The Compensation Structure That Keeps Your Best People Without Bleeding Cash
Veronica ran a residential cleaning company with twelve employees. She had been in business for seven years and had never once lost a night of sleep over her team. Then, in a single quarter, three of her best people left. Not because she underpaid them. Not because the work dried up. Because they didn't know where they stood.
One of them told her on her way out the door: "I didn't know if staying made sense. Nobody ever told me what the path looked like."
Veronica had twelve employees and twelve separate compensation agreements — each one a product of a different negotiation, a different moment, a different level of urgency. None of them connected to each other. None of them told an employee anything about what came next. She had built a payroll. She had not built a system.
That distinction is what this post addresses. Your employee compensation structure — the architecture that defines how your small business pays people, how it advances them, and what they can expect — is either a retention tool or a departure accelerator. There is very little in between.