European
Corporate Salary Survey 2008
The corporate salary survey accesses over 3,000 senior managers
across Europe understanding core skills and responsibilities to
provide a benchmark for remuneration. We then
interviewed key managers to understand forthcoming organisational
and sector challenges.
There has to be a margin for localised enhancement in the
remuneration package for individuals located in capital cities due
to accommodation, taxes etc.
At the Chief Security Officers’ level there is still a broad
anomaly in responsibility and impact from one corporation to
another.
Capabilities have to be defined initially through geographical
location. Many CSOs (or Heads of Security) have not been
exposed to international cross-border issues, although they are
responsible for €billion corporations.
With corporations acquiring other businesses, such secluded CSOs
are rapidly exposed through language inadequacies and technical
capability when siloed too long.
This opens up greater opportunities for capable business managers
who understand large corporation thinking and appreciate that the
security function adds value.
The larger world stage also offers opportunities for senior
executives with a background in organisational building in both
private and public sectors.
Non executive directors have a growing influence and fiduciary
responsibility to shareholders. In our experience it is not
unusual for them to seek out the ‘security person’ as they identify
that role as ‘keepers of the company’s ethics
programmes’.
Keeping Pace
Executive remuneration on the whole has risen by 6% (IRS) in the
past twelve months. Many in the financial sector have
had mixed fortunes, bonuses paid 2007 for most senior managers have
been in line with the past two years. A small number of
executive managers can receive up to 100% of basic salary in
bonuses, for the majority of us, awards are up to 25%
(PWC). Those managers who are multi-skilled and
developed valued services to their business could have expected pay
reviews in 2008 of up to 15% (SSR 2007). The long hours
culture remains with over 82% of senior managers working more than
50 hours per week and 34% working over 60 hours (IoD 2007).
Convergence or Not?
Whilst there is a thirst for understanding convergence by those in
physical security, Information Security Management has been driven
by business savvy IS managers who have capitalised upon the
paranoia in boardrooms for digital integration, more forcefully
than those from physical security.
Should this be considered perverse; when physical security
management are a major part (if not the owner) of the enterprise
recovery strategy, they need to hold their ground (or prove their
worth) in the boardroom. Convergence is about cost reduction,
one party or the other has proved their worth more. ISM
relies on exterior threats to continue to improve their defences
and increased spending. Yet poor procedural policies for data
protection rather than maliciousness or organised crime attacks a
corporation’s reputation and profitability. This year we have
seen the FSE impose a number or large fines for poor procedural
practices.
Standing Still is Not an Option for Anyone
The CISO position will be recruited on average every 3 - 5
years. There is a consistent benchmarking of skills and
remuneration in open market that occurs with this type of
attrition.
In the mid executive position around the function of security
(physical, investigations, due diligence) there is a similar
attrition or job realignment rate (SSR® 2007) which enables
companies to keep pace with current salaries. Having
managed a number of such reviews there is an averaged salary
re-inflation of up to 15% when positions are subject to open market
review.
The age profile for the security profession has decreased over the
last ten years, but consideration must be given to how we recruit
and retain Generation ‘Y’ applicants in five years time. On
our current projections the age profile of people attracted to the
security profession will increase, whilst the general demographics
of executive managers of many businesses will decrease.
This foretells that in the soft skills positions of investigations,
employee relations and client assurance, practitioners will be
generationally inverse so perhaps increasingly disenfranchised with
their own corporate culture!
Employment Hotspot
The Middle East continues to attract a premium remuneration
mainly because of lack of suitable accommodation. Housing
allowances have trebled in the past two years to offset this.
Many corporations have attempted to correct the imbalance through
lower basic salaries and higher performance bonuses. But the
geo political situation and increasing corporate appetite for risk,
demands higher social skills from service professionals.
There is a demand for mid management graduates which will
increase with the strengthening financial strength of the
region, lead by the UAE.
Whose Job Is It Anyway?
In the CEO office the top item remains recoverability, followed
closely by M&A, yet the events of the past weeks might just
have jarred every senior executive with the £3.5bn losses incurred
by a mid range low risk dealer by the name of Jerome
Kervial. More incredibly is the claim by Bank Societe
Generale that he had gambled £37bn in the share market. More
than the entire wealth of the bank and larger than the annual
budget deficit of France. Should the issue be
oversight? Is this where the security function should be
engaged?
In whole sectors of commence through treasury, hedging or future
trading, individuals put an organisation at risk.
Perhaps the audit department would say that they are in charge
of processes, and compliance would argue that they are in charge of
regulatory issue. Where does the organisational threat
sit when allegedly Mr Kervial did not undertake any fraud or seek
personal gain from his actions?
The CSO should be at the core of an enterprises risk, with
reputation, brand integrity, ethics, social responsibility and
inclusion all issues for their in-tray.
Ownership of risks can be multifarious, and with business
resumption you have to ensure transparency and accessibility for
those who contribute to recoverability. Does this sound like
the job profile for a CISO? So international
communication and influencing skills are at a premium in today’s
corporate world.
Future Needs
It is imperative that senior security professionals have
‘second sling’ appeal. This will increase their
worth. In the last ten years the security professional has
become one of the senior managers at the corporate
table. The ‘second sling’ is to emphasise that
they are the executive to whom failures or breakdowns will be
delivered and will facilitate the fix. In order to achieve
this, traditional security skills are not enough. You
need to identify the thinking of the corporation, have immediate
knowledge of its risk appetite and be prepared to offer your
judgements within best corporate practice.
Looking to own risk is a key criteria, and in Europe owning the
risk associated with corporate manslaughter regulations might be
timely for senior managers to consider.
Every CSO has that monthly or quarterly presentation to the
executive board. Security will remain on the boardroom agenda
if the message is clear, precise and delivered in the language of
the business.
Last year’s ROI was 30%, double the rate of return to most
trading sectors of an organisation. Coupled with this year’s
cost reductions or cost realignment that is required by most global
organisations of up to 10% - it is going to be a savage year.
But as one CSO reminded me, ‘Keeping it simple and
understandable is a most under-rated skill’.
SSR® Personnel is the largest recruitment consultancy
dedicated to the security, fire, health and safety sectors in
Europe, operating in 20 countries. We have a global
presence in North America, and partners in Asia and Eastern
Europe. We are accredited ISO 9001:2000. For
details of our opportunities and open vacancies visit our web
site www.ssr-personnel.com
SSR® Personnel Services Ltd
5 Blackhorse Lane London E17 6DN
Tel: 020 8626 3100
Fax: 020 8626 3101
Email: info@ssr-personnel.com
www: ssr-personnel.com