EAGLE MATERIALS INC. AMERICAN GYPSUM COMPANY SALARIED INCENTIVE COMPENSATION PROGRAM FOR FISCAL YEAR 2008

EX-10.4 5 d46992exv10w4.htm AMERICAN GYPSUM COMPANY SALARIED INCENTIVE COMPENSATION PROGRAM FOR FISCAL 2008 exv10w4
 

Exhibit 10.4
EAGLE MATERIALS INC.
AMERICAN GYPSUM COMPANY
SALARIED INCENTIVE COMPENSATION PROGRAM
FOR FISCAL YEAR 2008
1.     Bonus Pool
     To insure reasonableness and affordability the available funds for bonus payments are determined as a percent of earnings of American Gypsum Company (the “Company”). The actual percentage may vary from year to year.
     For Fiscal Year 2008, bonus pool funding will be 2.25% of American Gypsum Company’s operating profit.
     Participants must be employed at fiscal year-end to be eligible for any bonus award. Awards may be adjusted for partial year participation for participants added during a year.
     Eagle Materials CEO retains the final right of interpretation and administration of the plan and to amend or terminate the plan at any time.
2.     Eligibility
     The American Gypsum Company President, Vice Presidents and Plant Mangers will be in the plan. Additional participants who have management responsibilities or are in a professional capacity that can measurably impact earnings may be recommended by American Gypsum Company President subject to the approval of the Eagle Materials CEO. The addition of new plan participants will not affect the total pool available but will in effect dilute the potential bonuses of the original participants.
     Participants must be an exempt salaried manager or professional. No hourly or non-exempt employee may participate. Participants in this plan may not participate in any other company incentive plan with monetary awards, except for American Gypsum Company’s Long-Term Compensation Program, the Eagle Materials Long-Term Compensation Program and the Eagle Materials Special Situation Program.
3.     Allocation of Pool
     The American Gypsum Company President will be eligible for 20% - 25% of the pool. The American Gypsum Company President will recommend the distribution of the remainder of the company pool. The participants in the plan and their percentage of the pool will be approved by the Eagle Materials CEO at the beginning of the fiscal year for which the bonus is being earned. For example:

1


 

         
Participant   % of Pool Available  
Company President
    22 %
Vice Presidents
    34 %
Plant Managers
    20 %
Other Participants (Directors, Superintendents)
    24 %
 
     
Total
    100 %
     The American Gypsum Company President’s bonus opportunity will be 50% objective goals and 50% discretionary as determined by Eagle Materials CEO taking into consideration overall job performance and compliance with Eagle Materials Policies and Code of Ethics. All participants in the plan must have the ability to significantly affect the performance of the subsidiary company by achieving measurable, quantifiable objectives. The American Gypsum Company President will determine the objective and discretionary balance of bonus opportunities for the other participants in this program, subject to approval by the Eagle Materials CEO.
4.     Objective Criteria
     Objective setting is essential to an effective incentive compensation plan. Objectives should be measurable and focus on areas that have meaningful impact on our operational performance. Having selected objectives, it is also important to establish a reference point for that objective which indicates expected performance.
     In addition to consideration of the budget plan as a reference, we will consider historic performance of a facility, equipment design standards, industry standards, comparable values from other companies or like situations and any other qualified source or establishing reference points or basis for determining performance.
     To illustrate the need for the selection of an objective, the reference point and how performance deviation from the reference is judged, let’s look at safety as an example. Let’s suppose a company plans 0 lost time accidents, which is reasonable to plan. If they have 1 lost time accidents, is the performance a total failure, poor, fair or reasonable? If they have 2 lost time accidents, is the performance unacceptable, poor, fair or reasonable? From this information it would be difficult to assess their overall safety performance. We could give consideration to the number of incidents requiring doctor’s treatment. We could include an evaluation of worker’s compensation claims or dollars spent. As an alternative to these, we could use industry statistics available from an authoritative source such as OSHA or GA which show accident frequency and severity ratio for comparable facilities. We could establish a mean or average as our reference point, based on accident frequency and severity, and agree to a bonus adjustment according to our percentile ranking with comparable industry.
     Another example might be the case of a dryer system that is allowed to deteriorate. This would tend to lower thermal efficiency and line speed, but could increase available hours because we didn’t take the necessary down time to repair the dryer system. A plan built on this premise might have production and BTU per MSF

2


 

statistics lower than historical performance but up time shown as higher. Rather than using plan as the reference point for these criteria, we might use historical performance for line speed, BTU/msf and a combination of historical and industry average for up time. The intent would be to cause a focus on the issue of not deferring maintenance.
     Because our basic products are commodities the level of prices in a given market area are established by supply and demand over which local management has little control. Through price leadership, local management can affect prices in a small range around supply-demand equilibrium. Accordingly, one of the performance criteria might still be pricing but this does not indicate that an overall bad or good market is itself a performance indicator of local management. For bonus purposes, they should neither be penalized nor rewarded for the general economic conditions.
     Fixed assets is another area over which local management exercises limited control. Each manager basically has to work with the fixed assets he is assigned. Local management can exercise considerable control over current assets such as receivable and inventory but, as a heavily capitalized industry with limited transportability, local management essentially has to do the best they can with the PP&E they are assigned.
     Typical objectives that impact earnings include:
    Sales
    Volume (total or specific product)
 
    Price
 
    Market share
    Plant Efficiencies
    Waste
 
    Speed
 
    Delay
 
    Fuel usage/msf
 
    Contribution/machine hour
    Production
    Volume
 
    Cost (total or specific component)
    Quality Rating
 
    Environmental Compliance
 
    Managing Capital Projects
 
    Overhead Reduction
 
    Working Capital
    Inventory turns
 
    Receivables
    Long Term Planning
    Gypsum reserves
 
    Maintenance — protection of assets
    Personnel
    Training and development
 
    Turnover rate
 
    Union relations

3


 

5.     Measuring Performance
     At the close of the fiscal year the American Gypsum Company President will review the performance of the company versus the objectives submitted at the beginning of the year and recommend the distribution of the pool to the participants. Distribution of the pool requires approval of the Eagle Materials CEO.
     Any portion of the Company Operating Pool not paid out (unearned) or forfeited will be added to the SSP at Corporate.
     At anytime during the fiscal year the American Gypsum Company President may also recommend to the Eagle Materials CEO an SSP award to recognize outstanding individual performances that dramatically improved the company’s profitability or long term value.

4