Major corporate deals rarely affect only strategy and capital allocation. They also reshape how companies reward the people expected to deliver the change.
That dynamic is now visible inside Paramount. Internal documents reviewed by Business Insider indicate that the company has altered how its annual employee bonus program will be calculated for 2025, removing individual performance differentiation and reducing the overall payout multiplier.
For CEOs navigating similar moments, the development highlights a recurring leadership challenge: how to maintain employee motivation and organizational stability while significant corporate change is under way.
The Workforce Shift
For years, eligible salaried employees at Paramount have received bonuses through a Short Term Incentive Plan (STIP), calculated using a target bonus tied to base salary and adjusted through two multipliers — one based on individual performance and another tied to the company’s overall results.
In previous years, both factors influenced final payouts. High-performing employees could earn bonuses above their base targets if their individual multiplier exceeded 100%.
The 2025 plan introduces two notable changes. According to internal communications reported by Business Insiderthe business performance multiplier has been set at 94%, down from 136.7% in 2024. At the same time, the company has removed performance differentiation by assigning each employee an individual multiplier of 100%, regardless of their individual performance review.
Managers reportedly told staff that employee reviews were deprioritized following the completion of the Paramount–Skydance merger process. As a result, bonus calculations will reflect overall company performance rather than individual outcomes.
For some employees, the impact could be significant. Staff who previously received individual multipliers above 100% may see their bonuses fall by more than 30%, depending on their compensation structure.
Employees cited in the report said STIP bonuses typically represent about 10% of base salary for some staff, while others receive bonuses in the mid-teen percentage range.
The shift reflects a broader pattern often seen during major mergers and corporate transitions, when companies simplify incentive structures while leadership teams focus on executing strategic change.
Business Impact
David Ellison, CEO of Skydance Media, whose deal to acquire Paramount has triggered significant strategic changes inside the company.
Incentive systems play a central role in shaping employee behavior and organizational performance. When companies adjust those systems, the effects extend well beyond compensation.
During mergers, acquisitions or large strategic investments, leadership teams often face pressure to control costs and reduce complexity while the organization adapts to new priorities. Simplifying bonus structures can help manage uncertainty during these periods.
Removing performance differentiation can also reduce the administrative burden of evaluations at a time when managers are focused on integration work, operational changes and strategic repositioning.
However, these decisions can create tensions within organizations. High-performing employees often see incentive differentiation as recognition of their contribution. When that distinction disappears, leaders risk sending unintended signals about how performance is valued.
Research from Gallup highlights how significant engagement and recognition can be for organizational performance. In its State of the Global Workplace 2025 report, Gallup found that global employee engagement fell from 23% to 21% in 2024, a decline that the firm estimates cost the global economy roughly $438 billion in lost productivity.
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The same research underscores the influence of leadership on workplace motivation. Gallup estimates that around 70% of team engagement is attributable to the managerhighlighting how closely employee performance and morale are tied to leadership practices and incentive structures.
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For CEOs, the broader lesson is that compensation frameworks are not simply financial tools. They are signals about what behavior the organization values and how success is recognized.
Strategic Implications
Major corporate transactions inevitably absorb management attention. Leadership teams must manage regulatory processes, integration planning and investor expectations while ensuring day-to-day operations continue uninterrupted.
In this environment, companies sometimes prioritize organizational stability over performance differentiation, particularly if business conditions or strategic priorities are shifting rapidly.
Yet these decisions highlight a deeper leadership trade-off. Simplifying incentives can make organizational management easier during a transition. At the same time, leaders must consider how employees interpret the change.
Many companies facing similar circumstances attempt to balance these pressures by clearly communicating the temporary nature of incentive adjustments or by reinforcing other forms of recognition.
Maintaining clarity about organizational priorities is equally important. When performance incentives change, employees often look for alternative signals about what behaviors matter most.
Without that clarity, uncertainty around incentives can lead to disengagement or internal competition that distracts from the organization’s broader strategic objectives.
For leadership teams managing major deals or restructuring efforts, the challenge is not simply designing compensation systems but maintaining alignment between incentives, culture and organizational goals.
CEO takeaway
Large corporate transactions inevitably reshape financial priorities, operational structures and leadership focus. But they also test how effectively organizations maintain motivation and alignment during periods of uncertainty.
Paramount’s decision to adjust its bonus framework illustrates how companies sometimes simplify incentive systems while navigating major strategic change. Yet it also highlights the delicate balance leaders must strike when modifying the mechanisms that recognize performance.
In an era of constant corporate transformationthe companies that manage incentives carefully during periods of disruption may protect something far more valuable than short-term cost savings: the commitment of the people responsible for delivering the strategy.


