
Everything You Know About Paying Fairly is Wrong | With What Pay Costs' Author James Seechurn
FNDN Series
How Control Undermines Startup Energy
James explains how introducing structured pay systems reduces the experimental space that drives startup innovation.
Welcome back to the FNDN Series, where we continue our deep dive into startup compensation with industry leaders from across the startup world. In our conversation with James Seechurn, author of What Pay Costs and Nothing Left to Take Away, we challenge everything you thought you knew about compensation. James dismantles the myths behind pay for performance models, merit cycles, and competency frameworks while exploring why companies fail to pay people fairly. We dive into the tension between chaos and control in startups, examine the future of work in an AI-driven economy, and discuss how participative workforces and employee ownership can transform company culture. Stick around for one of the most eye-opening conversations about compensation you'll ever hear.
James Alexander Seechurn is an author and advisor specializing in sales compensation, incentives, and the design of reward systems. He advises companies on how pay, job architecture, and performance systems shape behavior, culture, and long-term outcomes. James is the author of Nothing Left to Take Away and What Pay Costs, where he challenges conventional pay-for-performance thinking and draws on research, history, and real-world examples to rethink how organizations motivate people.
Chapters:
00:44 Guest Introduction: James Seechurn
02:26 The Balance of Chaos and Control in Startups
07:04 Pay Transparency and the Failure of Fair Compensation
11:35 Why Companies Haven't Paid People Fairly
16:23 Making the Economic Case for Fair Pay
20:43 Innovation Failures: BlackBerry, Google, and Kodak
26:45 Employee Ownership vs VC-Backed Models
31:35 The Problems with Merit Cycles and Pay for Performance
37:11 Why Competency Frameworks Infantilize Employees
43:22 Career Progression as the True Reward
48:37 Pay Tiers and Living Wages: A Better Approach
56:21 Peer-to-Peer Rewards and Participative Workforces
1:03:57 Advice for Startup Leaders: Trust Your People
1:12:39 The Future of Work in a Stagnant Wage Environment
1:21:02 Fractional Work and the Possible Return of Unions
1:27:21 The Executive Pay Problem
1:33:35 The Role of a Great CEO
Connect with James
Visit: LinkedIn profile https://www.linkedin.com/in/james-seechurn/
Guest: James Seechurn
Resources Mentioned
Books:
What Pay Costs by James Seechurn
Nothing Left to Take Away by James Seechurn
The Hidden Brain - Book on inherent bias
The Progress Principle by Teresa Amabile
Companies Mentioned:
Semco (Brazil) - Employee-owned participative workforce model
Valve - Gaming company with employee-decided structure
Morning Star (US) - Participative workforce example
PayPal - Living wage implementation
Whole Foods - Early pay transparency adopter
Carter - No negotiation pay stance
Emco (Brazil) - Employee ownership and salary-setting model
Concepts:
Knowledge work (Peter Drucker, 1959)
Cognitive closure (Ari Lansky)
Self-perception theory and self-determination theory
ESOPs (Employee Share Ownership Programs)
DAOs (Distributed Autonomous Organizations)
More FNDN Episodes:
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4GeBIeZOKrFxG1oiiPxmiM
Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/fndn-series/id1794263484


