Alphabet, the parent company of Google, has approved a new compensation package for its chief executive Sundar Pichai that could be worth as much as $692 million over the next three years. The plan was disclosed through a regulatory filing and is structured mainly around stock-based incentives linked to the company’s performance and long-term growth.
Unlike traditional salary-heavy compensation plans, most of the value in Pichai’s package depends on Alphabet’s performance in the coming years. His base salary will remain $2 million annually, a level that has not changed since 2020. Instead, the majority of the payout will come through equity awards and performance-based stock units that are designed to align the CEO’s financial rewards with shareholder returns.
The structure of the compensation plan follows a three-year cycle similar to the one granted in 2022. However, the latest package introduces additional incentives linked to some of Alphabet’s emerging businesses, highlighting the company’s strategy of expanding beyond its core search and advertising operations. If all performance targets are met and Alphabet’s stock performs strongly during the period, Pichai’s total compensation could reach the full $692 million mark.
The move also places Pichai among the highest-paid corporate executives globally. Executive pay packages in the technology industry often draw attention because they rely heavily on stock incentives rather than fixed pay, meaning the actual value can fluctuate depending on company performance.
Large portion of compensation tied to Waymo and Wing performance:
A key feature of the new compensation structure is that a significant portion of the payout is tied to the performance of Alphabet’s “Other Bets” businesses, particularly Waymo and Wing. These subsidiaries focus on emerging technologies such as autonomous vehicles and drone-based delivery systems.
Under the plan, Pichai will receive equity units linked to the value of Waymo, Alphabet’s self-driving technology company. These incentives have a target value of about $130 million and could grow significantly depending on how the company’s valuation changes over the next three years. Another set of equity awards tied to Wing, Alphabet’s drone delivery venture, carries a target value of around $45 million.
The final payout from these incentives will depend on how the companies perform and how their equity value evolves over the period. In some cases, the awards can reach up to 200 percent of the target value if the businesses exceed expectations. The board has indicated that tying executive compensation to these projects is meant to encourage stronger focus on scaling them into profitable operations. Waymo, which began as a Google research project in 2009, has since developed into a commercial autonomous vehicle platform operating robotaxi services in several US cities. Wing, launched in 2012, focuses on delivering small packages through drones and has been expanding partnerships with retailers and logistics networks.
Stock incentives linked to Alphabet’s overall market performance:
Apart from incentives connected to Waymo and Wing, the compensation package also includes performance stock units tied to Alphabet’s overall market performance. These stock awards have a target value of about $126 million but could rise to as much as $252 million if Alphabet significantly outperforms other companies in the S&P 100 index during the performance period.
There is also a separate time-based stock grant valued at about $84 million. These shares will vest gradually over the three-year cycle as long as Pichai continues to remain with the company. Such structures are commonly used to ensure leadership stability and encourage long-term strategic decision-making.
Alphabet’s board has defended the compensation plan by pointing to the company’s strong financial growth under Pichai’s leadership. Since he became Google’s CEO in 2015 and later took over as Alphabet’s CEO in 2019, the company’s market value has grown dramatically, rising from roughly $535 billion to more than $3.6 trillion.
Leadership and AI race shape Alphabet’s long-term strategy:
The compensation package also reflects the competitive environment facing large technology companies. Alphabet is investing heavily in artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and next-generation technologies as it competes with rivals across the global tech industry.
Strong leadership is viewed as especially crucial during this age of fast technological development. Alphabet has incorporated AI into a variety of its products, including search, cloud services, and productivity tools. Analysts believe that connecting CEO pay to performance measures encourages executives to focus on long-term growth rather than short-term success. For Pichai, the new package is both a reward for previous performance and an incentive to drive Alphabet’s next phase of growth. If the company continues to develop its technological leadership and scale additional companies like autonomous mobility and drone logistics, the compensation plan may achieve its peak value within the next three years.




