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To avoid becoming an "asset accumulation business," SLR Capital requires all employees to invest a significant part of their compensation back into the firm's funds. This forces everyone to act as a principal and ask, "Would I personally own this loan?" creating a powerful filter against risky deals.
To ensure genuine collaboration across funds, Centerbridge structures compensation so a "substantial minority" of an individual's pay comes from other areas of the firm. This economic incentive forces a firm-wide perspective and makes being "part of one team" a financial reality, not just a cultural slogan.
To ensure true alignment and 'skin in the game,' offer proven managers the opportunity to buy into the HoldCo's equity rather than giving them stock grants. People value what they pay for, creating a stronger sense of ownership and long-term commitment.
To ensure accountability and combat hindsight bias, D1 Capital requires analysts to maintain a weekly "mock portfolio" of their best ideas, weighted as if managing real capital. This pre-registered record is used in compensation reviews, preventing analysts from only highlighting their successful calls at year-end.
When assessing a co-investment, LPs should request data on employee participation. Deals where the PE firm's own staff invest their personal capital tend to be the better-performing ones, serving as a powerful, internal signal of conviction that goes beyond the official pitch.
Capital Group's unique "Capital System" empowers analysts to invest client assets directly, rather than just issue ratings. This instills a deep sense of ownership and responsibility, forcing them to consider portfolio risk and diversification beyond a simple buy/sell recommendation.
Analyzing past failures, TA found that deals approved by lukewarm Investment Committee (IC) members led to poor outcomes. They now require enthusiastic IC support and add approved deals to the IC members' personal track records. This system aligns incentives and prevents conviction from overriding caution.
To prevent any conflict of interest, founder Christopher Zook invests exclusively in the same funds as his clients. He has no separate personal account for side deals. This ensures that if an opportunity isn't suitable or available for the firm's investors, it's not available to him either.
Structuring compensation around a single, firm-wide P&L, rather than individual deal performance, eliminates internal competition. It forces a culture of true collaboration, as everyone's success is tied together. The system is maintained as a meritocracy by removing underperformers from the 'boat.'
Eagle Capital pays its analysts salary only, with no bonuses. This unconventional structure removes the pressure for short-term performance, aligns incentives with the firm's multi-year holding periods, and counter-positions against the bonus-driven culture of multi-manager funds.
Founders Fund's perk allowing employees to co-invest personally is a clever mechanism to test true conviction. If an investor sponsoring a deal is unwilling to put their own money in, it raises a serious question about their belief in the investment's potential, forcing them to justify why it's a better allocation for LPs than their own capital.