Facebook Details Executive Salaries, Bonuses
An anonymous reader writes "Facebook has detailed the pay of 27-year-old Facebook co-founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg as well as four other executives. These are people who are set to be billionaires at least on paper when the company goes public as part of its $5 billion initial public offering (IPO). All five individuals are in line for annual target bonuses of 45 percent of their salary plus other base wages. For Zuckerberg, the bonus could amount to roughly $225,000 this year, based on his annual salary of $500,000."
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Period.
next year, his salary is $1
Do you even lift?
These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.
FTFA "These salaries of course don’t take into account the executives’ stocks in the social networking giant. If you were worried their salaries are on the low side, don’t be."
Oh thank god! I can finally sleep easy tonight. Phew!
I thought Zuck's salary was $1? What happened to that?
It's a great free app that I can choose to use, or not to use. It has brought me in contact with people I haven't talked to for decades. I hope you become fabulously rich. I also hope that Facebook doesn't engineer itself into oblivion before an alternative comes along...
For in politics, as in religion, it is equally absurd to aim at making proselytes by fire and sword. - Publius
It's such a waste of money to give these guys a salary when they are billionaires. If I were them I would lower my salary to $1 or I would give myself the salary of my lowest level employee as a gesture.
Let's see how many of the people griping about income inequality and bad corporate conduct will continue using Facebook as the venue for their griping, never realizing the irony.
Look, over there, it's an oil executive and 1%er! Get him! Thanks Mr. 99%er Zuckerberg for your help!
Facebook is the worst example of everything the computer revolution shouldn't have been. An inside crew hit a huge lottery-style jackpot (many better startups have surely failed, for having been in the wrong place at the wrong time) made not by creating things which help people enough for those customers to be willing to buy, but rather, engaging in atrocious and unethical behavior, coercing users into submitting to the FB hive mind through network effect guilt coming from their friends. Not many people will keep telling the 3 in 4 (or more) of their friends/coworkers on FB to keep getting bent every time they ask why first said party is not a member.
Facebook is the new Big Tobacco. It's addictive, unhealthy, sold through peer pressure, and not in the user's best interest.
I agree, this is news for Nerds, not news for people interested in becoming wealthy through various means including nefarious or even slightly shady.
When people make my entire retirement savings (me+wife working for 30 years) in a weekend, I wonder why I bothered doing science. Clearly, I was in the wrong line of work and the world changed out from under me.
Sorry, but gray text on gray background is making my eyes bleed.
Speak for yourself!
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
Slashdot is full of nigger sucking autistic cocks.
Is there a way to automatically forward your comments on /. to my Grandmother? It's some sort of Tourettes poetry or something. It really drives to the heart of the issue and makes me feel closer to my fellow man. I hope you have the courage to post with your name and address sometime! :P
How many CEOs have actually earned these salaries and bonuses? I think Zuckerberg has. Congrats!
useless tool makes a pile of money fucking everyone else in the world news at 11
Given the size of the company, and number of customers, $275k for a General Council or Head Engineer, $300k for a COO, and $500k for a CEO (plus potential 45% bonuses for all) is a pretty fair deal. Theses guys work long, hard hours, and have a lot of responsibility.
Zuckerburg's salary of $500,000 is only effective through 2012. As of 2013, it will drop to $1. http://techcrunch.com/2012/02/01/mark-zuckerberg-will-have-a-1-salary-starting-in-2013/
for a 100-billion-dollar company, a quarter million doesn't seem like a whole lot of "bonus" for the CEO.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
I guarantee you they are not working more than thrice as many hours, and take less risk than I do.
"Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
It's not Zuck's fault you're underpaid.
DATABASE WOW WOW
You excluded any valuation of his ownership stake and options from your definition of "making" (I know Facebook is not public yet, but I _can_ estimate the value of the home I own as an asset without having to try sell it.)
Not to mention other perks like use of an executive jet.
http://www.bornrich.com/private-jet.html
If this were Apple being discussed, wouldn't we get some really kooky numbers Jobs' $1 salary?
Because they say so!
$275k for a General Council or Head Engineer, $300k for a COO, and $500k for a CEO
David Cameron earns £140,000 for being CEO of the UK, a country of 60 million people. That's about $200,000.
Do you really think that the CEO of any company has more responsibility than him?
Compared to what say that dodgy tax dodging geezer Redknap will get if he gest the England manager job its quite reasonable.- as hes on £3m-a-year contract with a mid ranking premier team at the moment.
"Facebook Details Executive Salaries, Bonuses"
Why do Americans use this strange form of English? I mean using a comma to separate nouns and usually only towards the end of a sentence. The obvious way to write the same thing would surely be "Facebook details executive salaries and bonuses."
Not a criticism by the way. I would really like to know and Google has not helped me.
"Don't belong. Never join. Think for yourself. Peace." V.Stone, Microsoft Corporation
one percenters
I mean no offense to you or your line of work, I am in the same boat. I followed. I am happy where I am at. I know where I want to be and work to get there.
Just like there are superstars in sports there are superstars in business. Whether they bring new products or innovation matters not, their drive is wholly different.
Now I know some will write it off to luck and yes, there are many cases of luck. Guess what, you don't get lucky not doing. You get lucky by trying, in some cases over and over and over.
Look at it this way, I would rather live in a system where there are untold riches for those who succeed. He isn't some politician deciding from up on high the winner or losers. He is deciding for himself and there are hundreds, if not thousands along for the ride. He created something many people value.
Some need that mythical pot of gold on the other side of the rainbow, others just feel the need to do. Which is he? Hell if I know. I don't have the drive but am quite happy to be in their world.
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
You are correct, but I imagine that what you do creates less value and is less unique than what they do. We're not paid by how long and hard we work, but rather by the combined perception of how much value we provide and how hard it would be to replace us. Is it always fair? No. Is it always unfair? Also no.
Absolutely. I purely take exception to the story that we're rewarding risk taking and hard work. We're not. We don't reward those things. We reward success in the marketplace, and that's it.
"Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
Actually, it is. He entered into a secret, probably illegal (still to be tested in court) agreement with my potential employers to hold down wages.
"Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
No, but the public sector is generally underpaid compared to the private sector, so the comparison is a bit off.
This is why the idea that privatizing saves money is a joke. The government is inefficient compared to the impossible ideals we hold it up to... but not compared to most large industry.
Its amazing how over half the comments to this story are schemes to change the tax code to make him pay more taxes to the IRS, as if that is what we need. Have you all not paid attention in the LEAST over the last couple years? SOPA, PIPA, ACTA, the TSA, Solendra, gun running into Mexico, Congressional insider trading, bank bailouts. Why would you even want these bastards to have any money, much less more money? Do you all want more of this kind of behavior? By acting the way you are you are telling Obama to keep at it and you all will do everything possible to make sure he has more money to do so.
Facebook has more users than UK has citizens. Last I heard it was 800 million.
Since when is 3rd place in the EPL a "mid ranking" team?
At night I drink myself to sleep and pretend I don't care that you're not here with me
uh what? I get the context of your post, but why would anyone reward risk taking? then it wouldn't be very risky, would it?
It's a common trope that our capitalist society is designed to reward successful risk takers.
"Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
I've discovered a brilliant algorithm for calculating the IQ of an individual partially based on the ratio of shares of Facebook stock purchased to his or her overall assets, but it's just a little too large to fit in this HTML text box.
You assume what he created was unique in the first place. It wasn't. Has everyone forgotten Myspace already?
I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
We only reward risk taking if it's done by Wallstreet, but we don't call it a risk taking reward. We call it a bailout.
I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
I'm sorry my comment was moderated "offtopic", I was only trying to be humorous. I appreciate slashdot's perspective that it is better not to reply to flamebait posts and I will avoid replying to racist and foul language posts in the future. However, I firmly believe that it would be best if posts like the one I replied to were DELETED!) Freedom of speech doesn't need to protect inflammatory racist drivel. We should all be allowed to speak provided that our thoughts have a hint of quality behind them. There is a point at which language is not worth the paper (or electricity) it is printed on.