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Graef Slater Crystal

April 30th, 1934 - April 18th, 2017

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Graef “Bud” Crystal, who for more than 40 years designed compensation packages for some of America’s top corporate executives and then did an about face and became a feisty critic of how and what companies pay senior executives, died Tuesday. He was 82. Crystal died at his home in Las Vegas from heart problems, said his wife, Sue. During his career as a compensation expert, Crystal worked with the CEOs and senior managers of many of the Fortune 500 companies, including American Express, Coca-Cola, Squibb Corporation, General Electric and Eastman Kodak. In the late 1970s he was the New York Stock Exchange’s compensation consultant and designed its first incentive plans for CEOs. As a designer of compensation packages that included incentive bonuses, stock options, pension benefits and more, and then a critic, Crystal was treated as a guru on executive compensation. He was regularly contacted by reporters for comments on executive compensation, appeared on “60 Minutes”, “Charlie Rose” and others. In 1989, Crystal stopped being an executive compensation consultant and took on the role of a pugnacious critic, analyzing executive pay for media, including Fortune and, most recently, Bloomberg News as a columnist. When he became a critic of those packages, he used the same formulas and more to determine if higher pay also meant higher shareholder returns. His conclusion: pay for performance was often fiction, and he singled out CEOs by name. Crystal maintained that CEOs should be paid based on performance, that they should get a boost when the company’s performance improves and a pay cut if the company’s performance stumbles or falls. “Shareholder return is the best determinant of pay because it’s the only gauge of success that’s external and can’t be manipulated by accounting tricks or shifts in performance targets,” Crystal said. He called his second career as a compensation critic “atoning for my sins.” “My switch from henchman to gadfly incensed many CEOs, some of whom called me a Judas and asked where they should deliver the 30 pieces of silver. In a sense, though, those CEOs and I were operating on the same wavelength. They were quoting from the Bible, while I was beginning to think seriously about the need to save my immortal soul,” he said. Throughout his career, which began in 1959 after he saw an ad for a wage and salary analyst in The Los Angeles Times, Crystal said he noticed that CEOs rarely saw their pay package reduced when their companies’ stock plummeted. He was the author of six books, including in 1991 the best-selling “In Sear of Excess: The Overcompensation of American Executives.” A modern CEO, he wrote, was “a cross between the ancient Pharaohs and Louis XIV –an imperial personage … he is paid so much more than ordinary workers that he hasn’t got the slightest clue as to how the rest of the country lives”. But Crystal also admitted to having been part of the problem: “I helped create the phenomenon we see today; huge and surgin pay for good performance, and huge and surging pay for bad performance, too.” The book was praised by then-presidential candidate Bill Clinton as a “wake-up call to the corporate world.” A New York Times’s reviewer wrote: “Mr. Crystal concludes that the system is ‘rotten to the core,’ though he is quick to confess that as a corporate pay consultant he helped create the problem. Now he is trying to right the wrong by working for shareholder groups and by writing articles – and ‘In Search of Excess.’ The result is a highly informative, very readable indictment of executive pay in the United States, larded with instructive examples.” Asked why he thought CEOs didn’t like people criticizing their pay packages, Crystal told Charlie Rose in an interview in June 1992: “Some of the things I’m saying will result in having their pay slashes; which is roughly the equivalent of trying to take a piece of filet out of the jaws of a Doberman who hasn’t eaten for a week.” Crystal didn’t limit his criticism to occupiers of the “C suite”. He took on the chief financial officers, chief operation officers, chief legal officers, board compensation committees, the Financial Accounting Standards Board, the Securities and Exchange Commission and even compensation consultants. His writing were full of numbers and formulas, and throughout them Crystal wove his wit and own lexicon. In a study comparing the compensation of British and American CEOs who headed comparable companies and delivered comparable results, he wrote: “You would always want to hire the Brits. They deliver the same results for less money. And besides, they speak better English.” On a major company replacing its retiring CEO with one from another company, Crystal wrote: You paid a Cadillac price for a Chevrolet, and the Chevrolet turned out to be a lemon.” And one of the most used terms was: “He is a porker of the first order.” When he wasn’t criticizing CEOs with huge compensation packages, he targeted boards of directors who gave them the pay. ‘Many CEOs decide on what they perceive to be a fair level of pay, add $10 million to give themselves some maneuvering room, and then present their outsized demands to a board of directors that they hand-picked,” he said. ‘Typically, some 60 percent of these directors are CEOs of other companies, and none has a known aversion to agreed.” While Crystal tossed his barbs at many CEOs and others, he also has his “heroes”, CEOs who had been paid too little for what he called “magnificent contributions” to their shareholders. They included Intel’s Andy Grove, Berkshire Hathaway’s Warren Buffett and Microsoft’s Bill Gates. No matter how entertaining he would make his barbs, the former clients and even those he never worked for didn’t take kindly to his criticisms. Some called his compilation of data inaccurate; others tossed unprintable responses his way. Some called him a Judas for being a part of the system for so long and then turning on it. His response was that he preferred to be compared to Mary Magdalene in the second phase of her life. “Maybe I was a hooker,” Crystal said. “But I’m hoping to end my life as a saint.” After Crystal stopped writing, he turned to the piano for relaxation. ‘I was trained as a classic pianist since I was four and a half,” Crystal explained. “I have a Steinway grand piano and high ceilings. I enjoy my time these days with people like Mozart, Bach, and Chopin.” Crystal was born on April 30, 1934, in Oakland, California. When his parents died, an aunt and grandparents enrolled him at San Rafael Military Academy in California at the age of 10. He was there from 1945 to 1950, and then graduated from Oakland High School in 1952. In 1956, he received a bachelor’s degree from the University of California, where he later was an adjunct professor, and a master’s degree from Occidental College in 1962. He is survived by a daughter and two sons from a previous marriage; Allison Taliercio of Dunedin, Florida, Matthew Crystal of Redmond, Oregon, and David Crystal. He also had three stepchildren from another marriage; Chad Cunningham, Amy Breninger, and Jamie Baker, all of Santa Rosa, California. He had 12 grandchildren and one great grandchild.

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Kraft-Sussman Funeral & Cremation Services

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Tributes

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Sheila Anne Feeney

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Mr. Crystal was hugely influential in developing my own critical thinking around matters of equity and compensation in the workforce and in our nation. I think I interviewed him many years ago while working for Workforce magazine, but I don't see the story on line, so perhaps the site is dead or my memory is faulty. I hadn't seen him quoted in any publications for a while and thought of him again today wondering how he would have weighed in on Nicholas Kristof's column on Dan Price in the NYT. After a quick Google, I discovered what I feared. The world has lost an important warrior for justice. Mr. Crystal may have earned the enmity of those he rightfully called out for their greed but he was beloved not just by social justice advocates, but by reporters. He gave a helluva interview and was one of the few people with impressive credentials who could be counted upon to speak truth to power. His career course correction allowed him to achieve his objective to "die a saint" - in my book. His absence is so painful in so many ways, but I hope his phenomenally important work and all he did to right the wrongs of corporate America is some comfort to you. In sympathy, Sheila Anne Feeney

Published June 8th, 2024
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Rajiv Sabharwal

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Bud was a mentor and inspiration to me when I joined TPF&C in 1986 in my first job after my MBA working in San Francisco. He was bold, fearless, articulate, outspoken, a charming man and pure genius. he is the father of Compensation as far as I am concerned. His legend for activism in Compensation is unmatched. My best wished to the family.

Published June 8th, 2024
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Matt, Caroline, Eva & Clareen Ward

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Sue and Family: Caroline and I only just learned of the very sad news of Bud's passing. He was very much a mentor to me, and I was so lucky that he took me under his wing. He graciously "put food on our table" when my firm was a mere start-up. We will always remember him fondly and the wonderful hospitality Sue and he showed to us and our girls (who just turned 25 and 27 in the last few days if you can believe that ! ). We are sending you all good energy and fervent prayers and are so very thankful we had the chance to know such remarkable people. Take care, Matt, Caroline, Eva and Clareen Ward

Published June 8th, 2024
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Andrew Shapiro

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Just learned of Bud's passing and very sorry to hear of it. He was one of a kind and a great ally and mentor. I will miss his wit and sound bites and insight into deciphering the overpayments made to imperial CEOs. May his memory be a blessing to family and friends.

Published June 8th, 2024
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Joyce Vallecorse

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Bud was one of a kind, my most unforgettable character. We met in 1982 in San Francisco and remained friends throughout the rest of his life. Bud was my friend, but he was very much the brother wish I had. He was a wonderfully talented human bring, a bit of a polymath and a Renaissance man all rolled into one great guy. Bud was brilliant, witty, and funny. I shall miss his laughter and witticisms until the end of my own days. I not only admired and respected Bud, but I loved him dearly. My deepest sympathies go out to his family and friends at this most difficult of times. Sincerely, Joyce Vallecorse

Published June 8th, 2024
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Allison Taliercio

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Published June 7th, 2024
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Chaun crystal

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Published June 7th, 2024
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Steve Warnek

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Just read about Bud's passing - he will always be an inspiration to all.

Published June 8th, 2024
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miriam goldfine

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Dear Sue: I was so sad to hear about Bud's passing. He was a very special person. For me, he was a mentor, a supporter and, above all, a friend. He helped steer me through my first days at TPFC, even trying to teach me about the Black Schole's box (I never got it), and was always there when I needed help. Although our paths separated in recent years, he'll always be in my memories. My heartfelt condolences to you and yours. Fondly, Miriam Goldfine

Published June 8th, 2024
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FRED COOK

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Our thoughts and prayers go out to Sue Crystal and all the members of Bud'S extended family. He was a great friend and teacher for almost 50 years. I'll miss him terribly, Fred Cook

Published June 8th, 2024
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Bob Coscarello

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Bud was my first boss at Towers Perrin and life-time mentor. I joined Towers Perrin after 6+ years as an Executive Compensation consultant at McKinsey. I thought that I knew it all. I learned from Bud otherwise. Will miss him greatly. Bob

Published June 8th, 2024
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Sue Crystal

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Published June 7th, 2024
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Joyce Vallecorse

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Published June 7th, 2024
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Rajiv Sabharwal

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Published June 7th, 2024
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