organizations.

Yet in most professional services organizations, Human Resources leaders are often only marginally involved in partner compensation decisions or the processes leading up to them.  Often, Chief People Officers are either excluded altogether or constrained by somewhat outdated assumptions by partners and senior leadership that partner compensation matters are best handled exclusively by partners themselves.  

Often, only the CFO’s perspective has a seat at the partner compensation table, and as a former accountant I am deeply appreciative of the value all CFOs bring to the process.  Yet by only including the financial discipline in this process usually leads to even more emphasis on financial production metrics that all too often already dominate partner compensation discussions – at the exclusion of other perspectives.  Excluding the Chief People Officer dismisses the strategic and practical value they can bring to the process and often translates into missed opportunities. 

Here are 5 reasons why firms should involve their Chief People Officer in partner compensation:

  1. Ensuring RemCom looks beyond the numbers
    Having observed dozens Partner Remuneration Committee (RemCom) meetings, Chief People Officers almost always provide critical objectivity and help ensure that partner assessments and compensation decisions that result from them reach beyond the numbers. Their perspective reinforces a broader view of partner contribution, helps surface potential biases and helps committee members make fair, balanced decisions by challenging assumptions. Without HR at the table, there’s a real risk that compensation decisions default to outdated perceptions or narrow financial metrics, missing the full picture of a partner’s impact.
  2. Aligning partner compensation with firm strategy
    Without fair, transparent and strategically aligned partner compensation systems, firms risk internal mistrust, misaligned incentives and retention challenges. The best Chief People Officers provide deep expertise in how reward shapes motivation and behavior. This expertise helps ensure that profit-sharing and all related financial incentives recognize both a partner’s current year results and their contribution to long-term goals and values. This places the CPO in the best position to guide how RemCom balances a partner’s holistic contribution in its decision-making.
  3. Focusing on people metrics that matter
    The best CPOs manage their talent metrics – yet Remuneration Committees without their CPO often don’t focus on metrics that matter.  This comes at a cost and a lost opportunity for the firm.  High staff turnover comes with a high tangible cash cost (e.g. internal recruiting team and external recruiting fees) and a high tangible non-cash cost (e.g. lost client insights, team disruption and non-chargeable time spent bringing a new person up to speed).  A lack of focus on staff development and mentoring invariably means higher write-offs of partner billable hours, often invisible to RemCom. And low engagement numbers often lead to higher turnover.  The best CPOs put into context how service lines and individual partners influence the firm’s most important operational metrics.
  4. Using partner compensation to shape culture and ethos
    If the partner compensation system focuses solely on financial outcomes, firms risk sending the message that culture, collaboration and long-term value don't matter. Chief People Officers help ensure the partner compensation process reflects the full spectrum of what the firm stands for. Recognizing partners not just for revenue and gross profit but also, by example, for results achieved collaboratively that sustain growth, for taking risks in new markets and for helping lateral partners succeed, in the end builds a strong, values-driven culture. This alignment between what the firm says it values and what it values when it comes to determining variable profit shares is essential to attracting and retaining the best partner talent and to reinforcing what truly matters to the firm’s future.
  5. Augmenting how partners trust the Partner Remuneration Committee
    Senior Human Resources leaders play a vital role in translating compensation strategy into effective practice. The best Partner Remuneration Committees tend to their remit year-around and not just during a hot phase after year-end to make reward allocations. By supporting RemCom across its remit, the Chief People Officer promotes consistency, transparency and trust in RemCom’s assessments and allocations – and in the firm’s entire management system.

Partners are the most important asset in any knowledge-led organization, and compensation is one of the most important elements of a firm’s partner talent proposition. Involving HR at the partner compensation table isn’t a nice-to-have – it’s essential for fair and equitable outcomes that benefit both individuals and the firm as a whole.

If you, your head of HR or your partners are not yet confident navigating partner compensation discussions or contributing effectively to the process, our Partner Remuneration Committee Fundamentals Course equips RemCom members with the practical knowledge, frameworks and tools needed to participate with confidence and impact.

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