As private equity firms diversify strategies, launch multiple vehicles, expand co-investment programs, and grow headcount, compensation and carry have become some of the most operationally complex and risk-sensitive areas of the firm. This trend is reflected across private capital research and advisory literature, including Allvue Systems’ Definitive Guide to Carry and Compensation Management.
Many firms still manage these programs with spreadsheets, manual processes, and fragmented systems that were never designed for this level of complexity. This challenge is frequently cited in private equity operational research, including Deloitte’s work on operational excellence in private markets (Deloitte – Private Equity Operational Excellence).
Across the private equity market, a few themes consistently surface in conversations with CFOs, finance leaders, and HR teams, as well as in industry research from firms like Preqin and Heidrick & Struggles.
What worked at $2B AUM often breaks at $10B+. Excel models proliferate, ownership becomes unclear, and institutional knowledge lives in individuals’ heads instead of systems. Operational risk tied to spreadsheet dependency is a recurring theme in private markets research on operational resilience and risk management. The result is operational risk in an area that directly impacts talent retention, investor confidence, and firm reputation and liability.
Firms manage multiple funds, SPVs, SMAs, and bespoke co-investment structures, each with its own set of allocations, dilution and accretion rules, vesting schedules and economics. Allocation methodologies can consist of fund-level, investment-level, tranche-based, and hybrid or vintage-based models which is well documented in industry benchmarking and compensation research, including insights published by PE Professional and Allvue Systems’ Definitive Guide to Carry and Compensation Management.
Partners and employees want clearer answers to basic questions:
When those answers take weeks to compile or require reconciliation across multiple spreadsheets and systems, confidence erodes. Research from total rewards and compensation advisory firms continues to link transparency in long-term incentives to retention and engagement outcomes (Mercer – Total Rewards).
Compensation and carry sit at the intersection of payroll, performance management, tax, compliance, and long-term incentives. Promotions, departures, discretionary awards, fund restructurings, and new incentive plans ripple through the data.
Governance and reporting expectations for GPs continue to rise, as emphasized in guidance from organizations like the Institutional Limited Partners Association (ILPA) and private capital advisory research from firms such as PwC.
Leading private equity firms are beginning to treat compensation and carry with the same rigor they apply to fund accounting and investor reporting. They are asking:
Increasingly, firms are moving away from point solutions and toward purpose-built platforms designed for private markets complexity. This shift is highlighted in broader private capital technology and operations research.
Modern compensation and carry management increasingly requires:
These principles and the operational frameworks to support them are explored in depth in Allvue Systems’ Definitive Guide to Carry and Compensation Management.
If you see these pressure points firsthand, whether through reporting delays, reconciliation challenges, or growing questions from leadership and employees, it may be time to rethink how compensation and carry are managed at your firm.
These trends and the operational realities behind them are explored in detail. Learn how your firm can empower professionals in the private capital space to make informed decisions about compensation and keep teams incentivized.
👉 Download the Whitepaper: The Definitive Guide to Carry and Compensation Management