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When transparency stops being a threat: Is 2026 the year reward gets exposed?

by | Mar 31, 2026

Payroll | Reward and Performance
Home 5 Payroll 5 When transparency stops being a threat: Is 2026 the year reward gets exposed?

When transparency stops being a threat: Is 2026 the year reward gets exposed?

Pay transparency is accelerating across Europe. Most organisations are preparing for compliance. But the real question is more uncomfortable: are you confident your reward system still works once people can see it? Transparency doesn’t expose regulation gaps, it exposes weakness in reward strategy.

Does our reward approach work in a transparent world?

This was the core question at a recent CPO network breakfast we held at LACE. And the conversation confirmed what many leaders quietly admit: transparency isn’t the problem. But sometimes reward design quality is. Transparency simply turns the lights on.

Let’s get the obvious out of the way. Yes, the EU Pay Transparency Directive is coming. Yes, it affects any employer with EU-based employees. And yes, UK‑headquartered companies are being pulled into it, whether they like it or not. But these changes are a signal of a wider shift – increasing expectations of openness about reward. The shift was already underway.

Let’s get real. Employees already:

  • Talk
  • Compare
  • Screenshot
  • Infer
  • Fill gaps with stories (usually wrong ones)

Much of reward is already informally transparent whether employers like it or not. The EU Directive just pushes this along to the next step and forces organisations to confront a harsh reality for some: if employees can’t understand how their pay works, they discount its value and assume the worst. Take a situation where two workers do a similar job but get paid differently. Transparency doesn’t create that problem, but it does make it obvious.

The real stress‑test of a reward strategy is: can your approach survive explanation? Could we explain this to a reasonable person in five minutes and be understood?

Regulation accelerates transparency, but it does not define an organisation’s response

This is the real story. Transparency is becoming the default expectation. The competitive advantage sits in how organisations respond.

Transparency exposures weakness in approach

Reward systems can break under transparency for a range of reasons:

  • Overcomplexity: Designs that collapse when asked to be explained in plain language
  • Vague intent: Aspirational promises (e.g., “competitive pay”) without definition or reference points
  • False objectivity: Overreliance on maths without addressing perceptions of fairness or context
  • Misaligned incentives: Variable pay schemes where performance is extremely hard to measure reliably or where employees are unable to impact outcomes
  • Lack of empathy: Systems designed for employees but not with them, creating feelings of unfairness or exclusion.

Many organisations assume their frameworks are sound because they “work on paper”. But reward does not operate on paper. It exists in perception, interpretation, and daily experience. If the approach is unclear employees construct their own narratives to fill the gaps.

If you’re nervous about transparency, the problem is often complexity – not openness.

 

Simplicity and fairness: The cornerstones of effective reward design

Beneath the complexity, two themes dominate discussions we have: simplicity and fairness.

Simplicity first

Reward only works when people can understand it – how it operates, what they can influence, and how effort translates into outcomes. In reward, simple and clear routinely beats clever complexity.

Fairness as felt experience

Fairness isn’t mathematical equality. It’s felt, not calculated.

Fairness drives trust, engagement and acceptance – even when outcomes are not favourable. Research repeatedly shows that unfairness (or the feeling of it) is one of the most powerful demotivators of human behaviour – more significant than pay levels themselves.

The challenge? Fairness is:

  • Subjective
  • Relative
  • Context dependent.

This places enormous value on narrative, process clarity and empathetic leadership.

Fairness isn’t just about being right. It is built on trust and whether employees believe the process.

 

So, what should organisations do now?

Pay transparency, approached intentionally, can become a source of competitive advantage – not a compliance burden. Here’s some initial tips:

Redesign for simple effectiveness

  • Adopt human-centred incentive design
  • Remove overengineered mechanics
  • Test explainability directly with employees
  • Build systems that are robust no matter the scrutiny.

Build fairness into both process and perception

  • Go beyond minimum compliance on EU Pay Transparency requirements
  • Clarify decision logic and improve process consistency
  • Put fairness at the heart of your objectives for reward
  • Equip leaders with the confidence and capability to discuss pay openly. Reward is only as credible as the leaders asked to explain it.

 

Modernise how judgement is applied

Analytics should inform decisions – not replace them. This means using data to support human judgement, not automate pay outcomes, that employees may see as opaque or impersonal.

 

From risk to leverage: The strategic opportunity ahead

The transformation ahead is not simply about regulation – it’s about redefining how organisations communicate value, fairness and intent.

More reward transparency is coming. Those who treat it as a compliance exercise will find themselves explaining, defending, and repairing trust. Those who embrace it in reward design – building simplicity, fairness and clarity into their reward systems – will position themselves as employers of choice in an increasingly transparent world.

 

In the end, transparency doesn’t change reward systems. It reveals them.

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