Remuneration Committee Presentation: How to Brief Non-Executives on Executive Pay Decisions
Quick Answer
A remuneration committee presentation should lead with the governance rationale behind every pay recommendation, not the numbers themselves. Non-executive directors need to understand the decision framework — market positioning, performance conditions, shareholder context, and risk — before they can approve anything. Structure your briefing around those four pillars and you give the committee what it needs to act.
Laurence had been HR Director at a FTSE 350 financial services firm for three years. He knew the compensation landscape inside out. His benchmarking data was impeccable. His spreadsheets ran to fourteen tabs.
The remuneration committee meeting lasted forty-five minutes. His presentation took thirty of them. When the committee chair — a former FTSE 100 CFO — asked, “What’s the single strongest argument for this package if a shareholder challenges it at the AGM?”, Laurence didn’t have an answer ready.
Not because he didn’t know. Because his presentation hadn’t been structured to surface that answer. He’d built a data briefing. The committee needed a governance briefing. The distinction sounds semantic, but it changes everything about how you organise information, which slides come first, and what the committee remembers when they vote.
I’ve seen this pattern repeatedly across financial services, healthcare, and technology organisations. The person presenting to the remuneration committee is typically the most knowledgeable person in the room on compensation. But knowledge alone doesn’t translate into a presentation that helps non-executives make a confident decision.
Already know the pay data but struggling to frame it for non-executives?
The Executive Slide System includes governance briefing frameworks designed for committee and board presentations — the structures that turn complex data into clear decision support for non-executive directors.
Why most remuneration committee briefings lose the room
The most common failure in a remuneration committee presentation is not poor data. It’s presenting the data as though the committee members are compensation specialists. They are not. They are non-executive directors with fiduciary responsibilities, broad commercial experience, and a governance lens that prioritises risk, fairness, and shareholder defensibility.
When you open with a detailed salary benchmarking analysis, you’re answering a question the committee hasn’t asked yet. They don’t start with “Is this the right number?” They start with “Is this defensible?” Those two questions require entirely different opening structures.
Three patterns consistently undermine remuneration committee briefings:
- Data-first sequencing: Leading with median market data, percentile positioning, and peer group analysis before establishing the governance rationale. The committee receives numbers without a framework for evaluating them.
- Excessive granularity: Presenting every element of the pay package — base, bonus, LTIP, benefits, pension — in sequence without connecting them to the overall narrative. The committee loses the thread between slide five and slide twelve.
- Missing the shareholder voice: Failing to anticipate how the recommendation would appear in the annual report or at the AGM. Non-executive directors are acutely aware of shareholder scrutiny. If your presentation doesn’t address it, they will — and you won’t control the framing.
Each of these problems has the same root cause: the presentation is structured around what the presenter knows rather than what the committee needs to decide.
Give the Committee a Decision Framework, Not a Data Dump
The Executive Slide System — £39, instant access — includes governance briefing structures designed for committee and board-level presentations. Frame executive pay recommendations around defensibility, not just data. Built from 25 years of corporate banking experience.
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Designed for executives presenting pay, governance, and approval recommendations to non-executive boards.
The four pillars of a strong committee pay briefing
Every effective pay committee briefing rests on four pillars. These are not sections of your slide deck — they’re lenses that every piece of information in your briefing should be viewed through.
1. Market positioning
Where does the proposed package sit relative to the external market? Non-executive directors need to understand whether you’re positioning at median, upper quartile, or somewhere between — and why. The “why” matters more than the number. A package at the 75th percentile is defensible if the role requires a scarce skill set and the retention risk is genuine. It’s indefensible if it’s there because “that’s where we’ve always been.”
Present your benchmarking data as a single summary slide with the comparator group clearly defined. Save the detailed peer analysis for the appendix. The committee needs the conclusion, not the methodology.
2. Performance conditions
How is variable pay linked to outcomes? This is where many presentations lose clarity. The committee needs to see a direct line between the performance conditions in the bonus and LTIP schemes and the strategic objectives of the organisation. If the conditions are financial — revenue growth, return on equity, total shareholder return — show how they align with the published strategy. If they include non-financial metrics (ESG, customer satisfaction, employee engagement), explain why those metrics are material to long-term value.
3. Shareholder context
What would an institutional investor say about this recommendation? Non-executive directors on remuneration committees are acutely conscious of proxy advisory firms — ISS, Glass Lewis — and the governance codes that define best practice. Your presentation should pre-empt the questions those bodies would raise. If the proposed package includes any element that sits outside the Corporate Governance Code’s expectations, address it explicitly rather than hoping the committee doesn’t notice.
4. Risk and proportionality
What happens if this goes wrong? The committee needs to understand downside scenarios. If the executive underperforms, what clawback or malus provisions apply? If the share price falls, how does the LTIP award look in the annual report? If the pay ratio between the CEO and the median employee widens, how will that be communicated? Presenting the upside without acknowledging the downside is a trust-eroding pattern that experienced non-executives recognise immediately.

Structuring the narrative for non-executive scrutiny
The slide order in a committee pay briefing matters more than most presenters realise. Non-executive directors process information through a governance lens, and that lens has a specific sequence: rationale first, then data, then recommendation.
A structure that works consistently:
Slide 1: The governance context. One slide that frames the purpose of the meeting. “The committee is being asked to approve the following pay recommendations for FY2027. These recommendations reflect [strategic priority], are benchmarked against [comparator group], and are designed to [retention/alignment objective].” No data yet — just the frame.
Slides 2–3: Market positioning summary. The benchmarking conclusion (not the raw data). Where the package sits, why it sits there, and what happens if you don’t act.
Slides 4–5: Performance conditions and strategic alignment. The link between pay and performance. What must be achieved for variable elements to vest or pay out. How this connects to the published strategy.
Slide 6: Shareholder and governance lens. Pre-empt the AGM question. Address the pay ratio. Note any departures from the governance code and explain why they’re appropriate.
Slide 7: The recommendation. Clear, specific, and presented as a resolution for the committee to approve. This is not a summary — it’s the decision point. State what you’re asking for and in what form.
This structure aligns with the governance sequence that non-executive directors are trained to follow. It respects their fiduciary role and gives them the information they need in the order they need it. For a detailed framework on structuring any board-level presentation within a tight time constraint, see the guide to the board presentation 15-minute framework.
How to handle sensitive data in a pay briefing
Pay committee briefings contain some of the most sensitive data in any organisation. Individual pay packages, performance ratings, retention risk assessments, and internal comparisons — all of this is material that requires careful handling in terms of both presentation and distribution.
Three principles apply to every sensitive element:
Name individuals only when necessary. In most remuneration committee meetings, the committee will review the pay of the executive team by name. But your slides don’t always need to display individual names prominently. Consider whether a summary table with names in an appendix serves the committee better than a slide-by-slide walkthrough of each executive. The committee chair can direct discussion to specific individuals as needed.
Control the document trail. Every slide you present to the remuneration committee may become discoverable in a legal or regulatory context. Write every slide as though it could appear in a newspaper. This doesn’t mean being evasive — it means being precise and avoiding informal language, subjective assessments without evidence, or commentary that could be misinterpreted.
Separate the paper from the presentation. The committee paper (the pre-read) should contain the full detail. Your presentation should contain the decision-support summary. If you try to put everything in the slides, they become too dense for verbal presentation but too sparse for standalone reading. Neither works. The approach to understanding how board papers and presentations serve different purposes is explored in the article on board agenda presentations.
If you want a structured template for governance-level committee briefings rather than building from blank slides each cycle, the Executive Slide System includes frameworks for exactly this type of presentation.
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The Executive Slide System — £39, instant access — gives you repeatable slide structures for governance presentations, committee briefings, and board approvals. Frame recommendations around defensibility, not just data. 22 templates, 51 AI prompts, 15 scenario playbooks.
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Designed for committee, board, and governance presentations.

Building the shareholder lens into your slides
The remuneration committee’s ultimate accountability is to shareholders. Every pay decision they approve will be disclosed in the Directors’ Remuneration Report and potentially challenged at the AGM. If your presentation doesn’t help the committee see the recommendation through that lens, you’re leaving them to construct the shareholder argument themselves — and they shouldn’t have to.
Three shareholder-facing elements belong in every pay governance briefing:
The pay ratio. The UK Corporate Governance Code requires disclosure of the CEO-to-median-employee pay ratio. Your presentation should show this ratio, show the trend, and explain any year-on-year movement. If the ratio has widened, explain why in terms the committee can relay to shareholders: “The increase reflects the vesting of a three-year LTIP award granted during a period of significant strategic transformation.”
The comparator group logic. Institutional investors frequently challenge the choice of comparator companies used for benchmarking. If your comparator group includes organisations significantly larger or more profitable than yours, explain why the comparison is still relevant. If you’ve excluded outliers, say so. Transparency in methodology builds confidence in the conclusion.
The governance code alignment. Where do your proposals sit relative to the UK Corporate Governance Code or your organisation’s specific governance framework? If you’re compliant on every point, say so clearly. If you’re departing from a provision — for example, by using a notice period longer than twelve months — the “explain” part of “comply or explain” should be in your slides, not left to verbal commentary that may not be minuted.
For a broader view on how to tailor your presentation style when addressing non-executive directors specifically, see the guide to non-executive director board presentations.
The principle of audience-first structuring applies equally whether you’re briefing a committee, a full board, or an investor group. The specifics change; the discipline of leading with what the audience needs to decide does not.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long should a remuneration committee presentation be?
Most effective pay committee briefings run between seven and twelve slides, with the verbal briefing taking fifteen to twenty minutes. The remainder of the committee’s time should be reserved for questions and discussion. If your presentation takes longer than twenty minutes, it almost certainly contains detail that belongs in the committee paper rather than the slides. The committee’s role is to scrutinise and approve, not to be educated on every data point. Keep the slides focused on the decision framework and move the supporting analysis to the appendix.
Should I present benchmarking data or just the conclusions?
Present the conclusions in the main body and keep the detailed benchmarking in an appendix or the committee paper. Non-executive directors need to know where the package sits relative to the market and whether the comparator group is appropriate. They do not typically need to see every peer company’s individual data point during the presentation. If a committee member wants the detail, they’ll ask — and having it in the appendix shows you’ve done the work without consuming presentation time on methodology.
How do I address performance conditions that weren’t fully met?
Directly and early. If an executive’s bonus or LTIP award will vest at a reduced level because certain performance targets weren’t achieved, present this as a demonstration that the pay-for-performance link is working as designed. Frame partial vesting as evidence that the scheme is calibrated appropriately, not as a shortfall. The committee will be reassured by a scheme that discriminates between full and partial achievement. What they worry about is a scheme that always pays out in full regardless of performance.
What’s the biggest mistake presenters make in remuneration committee meetings?
Treating the committee as an audience rather than a decision-making body. The difference shapes everything: your slide order, your level of detail, your opening sentence, and how you handle questions. An audience listens and absorbs. A decision-making body evaluates and approves. When you structure your presentation for evaluation rather than absorption, you lead with the governance rationale, provide the evidence efficiently, and make the recommendation explicit. The committee can then do its job rather than spend time searching for the point.
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Not ready for the full system? Start here instead: download the free Executive Presentation Checklist — a single-page reference for the structure, framing, and decision flow every governance presentation needs.
For executives preparing for internal career progression alongside committee briefings, the dynamics differ but the audience-first principle applies equally. See the related guide on promotion panel presentations.
Your next remuneration committee briefing should give non-executive directors a governance narrative, not a compensation lecture. Lead with the rationale, structure around the four pillars, and make the recommendation explicit. The committee will notice the difference.
About the Author
Mary Beth Hazeldine is the Owner & Managing Director of Winning Presentations. With 25 years of corporate banking experience at JPMorgan Chase, PwC, Royal Bank of Scotland, and Commerzbank, she advises executives across financial services, healthcare, technology, and government on structuring presentations for high-stakes funding rounds, board briefings, and leadership decisions.
