The online fashion and cosmetics retailer ASOS has come under scrutiny after scrapping diversity targets as incentives for its executives to achieve bonuses, signifying a growing view of diversity as non-essential.
Annual executive bonuses at the e-commerce platform will now be based on hitting profit targets, improving share prices, and increasing profit margins, scrapping diversity-driven targets altogether.
Last year, the brand’s annual bonuses were based on revenue (15%), adjusted pre-tax profit (25%), adjusted free cash flow (35%), and ESG measures including diversity goals (25%).
However, these bonuses have since changed drastically, with 75% of bonuses being based on adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation), and the remaining 25% of bonuses based on targets for closing stock, adjusted gross margin and cost to serve.
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