UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549

 

SCHEDULE 14A
(Rule 14a-101)

 

Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934

 

Filed by the Registrant x

Filed by a Party other than the Registrant o

 

Check the appropriate box:

 

o Preliminary Proxy Statement
o Confidential, For Use of the Commission only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
x Definitive Proxy Statement
o Definitive Additional Materials
o Soliciting Material Pursuant to Rule 14a-12

 

GARTNER, INC.

(Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)

 

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

 

x No fee required.
o Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.

 

  (1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
  (2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
  (3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined:
  (4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
  (5) Total fee paid:

 

o Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
   
o Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

 

  (1) Amount Previously Paid:
  (2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
  (3) Filing Party:
  (4) Date Filed:

 

 
 

 

April 11, 2016

 

Dear Stockholder:

 

On behalf of the Board of Directors and Management of Gartner, Inc., I invite you to attend our 2016 Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held on Thursday, May 26, 2016, at 10 a.m. local time, at our corporate headquarters at 56 Top Gallant Road, Stamford, Connecticut.

 

Details of the business to be conducted at the meeting are given in the Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders and Proxy Statement which follow this letter. The 2015 Annual Report to Stockholders is also included with these materials.

 

We have mailed to many of our stockholders a Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials (the “Notice”) containing instructions on how to access our 2016 Proxy Statement and our 2015 Annual Report to Stockholders, and how to vote online on the three management Proposals put before you this year. The Notice also includes instructions on how to request a paper or email copy of the proxy materials, including the Notice of Annual Meeting, Proxy Statement and Annual Report, and proxy card or voting instruction card. Stockholders who previously either requested paper copies of the proxy materials or elected to receive the proxy materials electronically did not receive a Notice, and will receive the proxy materials in the format requested.

 

In addition, by following the e-consent instructions in the proxy card, stockholders may go paperless in future solicitations and request proxy materials electronically by email on an ongoing basis.

 

Your vote is important. Whether or not you plan to attend the Annual Meeting, we urge you to review the proxy materials and vote your shares, regardless of the number of shares you hold, as soon as possible. You may vote by proxy over the internet or by telephone using the instructions provided in the Notice. Alternatively, if you received paper copies of the proxy materials by mail, you can also vote by following the instructions on the proxy card or voting instruction card. Instructions regarding the three methods of voting are contained in the Notice, proxy card or voting instruction card.

 

If you have any questions about the meeting, please contact our Investor Relations Department at (203) 316-6537.

 

Sincerely,

 

 

Eugene A. Hall

Chief Executive Officer

 

 

NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

 

Date: Thursday, May 26, 2016
   
Time: 10:00 a.m. local time
   
Location: 56 Top Gallant Road
  Stamford, Connecticut 06902
   
Matters To Be Voted On: (1) Election of nine members of our Board of Directors;
  (2) Advisory approval of the Company’s executive compensation;
  (3) Ratification of the appointment of KPMG LLP as our independent auditor for 2016.
   
Record Date: March 31, 2016 – You are eligible to vote if you were a stockholder of record on this date.

 

By Order of the Board of Directors,

 

 

Daniel S. Peale
Corporate Secretary

 

Stamford, Connecticut
April 11, 2016

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

GENERAL INFORMATION 1
   
The Annual Meeting and Proposals 1
Information Concerning Proxy Materials and the Voting of Proxies 1
   
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS 4
   
General Information About Our Board of Directors 4
Majority Vote Standard 6
Compensation of Directors 6
Director Compensation Table 6
   
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE 7
   
Board Principles and Practices 7
Director Independence 7
Board Leadership Structure 8
Risk Oversight 8
Board and Committee Meetings and Annual Meeting Attendance 8
Committees Generally and Charters 9
Audit Committee 9
Compensation Committee 10
Governance/Nominating Committee 10
Director Stock Ownership Guidelines 11
Code of Ethics and Code of Conduct 11
   
PROPOSAL ONE: ELECTION OF DIRECTORS 12
   
Nominees for Election to the Board of Directors 12
Recommendation of Our Board 12
   
EXECUTIVE OFFICERS 13
   
General Information About Our Current Executive Officers 13
   
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION & ANALYSIS 14
   
Executive Summary 14
Compensation Setting Process for 2015 18
Other Compensation Policies and Information 24
Executive Stock Ownership and Holding
Period Guidelines
24
24
Clawback Policy 24
Hedging and Pledging Policies 24
Accounting and Tax Impact 24
Grant of Equity Awards 24
Compensation Committee Report 25
   
   
COMPENSATION TABLES AND NARRATIVE DISCLOSURES 26
Summary Compensation Table 26
Other Compensation Table 27
Grants of Plan-Based Awards Table 28
Employment Agreements With Executive Officers 29
Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control 32
Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End Table 34
Option Exercises and Stock Vested Table 35
Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Table 35
Equity Compensation Plan Information 36
   
PROPOSAL TWO: ADVISORY APPROVAL OF THE COMPANY’S EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION 37
   
Recommendation of Our Board 37
   
SECURITY OWNERSHP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT 38
   
SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE 39
   
TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PERSONS 39
   
PROPOSAL THREE: RATIFICATION OF APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITOR 40
   
Principal Accountant Fees and Services 40
Audit Committee Report 41
Recommendation of Our Board 41
   
MISCELLANEOUS 41
   
Stockholder Communications 41
Available Information 41
Process for Submission of Stockholder Proposals for Our 2017 Annual Meeting 42
Annual Report 42
 

 

56 Top Gallant Road
Stamford, Connecticut 06902

 

 

 

PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

 

For the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held on May 26, 2016

 

GENERAL INFORMATION

 

The Annual Meeting and Proposals

The 2016 Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Gartner, Inc. will be held on Thursday, May 26, 2016, for the purposes set forth in the accompanying Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders and described in greater detail below. This Proxy Statement and form of proxy, together with our 2015 Annual Report to Stockholders, are being furnished in connection with the solicitation by the Board of Directors of proxies to be used at the meeting and any adjournment of the meeting, and are first being made available to our stockholders on or around April 11, 2016. We will refer to your company in this Proxy Statement as “we”, “us”, the “Company” or “Gartner.” The three proposals to be considered and acted upon at the Annual Meeting, which are described in more detail in this Proxy Statement, are:

 

  · Election of nine (9) nominees to our Board of Directors;
  · Advisory approval of the Company’s executive compensation;
  · Ratification of the appointment of KPMG LLP as our independent auditor for the 2016 fiscal year.

 

Management does not intend to present any other items of business and is not aware of any matters other than those set forth in this Proxy Statement that will be presented for action at the 2016 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. However, if any other matters properly come before the Annual Meeting, the persons designated by the Company as proxies may vote the shares of Common Stock they represent in their discretion.

 

Information Concerning Proxy Materials and the Voting of Proxies

Why is it Important to Vote:

Voting your shares is important to ensure that you have a say in the governance of the Company. Additionally, repeated failure to vote may subject your shares to risk of escheatment. For more information on escheatment laws, please visit www.investor.gartner.com. Please review the proxy materials and follow the relevant instructions to vote your shares. We hope you will exercise your rights and fully participate as a stockholder in the future of Gartner, Inc.

 

Why Did You Receive a Notice Regarding Availability of Proxy Materials?

Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) rules allow companies to furnish proxy materials to their stockholders via the Internet. This “e-proxy” process expedites stockholders’ receipt of proxy materials, while significantly lowering the costs and reducing the environmental impact of our annual meeting. Accordingly, on April 11, 2016, we mailed to our stockholders (other than those who previously have requested printed proxy materials) a Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials (the “Notice”). If you received a Notice, you will not receive a printed copy of the proxy materials unless you request one. The Notice provides instructions on how to access our proxy materials for the Annual Meeting on a website, how to request a printed copy of the proxy materials and how to vote your shares. We will mail printed copies of our proxy materials to those stockholders who have already elected to receive printed proxy materials.

 

If Your Shares Are Held in “Street Name,” How Are Your Shares Voted?

If you are the beneficial owner of shares (meaning that your shares are held in the name of a bank, brokerage or other nominee; i.e., “street name” accounts), you may receive a Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials from that firm containing instructions you must follow in order for your shares to be voted. Additionally, under applicable New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) rules relating to the discretionary voting of proxies, banks, brokers and other nominees are not permitted to vote shares with respect to the election of directors and executive compensation without instructions from the beneficial owner, but they are able to vote without instructions on the ratification of the appointment of an independent auditor. Therefore, beneficial holders are advised that, if they do not timely provide instructions to their bank, broker or other nominee, their shares will not be voted in connection with Proposals One and Two,

1

but may be noted in connection with Proposal Three. Generally, broker non-votes occur on a matter when a broker is not permitted to vote on that matter without instructions from the beneficial owner and instructions are not given.

 

If You Are the Holder of Record of Your Shares, How Are Your Shares Voted?

If you are the holder of record of your shares, you will either receive a Notice or printed proxy materials if you have already elected to receive printed materials. The Notice will contain instructions you must follow to vote your shares. If you received proxy materials in paper form, the materials include a proxy card instructing the holder of record how to vote the Shares.

 

How Can You Get Electronic Access to Proxy Materials?

The Notice provides instructions regarding how to view our proxy materials for the Annual Meeting online. Additionally, materials are available on http://www.astproxyportal.com/ast/14908 and at www.investor.gartner.com.

 

How Can You Request Paper or Email Copies of Proxy Materials?

If you received a Notice by mail, you will not receive a printed copy of the proxy materials. If you want to receive paper or email copies of the proxy materials, you must request them. There is no charge for requesting a copy. To facilitate timely delivery, please make your request on or before May 11, 2016. To request paper or e-mail copies, stockholders can call 1-888-776-9962 in the United States (1-718-921-8562 for international callers), send an email to info@amstock.com or visit http://www.amstock.com/proxy services/requestmaterials.asp.

 

How Can You Sign Up to Receive Future Proxy Materials Electronically?

You have the option to receive all future proxy statements, proxy cards and annual reports electronically via email or the Internet. If you elect this option, the Company will only mail printed materials to you in the future if you request that we do so. To sign up for electronic delivery, please visit www.amstock.com and follow the prompts to sign up for electronic delivery.

 

Who Can Vote at the Annual Meeting?

Only stockholders of record at the close of business on March 31, 2016 (the “Record Date”) may vote at the Annual Meeting. As of the Record Date, there were 82,630,617 shares of our common stock, par value $.0005 per share (“Common Stock”) outstanding and eligible to be voted. This amount does not include treasury shares which are not voted.

 

How Can You Vote?

You may vote using one of the following methods:

 

Ø Internet You may vote on the Internet up until 11:59 PM Eastern Time on May 25, 2016 by following the instructions on your Notice. Have your Notice available when you access the web page.
Ø Telephone You may vote by telephone by calling the toll free number specified on your Notice. You may call 24 hours a day and up until 11:59 PM Eastern Time on May 25, 2016. Have your Notice available when you call.
Ø Mail If you received paper copies of the proxy materials by mail, you may vote by marking the enclosed proxy card, dating and signing it, and returning it in the postage-paid envelope provided.
Ø In Person You may vote your shares in person by attending the Annual Meeting and submitting your proxy at the meeting.

 

All shares that have been voted properly by an unrevoked proxy will be voted at the Annual Meeting in accordance with your instructions. If you sign and submit your proxy card, but do not give voting instructions, the shares represented by that proxy will be voted for each proposal as our Board recommends.

 

How to Revoke Your Proxy or Change Your Vote

A later vote by any means will cancel an earlier vote. You can revoke your proxy or change your vote before your proxy is voted at the Annual Meeting by giving written notice of revocation to: Corporate Secretary, Gartner, Inc., 56 Top Gallant Road, P.O. Box 10212, Stamford, Connecticut 06904-2212; or submitting another timely proxy by the Internet, telephone or mail; or attending the Annual Meeting to vote in person. If your shares are held in the name of a bank, broker or other holder of record, to vote at the Annual Meeting you must obtain a proxy executed in your favor from your bank, broker or other holder of record and bring it to the Annual Meeting in order to vote. Attendance at the Annual Meeting will not, by itself, revoke your prior proxy.

 

How Many Votes You Have

Each stockholder has one vote for each share of our Common Stock owned on the Record Date for all matters being voted on.

2

Quorum

A quorum is constituted by the presence, in person or by proxy, of holders of our Common Stock representing a majority of the number of shares of Common Stock entitled to vote. Abstentions and broker non-votes (described above) will be considered present to determine a quorum.

 

Votes Required

Proposal One: Each nominee must receive more “FOR” votes than “AGAINST” votes to be elected. Any nominee who fails to achieve this threshold must tender his or her resignation from the Board pursuant to the Company’s majority vote standard.

 

Proposals Two and Three: The affirmative “FOR” vote of a majority of the votes cast is required to approve Proposal Two - the advisory approval of the Company’s executive compensation and Proposal Three - the ratification of the appointment of KPMG LLP as our independent auditor for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2016.

 

If any other matters are brought properly before the Annual Meeting, the persons named as proxies in the accompanying proxy card will have the discretion to vote on those matters for you. If for any reason any of the nominees is not available as a candidate for director at the Annual Meeting, the persons named as proxies will vote your proxy for such other candidate or candidates as may be nominated by the Board of Directors. As of the date of this Proxy Statement, we were unaware of any other matter to be raised at the Annual Meeting.

 

What Are the Recommendations of the Board?

The Board of Directors recommends that you vote:

 

ü FOR the election of the nine nominees to our Board of Directors
     
ü FOR the advisory approval of the Company’s executive compensation
     
ü FOR the ratification of the appointment of KPMG LLP as our independent auditor for fiscal 2016
     

 

Who Is Distributing Proxy Materials and Bearing the Cost of the Solicitation?

This solicitation of proxies is being made by the Board of Directors and we will bear the entire cost of this solicitation, including costs associated with mailing the Notice and related internet access to proxy materials, the preparation, assembly, printing, and mailing of this Proxy Statement, the proxy card, and any additional solicitation material that we may provide to stockholders. Gartner will request brokerage firms, fiduciaries and custodians holding shares in their names that are beneficially owned by others to solicit proxies from these persons and will pay the costs associated with such activities. The original solicitation of proxies may be supplemented by solicitation by telephone, electronic mail and other means by our directors, officers and employees. No additional compensation will be paid to these individuals for any such services. We have also retained Georgeson Inc. to assist with the solicitation of proxies at an anticipated cost of $6,500 which will be paid by the Company.

 

Where can I find the voting results of the Annual Meeting?

We will disclose voting results on a Form 8-K filed with the SEC within four business days after the Annual Meeting, which will also be available on our investor relations website – www.investor.gartner.com.

 

Who Can Answer Your Questions?

If you have questions about this Proxy Statement or the Annual Meeting, please call our Investor Relations Department at (203) 316-6537.

 

 
3

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

 

General Information about our Board of Directors

 

Our Board currently has nine directors who serve for annual terms. Our CEO, Eugene A. Hall, has an employment agreement with the Company that obligates the Company to include him on the slate of nominees to be elected to our Board during the term of the agreement. See Executive Compensation – Employment Agreements with Executive Officers below. There are no other arrangements between any director or nominee and any other person pursuant to which the director or nominee was selected. None of our directors or executive officers is related to another director or executive officer by blood, marriage or adoption.

 

Each member of our Board has been nominated for re-election at the 2016 Annual Meeting. See Proposal One – Election of Directors on page 12. Set forth below are the name, age, principal occupation for the last five years, public company board experience, selected additional biographical information and period of service as a director of the Company of each director, as well as a summary of each director’s experience, qualifications and background which, among other factors, support their respective qualifications to continue to serve on our Board.

 

Michael J. Bingle, 44, director since 2004 Mr. Bingle is a Managing Partner and Managing Director of Silver Lake, a private equity firm that he joined in January 2000. Prior thereto, he was a principal with Apollo Management, L.P., a private equity firm, and an investment banker at Goldman, Sachs & Co. He is a former director of TD Ameritrade Holding and Virtu Financial Inc.
   
  Mr. Bingle’s investing, investment banking and capital markets expertise, coupled with his extensive working knowledge of Gartner (a former Silver Lake portfolio company), its financial model and core financial strategies, provide valuable perspective and guidance to our Board and Compensation and Governance Committees.
   
Richard J. Bressler, 58, director since 2006 Mr. Bressler is President and Chief Financial Officer of iHeartMedia, Inc., and Chief Financial Officer of Clear Channel Outdoor Holdings, Inc. Prior to joining iHeartMedia, he served as Managing Director of Thomas H. Lee Partners, L.P., a Boston-based private equity firm, from 2006 to July 2013. He joined Thomas H. Lee Partners from his role as Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Viacom Inc., where he managed all strategic, financial, business development and technology functions. Mr. Bressler has also served in various capacities with Time Warner Inc., including Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Time Warner Digital Media and Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Time Warner Inc. Prior to joining Time Inc., he was a partner with the accounting firm of Ernst & Young. Mr. Bressler is currently a Director of iHeartMedia, Inc., and a former director of The Nielsen Company B.V. and Warner Music Group Corp.
   
  Mr. Bressler qualifies as an audit committee financial expert, and his extensive financial and operational roles at large U.S. public companies bring a wealth of management, financial, accounting and professional expertise to our Board and Audit Committee.
   
Raul E. Cesan, 68, director since 2012 Mr. Cesan has been the Founder and Managing Partner of Commercial Worldwide LLC, an investment firm. Prior thereto, he spent 25 years at Schering – Plough Corporation, serving in various capacities of substantial responsibility: the President and Chief Operating Officer (from 1998 to 2001); Executive Vice President of Schering-Plough Corporation and President of Schering-Plough Pharmaceuticals (from 1994 – 1998); President of Schering Laboratories, U.S. Pharmaceutical Operations (from 1992 to 1994); and President of Schering – Plough International (from 1988 to 1992).
   
  Mr. Cesan is also a director of The New York Times Company. Mr. Cesan’s extensive operational and international experiences provide valuable guidance to our Board and Compensation Committee.
   
4
Karen E. Dykstra, 57, director since 2007

Ms. Dykstra served as Chief Financial and Administrative Officer from November 2013 to July 2015, and as Chief Financial Officer from September 2012 to November 2013, of AOL, Inc. From January 2007 until December 2010, Ms. Dykstra was a Partner of Plainfield Asset Management LLC (“Plainfield”), and she served as Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer of Plainfield Direct LLC, Plainfield’s business development company, from May 2006 to 2010, and as a director from 2007 to 2010. Prior thereto, she spent over 25 years with Automatic Data Processing, Inc., serving most recently as Chief Financial Officer from January 2003 to May 2006, and prior thereto as Vice President – Finance, Corporate Controller and in other capacities. Ms. Dykstra is a director of VMware, Inc. and a former director of Crane Co. and AOL, Inc.

 

Ms. Dykstra qualifies as an audit committee financial expert, and her extensive management, financial, accounting and oversight experience provide important expertise to our Board and Audit Committee.

   
Anne Sutherland Fuchs, 68, director since July 1999

Ms. Fuchs served as Group President, Growth Brands Division, Digital Ventures, a division of J.C. Penney Company, Inc., from November 2010 until April 2012. She also served as Chair of the Commission on Women’s Issues for New York City during the Bloomberg Administration, a position she held from 2002 through 2013. Previously, Ms. Fuchs served as a consultant to companies on branding and digital initiatives, and as a senior executive with operational responsibility at LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton, Phillips de Pury & Luxembourg and several publishing companies, including Hearst Corporation, Conde Nast, Hachette and CBS. Ms. Fuchs is also a director of Pitney Bowes Inc.

 

Ms. Fuchs’ executive management, content and branding skills plus operations expertise, her knowledge of government operations and government partnerships with the private sector, and her keen interest and knowledge of diversity, governance and executive compensation matters provide important perspective to our Board and its Governance and Compensation Committees.

   
William O. Grabe, 77, director since 1993

Mr. Grabe is an Advisory Director of General Atlantic LLC, a global private equity firm. Prior to joining General Atlantic in 1992, Mr. Grabe was a Vice President and Corporate Officer of IBM Corporation. Mr. Grabe is presently a director of Covisint Corporation, QTS Realty Trust, Inc. and Lenovo Group Limited. He is a former director of Infotech Enterprises Limited, Compuware Corporation and iGate Computer Systems Limited (f/k/a Patni Computer Systems Ltd.).

 

Mr. Grabe’s extensive senior executive experience, his knowledge of business operations and his vast knowledge of the global information technology industry have made him a valued member of the Board and Governance Committee.

   
Eugene A. Hall, 59, director since 2004

Mr. Hall is the Chief Executive Officer of Gartner. Prior to joining Gartner in 2004, Mr. Hall was a senior executive at Automatic Data Processing, Inc., a Fortune 500 global technology and service company, serving most recently as President, Employers Services Major Accounts Division, a provider of human resources and payroll services. Prior to joining ADP in 1998, Mr. Hall spent 16 years at McKinsey & Company, most recently as Director.

 

As Gartner’s CEO, Mr. Hall is responsible for developing and executing on the Company’s operating plan and business strategies in consultation with the Board of Directors and for driving Gartner’s business and financial performance, and is the sole management representative on the Board.

   
Stephen G.
Pagliuca
, 61,
director since 1990 (except for 6 months in 2009 when he entered the U.S. Senate race for Massachusetts)

Mr. Pagliuca is a Managing Director of Bain Capital Partners, LLC and is also a Managing Partner and an owner of the Boston Celtics basketball franchise. Mr. Pagliuca joined Bain & Company in 1982, and founded the Information Partners private equity fund for Bain Capital in 1989. Prior to joining Bain, Mr. Pagliuca worked as a senior accountant and international tax specialist for Peat Marwick Mitchell & Company in the Netherlands. Mr. Pagliuca is a former director of Burger King Holdings, Inc., HCA, Inc. (Hospital Corporation of America), Quintiles Transnational Corporation and Warner Chilcott PLC.

 

He has deep subject matter knowledge of Gartner’s history, the development of its business model and the global information technology industry, as well as financial and accounting matters.

   
James C. Smith, 76, director since October 2002 and Chairman of the Board since 2004

Mr. Smith was Chairman of the Board of First Health Group Corp., a national health benefits company until its sale in 2004. He also served as First Health’s Chief Executive Officer from January 1984 through January 2002 and President from January 1984 to January 2001.

 

Mr. Smith’s long-time expertise and experience as the founder, senior-most executive and chairman of the board of a successful large public company provides a unique perspective and insight into management and operational issues faced by the Board, Audit Committee and our CEO. This experience, coupled with Mr. Smith’s personal leadership qualities, qualify him to continue to serve as Chairman of the Board.

5

Majority Vote Standard

 

The Company has adopted a majority vote standard for the election of directors which provides that a nominee must receive more FOR votes than AGAINST votes for election as a director. Should a nominee fail to achieve this threshold, the nominee must immediately tender his or her resignation to the Chairman. The Board, in its discretion, can determine whether or not to accept the resignation.

 

Compensation of Directors

 

Directors who are also employees receive no fees for their services as directors. Non-management directors are reimbursed for their meeting attendance expenses and receive the following compensation for their service as director:

 

Annual Director Retainer Fee: $60,000 per director and an additional $100,000 for our non-executive Chairman of the Board, payable in arrears in four equal quarterly installments, on the first business day of each quarter. These amounts are paid in common stock equivalents (CSEs) granted under the Company’s 2014 Long-Term Incentive Plan (“2014 Plan”), except that a director may elect to receive up to 50% of this fee in cash. The CSEs convert into Common Stock on the date the director’s continuous status as a director terminates, unless the director elects accelerated release as provided in the 2014 Plan. The number of CSEs awarded is determined by dividing the aggregate director fees owed for a quarter (other than any amount payable in cash) by the closing price of the Common Stock on the first business day following the close of that quarter.
Annual Committee Chair Fee: $10,000 for the chair of our Governance Committee and $15,000 for the chairs of our Audit and Compensation Committees. Amounts are payable in the same manner as the Annual Fee.
Annual Committee Member Fee: $7,500 for our Governance Committee members, $10,000 for our Compensation Committee members and $15,000 for our Audit Committee members. Committee chairs receive both a committee chair fee and a committee member fee. Amounts are payable in the same manner as the Annual Fee.
Annual Equity Grant: $200,000 in value of restricted stock units (RSUs), awarded annually on the date of the Annual Meeting. The number of RSUs awarded is determined by dividing $200,000 by the closing price of the Common Stock on the award date. The restrictions lapse one year after grant subject to continued service as director through that date; release may be deferred at the director’s election.

 

Director Compensation Table

 

This table sets forth compensation earned or paid in cash, and the grant date fair value of equity awards made, to our non-management directors on account of services rendered as a director in 2015. Mr. Hall receives no compensation for service as director.

 

Name Fees
Earned Or Paid
($)(1)
Stock
Awards
($)(2)
 
Total
($)
Michael J. Bingle 77,500 200,000 277,500
Richard J. Bressler 90,000 200,000 290,000
Raul E. Cesan 70,000 200,000 270,000
Karen E. Dykstra 75,000 200,000 275,000
Anne Sutherland Fuchs 92,500 200,000 292,500
William O. Grabe 77,500 200,000 277,500
Steven G. Pagliuca 60,000 200,000 260,000
James C. Smith 175,000 200,000 375,000

 

(1) Includes amounts earned in 2015 and paid in cash and/or common stock equivalents (CSEs) on account of the Annual Director Retainer Fee, Annual Committee Chair Fee and/or Annual Committee Member Fee, described above. Does not include reimbursement for meeting attendance expenses.
   
(2) Represents the grant date value of an annual equity award computed in accordance with Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) Accounting Standards Codification (“ASC”) Topic 718, consisting of 2,267 restricted stock units (RSUs) that vest on May 28, 2016, one year from the date of the 2015 Annual Meeting (unless deferred release was elected), subject to continued service through that date. Accordingly, the number of RSUs awarded was calculated by dividing $200,000 by the closing price of our Common Stock on May 28, 2015 ($88.22).
6

CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

 

Gartner is committed to maintaining strong corporate governance practices.

 

Corporate Governance Highlights:
  Ø Independent Chairman of the Board
  Ø Majority voting for directors
  Ø Annual election of directors
  Ø Mandatory Annual Board and Committee performance evaluation
  Ø Executive sessions after each Board and Committee meeting
  Ø 8 out of 9 directors are independent
  Ø 2 out of 9 directors are women
  Ø Fully independent Board committees
  Ø Annual director affirmation of compliance with Code of Conduct
  Ø Annual director evaluation of CEO
  Ø Average director age - 63

 

Board Principles and Practices

 

Our Board Principles and Practices (the “Board Guidelines”) are reviewed annually and revised in light of legal, regulatory or other developments, as well as emerging best practices, by our Governance Committee and Board. The Guidelines, which are posted on www.investor.gartner.com, describe the Board’s responsibilities, its role in strategic development and other matters, discussed below.

 

Director Independence

 

Our Board Guidelines require that our Board be comprised of a majority of directors who meet the criteria for independence from management set forth by the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) in its corporate governance listing standards.

 

Our committee charters likewise require that our standing Audit, Compensation and Governance/Nominating Committees be comprised only of independent directors. Additionally, the Audit Committee members must be independent under Section 10A-3 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”). The Compensation Committee members must be independent under Rule 16b-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act as well as applicable NYSE corporate governance listing standards, and they must qualify as outside directors under regulations promulgated under Section 162(m) (“Section 162(m)”) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”).

 

Utilizing all of these criteria, as well as all relevant facts and circumstances, the Board annually assesses the independence from management of all non-management directors and committee members by reviewing the commercial, financial, familial, employment and other relationships between each director and the Company, its auditors and other companies that do business with Gartner.

 

After analysis and recommendation by the Governance Committee, the Board determined that:

 

· all non-management directors (Michael Bingle, Richard Bressler, Raul Cesan, Karen Dykstra, Anne Sutherland Fuchs, William Grabe, Stephen Pagliuca and James Smith) are independent under the NYSE listing standards;
   
· our Audit Committee members (Ms. Dykstra and Messrs. Bressler and Smith) are independent under the criteria set forth in Section 10A-3 of the Exchange Act; and
   
· our Compensation Committee members (Ms. Fuchs and Messrs. Bingle and Cesan) are independent under the criteria set forth in Exchange Act Rule 16b-3 as well as under applicable NYSE corporate governance listing standards, and qualify as “outside directors” under Code Section 162(m) regulations.
7

Board Leadership Structure

 

The leadership of our Board of Directors rests with our independent Chairman of the Board, Mr. James C. Smith. Gartner believes that the separation of functions between the CEO and Chairman of the Board provides independent leadership of the Board in the exercise of its management oversight responsibilities, increases the accountability of the CEO and creates transparency into the relationship among executive management, the Board of Directors and the stockholders. Additionally, in view of Mr. Smith’s extensive experience as a chief executive officer of a major corporation, he is able to provide an independent point of view to our CEO on important management and operational issues.

 

Risk Oversight

 

The Board of Directors, together with management, oversees risk at Gartner. The Company’s strategic objectives and activities are presented by executive management to the Board and approved annually and more frequently as necessary.

 

The Risk (Internal Audit) function reports directly to the Audit Committee, and provides quarterly reports to the committee. The committee reviews the results of the internal audit annual risk assessment and the proposed internal audit plan. Subsequent quarterly meetings include an update on ongoing internal audit activities, including results of audits and any changes to the audit plan. Risk also meets with the Audit Committee in executive session on a quarterly basis.

 

The General Counsel, who serves as Chief Compliance Officer, also reports directly to the Audit Committee on a quarterly basis concerning the effectiveness and status of the Company’s legal and ethical compliance program and initiatives, hotline activities and litigation matters.

 

The Company maintains internal controls and procedures over financial reporting, as well as enterprise wide internal controls, that are updated and tested annually by management and our independent auditors. Any internal control deficiencies and the status of remediation efforts as well as any findings of the Disclosure Controls Committee are reported to the Audit Committee on a quarterly basis.

 

Risk Assessment of Compensation Policies and Practices

Management conducts an annual risk assessment of the Company’s compensation policies and practices, including all executive, non-executive and business unit compensation policies and practices, as well as the variable compensation policies applicable to our global sales force. The results of this assessment are reported to the Compensation Committee. In 2015, management concluded, and the Compensation Committee agreed, that no Company compensation policies and practices created risks that were reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on the Company.

 

Board and Committee Meetings and Annual Meeting Attendance

 

Our Board held five meetings during 2015. During 2015, seven of our directors attended 100%, and two of our directors attended at least 75%, of all Board and committee meetings held during the periods in which such director served as a director and/or committee member. At each regular quarterly Board and committee meeting, time is set aside for the non-management directors to meet in executive session without management present. James C. Smith, our non-executive Chairman of the Board, presides over the executive sessions at the Board meetings, and each committee chairperson presides over the executive sessions at their respective committee meetings. Directors are not required, but are invited, to attend the Annual Meeting of Stockholders. In 2015, Mr. Hall and other executive officers of the Company attended the 2015 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.

8

Committees Generally and Charters

 

As noted above, our Board has three standing committees: Audit, Compensation and Governance/Nominating, and all committee members have been determined by our Board to be independent under applicable standards. Our Board of Directors has approved a written charter for each committee which is reviewed annually and revised as appropriate. The table below provides information for each Board Committee in 2015:

 

Name Audit Compensation Governance/Nominating
Michael J. Bingle   X X
Richard J. Bressler X (Chair)    
Raul E. Cesan   X  
Karen E. Dykstra X    
Anne Sutherland Fuchs   X (Chair) X
William O. Grabe     X (Chair)
Stephen G. Pagliuca      
James C. Smith X    
Meetings Held in 2015: 5 5 4

 

Audit Committee

 

Our Audit Committee serves as an independent body to assist in Board oversight of:
  ü the integrity of the Company’s financial statements;
  ü the Company’s compliance with legal and regulatory requirements;
  ü the independent auditor’s retention, qualifications and independence; and
  ü the Company’s Risk, Compliance and Internal Audit functions

 

Gartner has a separately designated standing audit committee established in accordance with Section 3(a)(58)(A) of the Exchange Act. Our Board has determined that both Ms. Dykstra and Mr. Bressler qualify as audit committee financial experts, as defined by the rules of the SEC, and that all members have the requisite accounting or related financial management expertise and are financially literate as required by the NYSE corporate governance listing standards.

 

Additionally, the Committee is directly responsible for the appointment, compensation and oversight of our independent auditor, KPMG; approves the engagement letter describing the scope of the annual audit; approves fees for audit and non-audit services; provides an open avenue of communication among the independent auditor, the Risk and Internal Audit functions, management and the Board; resolves disagreements, if any, between management and the independent auditors regarding financial reporting for the purpose of issuing an audit report in connection with our financial statements; and prepares the Audit Committee Report required by the SEC and included in this Proxy Statement on page 41 below.

 

The independent auditor reports directly to the Audit Committee. By meeting with the independent auditor and the internal auditor, and operating and financial management personnel, the Audit Committee oversees matters relating to accounting standards, policies and practices, any changes thereto and the effects of any changes on our financial statements, financial reporting practices and the quality and adequacy of internal controls. Additionally our internal audit and compliance functions report directly to the Audit Committee. After each Audit Committee meeting, the Committee meets separately with the CFO, the independent auditor and the internal auditor, without management present.

 

The Audit Committee has established procedures for (i) the receipt, retention and treatment of complaints received by the Company regarding accounting, internal accounting controls or auditing matters, and (ii) the confidential, anonymous submission by employees of concerns regarding questionable accounting or auditing matters. A toll-free phone number managed by a third party is available for confidential and anonymous submission of concerns relating to accounting, auditing and other illegal or unethical matters, as well as alleged violations of Gartner’s Code of Conduct or any other policies. All submissions on the hotline are reported to the General Counsel, who determines the mode of investigation, to the internal auditor and to the Audit Committee not less than at each regular meeting. The Audit Committee has the power and funding to retain independent counsel and other advisors as it deems necessary to carry out its duties.

9

Compensation Committee

 

Our Compensation Committee has responsibility for:
  ü administering and approving all elements of compensation for the Chief Executive Officer and the other executive officers;
  ü approving, by direct action or through delegation, all equity awards, grants, and related actions under the provisions of our equity plan, and administering the plan;
  ü participating in the evaluation of CEO performance (with the input and oversight of the Governance Committee and the Chairman of the Board);
  ü approving the peer group established for executive compensation benchmarking purposes;
  ü evaluating the independence of all compensation committee advisers; and
  ü providing oversight in connection with company-wide compensation programs.

 

The Committee reviewed and approved the Compensation Discussion and Analysis contained in this Proxy Statement, recommended its inclusion herein (and in our 2015 Annual Report on Form 10-K) and issued the related report to stockholders as required by the SEC (see Compensation Committee Report on page 25 below).

 

Exequity LLP (“Exequity”) was retained by the Committee to provide information, analyses, and advice to the Compensation Committee during various stages of 2015 executive compensation planning. Exequity reports directly to the Compensation Committee chair. In the course of conducting its activities, Exequity attended meetings of the Committee and briefed the Compensation Committee on executive compensation trends generally.

 

The Committee has assessed the independence of Exequity, and has concluded that Exequity is independent and that its retention presents no conflicts of interest either to the Committee or the Company.

 

Final decisions with respect to determining the amount or form of executive compensation under the Company’s executive compensation programs are made by the Committee alone and may reflect factors and considerations other than the information and advice provided by its consultants. Please refer to the Compensation Discussion & Analysis beginning on page 14 for a more detailed discussion of the Committee’s activities with respect to executive compensation.

 

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation. During 2015, no member of the Compensation Committee served as an officer or employee of the Company, was formerly an officer of the Company or had any relationship with the Company required to be disclosed under Transactions With Related Persons below. Additionally, during 2015, no executive officer of the Company: (i) served as a member of the compensation committee (or full board in the absence of such a committee) or as a director of another entity, one of whose executive officers served on our Compensation Committee; or (ii) served as a member of the compensation committee (or full board in the absence of such a committee) of another entity, one of whose executive officers served on our Board.

 

Governance/Nominating Committee

 

Our Governance/Nominating Committee (the “Governance Committee”) has responsibility for:
  ü the size, composition and organization of our Board;
  ü the independence of directors and committee members under applicable standards;
  ü our corporate governance policies, including our Board Principles and Practices;
  ü the criteria for membership as a director and the selection of nominees for election to the Board;
  ü committee assignments;
  ü the form and amount of director compensation;
  ü the performance evaluation of our CEO and management succession planning; and
  ü the annual Board and committee performance evaluations.
10

While the Governance Committee has not specified minimum qualifications for candidates it recommends, it will consider the qualifications, skills, expertise, qualities, diversity, age, gender, availability and experience of all candidates that are presented for consideration. At the present time, two of our nine directors are women. The Board utilizes a concept of diversity that extends beyond race, gender and national origin to encompass the viewpoints, professional experience and other individual qualities and attributes of candidates that will enable the Board to select candidates who are best able to carry out the Board’s responsibilities and complement the mix of talent and experience represented on the Board. In connection with its annual evaluation, the Board considers the appropriateness of the qualifications of existing directors given then current needs.

 

Candidates for Board nomination may be brought to the attention of the Governance Committee by current Board members, management, stockholders or other persons. All potential new candidates are fully evaluated by the Governance Committee using the criteria described above, and then considered by the entire Board for nomination.

 

Director Candidates submitted by Stockholders: Stockholders wishing to recommend director candidates for consideration by the Governance Committee may do so by writing to the Chairman of the Governance/Nominating Committee, c/o Corporate Secretary, Gartner, Inc., 56 Top Gallant Road, P.O. Box 10212, Stamford, CT 06904-2212, and indicating the recommended candidate’s name, biographical data, professional experience and any other qualifications. In addition, stockholders wishing to propose candidates for election must follow our advance notice provisions. See Process for Submission of Stockholder Proposals for our 2017 Annual Meeting below.

 

Director Stock Ownership Guidelines

 

The Board believes directors should have a financial interest in the Company. Accordingly, each director is required to own at least 10,000 shares of our Common Stock. New directors have three years from election or appointment to comply with the policy as follows: 25% within one year of election or appointment; 50% within two years of election or appointment; and 100% within three years of election or appointment. We permit directors to apply deferred and unvested equity awards towards satisfying these requirements. All of our directors are in compliance with these guidelines.

 

Code of Ethics and Code of Conduct

 

Gartner has adopted a CEO & CFO Code of Ethics which applies to our CEO, CFO, controller and other financial managers, and a Global Code of Conduct, which applies to all Gartner officers, directors and employees, wherever located. Annually, each officer, director and employee affirms compliance with the Global Code of Conduct. See Miscellaneous—Available Information below.

11

PROPOSAL ONE:

 

ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

 

Nominees for Election to the Board of Directors

 

Our Board, acting through the Governance Committee, is responsible for presenting for stockholder consideration each year a group of nominees that, taken together, has the experience, qualifications, attributes and skills appropriate and necessary to carry out the duties and responsibilities of, and to function effectively as, the board of directors of Gartner. The Governance Committee regularly reviews the composition of the board in light of the needs of the Company, its assessment of board and committee performance, and the input of stockholders and other key stakeholders. The Governance Committee looks for certain common characteristics in all nominees, including integrity, strong professional experience and reputation, a record of achievement, constructive and collegial personal attributes and the ability and commitment to devote sufficient time and effort to board service. In addition, the Governance Committee seeks to include on the board a complementary mix of individuals with diverse backgrounds and skills that will enable the board as a whole to effectively manage the array of issues it will confront in furtherance of its duties. These individual qualities can include matters such as experience in the technology industry; experience managing and operating large public companies; international operating experience; financial, accounting, executive compensation and capital markets expertise; and leadership skills and experience.

 

All of the nominees listed below are incumbent directors who have been nominated by the Governance Committee and Board for re-election, and have agreed to serve another term. For additional information about the nominees and their qualifications, please see General Information about our Board of Directors on page 4 above. If any nominee is unable or declines unexpectedly to stand for election as a director at the Annual Meeting, proxies may be voted for a nominee designated by the present Board to fill the vacancy. Each person elected as a director will continue to be a director until the 2017 Annual Meeting of Stockholders or a successor has been elected.

 

Michael J. Bingle William O. Grabe
Richard J. Bressler Eugene A. Hall
Raul E. Cesan Stephen G. Pagliuca
Karen E. Dykstra James C. Smith
Anne Sutherland Fuchs

 

RECOMMENDATION OF OUR BOARD

 

Our Board unanimously recommends that you vote FOR management’s nine nominees
for election to the Board of Directors.

 

 
12

EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

 

General Information About our Current Executive Officers:

 

Eugene A. Hall
59
  Chief Executive Officer and director since 2004. Prior to joining Gartner, he was a senior executive at Automatic Data Processing, Inc., a Fortune 500 global technology and services company, serving most recently as President, Employers Services Major Accounts Division, a provider of human resources and payroll services. Prior to joining ADP in 1998, Mr. Hall spent 16 years at McKinsey & Company, most recently as Director.
Ken Davis
47
  Senior Vice President, Business and IT Leaders Products & Services since 2008. Previously at Gartner, he has served as Senior Vice President, End User Programs, High Tech & Telecom Program, and Strategy, Marketing and Business Development. Prior to joining Gartner in 2005, Mr. Davis spent ten years at McKinsey & Company, where he was a partner assisting clients in the IT industry.
Alwyn Dawkins
49
  Senior Vice President, Worldwide Events & Marketing since 2008. Previously at Gartner, he has served as Group Vice President, Asia/Pacific Sales, based in Sydney, Australia, and prior thereto, as Group Vice President, Gartner Events, where he held global responsibility for exhibit and sponsorship sales across the portfolio of Gartner events. Prior to joining Gartner in 2002, Mr. Dawkins spent ten years at Richmond Events, culminating in his role as Executive Vice President responsible for its North American business.
David Godfrey
44
  Senior Vice President, Worldwide Sales since 2010. Previously at Gartner, he led North American field sales, and prior to this role, he led the Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) and the Americas inside sales organizations. Before joining Gartner in 1999 as a sales executive, Mr. Godfrey spent seven years in business development at Exxon Mobil.
Robin Kranich
45
  Senior Vice President, Human Resources since 2008. During her more than 20 years Gartner, she has served as Senior Vice President, End User Programs; Senior Vice President, Research Operations and Business Development; Senior Vice President and General Manager of Gartner EXP; Vice President and Chief of Staff to Gartner’s president; and various sales and sales management roles. Prior to joining Gartner in 1994, Ms. Kranich was part of the Technology Advancement Group at Marriott International.
David McVeigh
48
  Senior Vice President, New Markets Programs since August 2015. Prior to joining Gartner, he was a managing director at Hellman & Friedman LLC, an operating partner at Blackstone Group and a partner at McKinsey & Company.
Daniel S. Peale
43
  Senior Vice President, General Counsel & Corporate Secretary since January 2016. Prior to joining Gartner in October 2015, he was a corporate and securities partner with the law firm of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati in Washington, D.C., where he was in private practice for 15 years.
Craig W. Safian
47
  Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer since June 2014. In his 13 years at Gartner, he has served as Group Vice President, Global Finance and Strategy & Business Development from 2007 until his appointment as CFO, and previously as Group Vice President, Strategy and Managing Vice President, Financial Planning and Analysis. Prior to joining Gartner, he held finance positions at Headstrong (now part of Genpact) and Bristol-Myers Squibb, and was an accountant for Friedman, LLP where he achieved CPA licensure.
Peter Sondergaard
51
  Senior Vice President, Research since 2004. During his 24 years at Gartner, he has held various roles, including Head of Research for the Technology & Services Sector, Hardware & Systems Sector, Vice President and General Manager for Gartner Research EMEA. Prior to joining Gartner, Mr. Sondergaard was research director at International Data Corporation in Europe.
Chris Thomas
44
  Senior Vice President, Executive Programs since April 2013. During his 15 years at Gartner, he has held various roles, including Group Vice President, Sales, leading the Americas IT, Digital Marketing and Global Supply Chain sales group; head of North America and Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) Small and Medium Business sales organizations, and a number of other roles, including sales operations and field sales leadership. Before joining Gartner, he spent seven years in procurement, sales and marketing at Exxon Mobil.
Per Anders Waern
54
  Senior Vice President, Gartner Consulting since 2008. Since joining Gartner in 1998, he has held senior consulting roles principally in EMEA, and served most recently as head of Gartner’s global core consulting team. Prior to joining Gartner, Mr. Waern led corporate IT strategy at Vattenfall in Sweden.
13

COMPENSATION DISCUSSION & ANALYSIS

 

This Compensation Discussion & Analysis, or “CD&A”, describes and explains the Company’s compensation philosophy and executive compensation program, as well as compensation awarded to and earned by, the following persons who were Named Executive Officers (“NEOs”) in 2015:

 

Eugene A. Hall Chief Executive Officer
Craig W. Safian Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
Lewis G. Schwartz Senior Vice President, General Counsel & Corporate Secretary
Alwyn Dawkins Senior Vice President, Events
Per Anders Waern Senior Vice President, Gartner Consulting

 

The CD&A is organized into three sections:

 

· The Executive Summary, which highlights the importance of our Contract Value (herein “CV”) metric, our 2015 corporate performance and our pay-for-performance approach and our compensation practices, all of which we believe are relevant to stockholders as they consider their votes on Proposal Two (advisory vote on executive compensation, or “Say-on-Pay”)
   
· The Compensation Setting Process for 2015
   
· Other Compensation Policies and Information

 

The CD&A is followed by the Compensation Tables and Narrative Disclosures, which report and describe the compensation and benefit amounts paid to our NEOs in 2015.

 

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

 

Contract Value – A Key Unique Performance Metric for Gartner

 

Contract Value (“CV”) represents the value attributable to all of our subscription-related research products that recognize revenue on a ratable basis. CV is calculated as the annualized value of all subscription research contracts in effect at a specific point in time, without regard to the duration of the contract.

 

Unique to the business of Gartner, Contract Value is our single most important performance metric. It focuses all of our executives on driving both short-term and long - term success for our business and stockholders.

 

Contract Value = Both Short-Term and Long-Term Measures of Success
Short-Term ü Measures the value of all subscription research contracts in effect at a specific point in time
Long-Term ü Measures revenue that is highly likely to recur over a multi-year period

 

Comparing CV year over year measures the short term growth of our business. More importantly, CV is also an appropriate measure of long – term performance due to the nature of our Research subscription business. Our Research business is our largest business segment (73% of 2015 gross revenues) with our highest margins (69% for 2015). Our Research enterprise client retention (84% in 2015) and retained contract value (105% enterprise wallet retention in 2015) are consistently very high. The combination of annual contracts and high renewal rates are predictive of revenue highly likely to recur over a 3 – 5 year period.

 

Accordingly, growing CV drives both short- term and long – term corporate performance and shareholder value due to these unique circumstances. As such, all Gartner executives and associates are focused at all times on growing CV. This, coupled with the fact that our investors are also focused on this metric, ensures that we are aligned on the long - term success of the Company.

14

Record 2015 Performance

 

2015 was another year of record achievements for Gartner:

 

  ü CV, Revenue, EBITDA* and EPS* grew 14%, 13%, 13% and 7%, respectively, excluding the impact of foreign exchange
  ü CV and Revenues ended the year at a record $1.761 billion and $2.163 billion, respectively
  ü Five year CAGR for CV, EBITDA and EPS was 12%, 12% and 20%, respectively
  ü Our Common Stock rose 8% in 2015, as compared to the S&P 500, which lost 1% and NASDAQ, which rose 6%
  ü Compound annual growth rates on our common stock were 8%, 25% and 22% on a 1, 3 and 5 year basis, out-performing the S&P 500 and NASDAQ indices for the corresponding periods
  ü $509 million was returned to our stockholders through our share repurchase program

 

*In this Proxy Statement, EBITDA refers to Normalized EBITDA, which represents operating income excluding depreciation, accretion on obligations related to excess facilities, amortization, stock-based compensation expense and acquisition-related adjustments. EPS refers to Normalized EPS, which is diluted EPS normalized for acquisition and integration charges.

 

Gartner 2015 Performance Charts (CV and EBITDA $ in millions)

 

The laser focus throughout our global organization on growing CV has resulted in a strong, sustained track record of growth across this measure, as well as EBITDA and EPS, over many years, as the following charts demonstrate.

 

15

These strong results have fueled stock price growth which leads all comparison groups as follows:

 

 

  2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 5 yr
CAGR
Gartner 100.00 104.73 138.61 214.01 253.64 273.19 22%
NASDAQ 100.00 98.20 113.82 157.44 178.53 188.75 14%
S&P 100.00 100.00 113.40 146.97 163.71 162.52 10%

 

Key Attribute of our Executive Compensation Program – Pay for Performance

 

Our executive compensation plan design has successfully motivated senior management to drive outstanding corporate performance since it was first implemented in 2006. Its key features are as follows:
     
  ü 100% of executive equity awards and 100% of executive bonus awards are performance-based.
  ü 70% of our executive equity awards, and 100% of our executive bonus awards are subject to forfeiture in the event the Company fails to achieve performance objectives established by our Compensation Committee.
  ü 90% percent of our CEO’s target total compensation (80% in the case of our other NEOs) is in the form of incentive compensation (bonus and equity awards).
  ü 80% of our CEO’s target total compensation (60% in the case of our other NEOs) is in the form of equity awards.
  ü Earned equity awards may increase or decrease in value based upon stock price movement during the vesting period.
16

Our Compensation Best Practices

 

Our compensation practices motivate our executives to achieve our operating plans and execute our corporate strategy without taking undue risks. These practices, which are consistent with “best practices” trends, include the following:
  ü We have an independent Compensation Committee.
  ü We have an independent compensation consultant that reports directly to the Compensation Committee.
  ü We annually assess the Company’s compensation policies to ensure that the features of our program do not encourage undue risk.
  ü All executive officers are “at will” employees and only our CEO has an employment agreement.
  ü We have a clawback policy applicable to all executive incentive compensation (cash bonus and equity awards).
  ü We have robust stock ownership guidelines for our executive officers.
  ü We have holding requirements that require 50% of net after tax shares from all released equity awards to be held until stock ownership guidelines are satisfied.
  ü We prohibit hedging and pledging transactions in company securities.
  ü We do not provide excise tax gross up payments.
  ü We encourage retention by having equity awards vest 25% per year over 4 years, commencing on the grant date anniversary.
  ü The potential annual payout on incentive compensation elements is limited to 2 times target.
  ü Our equity plan prohibits:
    o repricing stock options and surrendering outstanding options for new options with a lower exercise price without stockholder approval;
    o cash buyouts of underwater options or stock appreciation rights without stockholder approval; and
    o granting options or stock appreciation rights with an exercise price less than the fair market value of the Company’s common stock on the date of grant.
  ü We do not grant equity awards during closed trading windows.
17

COMPENSATION SETTING PROCESS FOR 2015

 

This discussion explains the objectives of the Company’s compensation policies; what the compensation program is designed to reward; each element of compensation and why the Company chooses to pay each element; how the Company determines the amount (and, where applicable, the formula) for each element to pay; and how each compensation element and the Company’s decisions regarding that element fit into the Company’s overall compensation objectives and affect decisions regarding other elements.

 

The Objectives of the Company’s Compensation Policies

 

The objectives of our compensation policies are threefold:
Ø to attract, motivate and retain highly talented, creative and entrepreneurial individuals by paying market-based compensation;
Ø to motivate our executives to maximize the performance of our Company through pay-for-performance compensation components based on the achievement of corporate performance targets that are aggressive, but attainable, given economic conditions; and
Ø to ensure that, as a public company, our compensation structure and levels are reasonable from a stockholder perspective.

 

What the Compensation Program Is Designed to Reward

 

Our guiding philosophy is that the more executive compensation is linked to corporate performance, the stronger the inducement is for management to strive to improve Gartner’s performance. In addition, we believe that the design of the total compensation package must be competitive with the marketplace from which we hire our executive talent in order to achieve our objectives and attract and retain individuals who are critical to our long-term success. Our compensation program for executive officers is designed to compensate individuals for achieving and exceeding corporate performance objectives. We believe this type of compensation encourages outstanding team performance (not simply individual performance), which builds stockholder value.

 

Both short-term and long-term incentive compensation is earned by executives only upon the achievement by the Company of certain measurable performance objectives that are deemed by the Compensation Committee and management to be critical to the Company’s short-term and long-term success. The amount of compensation ultimately earned will increase or decrease depending upon Company performance and the underlying price of our Common Stock (in the case of long-term incentive compensation).

 

Principal Compensation Elements and Objectives

 

To achieve the objectives noted above, we have designed executive compensation to consist of three principal elements:

 

Base Salary Ø Pay competitive salaries to attract and retain the executive talent necessary to develop and implement our corporate strategy and business plan
  Ø Appropriately reflect responsibilities of the position, experience of the executive and marketplace in which we compete for talent
Short-Term Incentive Compensation
(cash bonuses)
Ø Motivate executives to generate outstanding performance and achieve or exceed annual operating plan
  Ø Align compensation with results
Long-Term Incentive Compensation Ø Induce enhanced performance and promote retention
(equity awards) Ø Align executive rewards with long-term stock price appreciation
  Ø Make executives stakeholders in the success of Gartner and thereby create alignment with stockholders
18

How the Company Determines Executive Compensation

 

In General

The Company set aggressive performance goals in planning 2015 executive compensation. In order for our executives to earn target compensation, the Company needed to exceed double digit growth in two key performance metrics, as discussed below.

 

The Compensation Committee established performance objectives for short-term (bonus) and long-term (equity) incentive awards at levels that it believed would motivate performance and be adequately challenging. The target performance objectives were intended to compel the level of performance necessary to enable the Company to achieve its operating plan for 2015.

 

As in prior years, the short- and long-term incentive compensation elements provided executives with opportunities to increase their total compensation package based upon the over-achievement of corporate performance objectives; similarly, in the case of under-achievement of corporate performance objectives, the value of these incentive elements would fall below their target value (with the possibility of total forfeiture of the short-term element and 70% of the long-term element), and total compensation would decrease correspondingly. We assigned greater weight to the long-term incentive compensation element, as compared to the salary and short-term elements, in order to promote decision-making that would deliver top corporate performance, align management to stockholder interests and retain executives. We believe that previously granted and unvested equity awards serve as a strong retention incentive.

 

Salary, short-term and long-term incentive compensation levels for executive officers (other than the CEO) are recommended by the CEO and are subject to approval by the Compensation Committee. In formulating his recommendation to the Compensation Committee, the CEO undertakes a performance review of these executives and considers input from human resources personnel at the Company, as well as benchmarking data from the compensation consultant and external market data (discussed below).

 

Salary, short-term and long-term incentive compensation levels for the CEO’s compensation are established by the Compensation Committee within the parameters of Mr. Hall’s employment agreement with the Company. In making its determination with respect to Mr. Hall’s compensation, the Compensation Committee evaluates his performance in conjunction with the Governance Committee and after soliciting additional input from the Chairman of the Board and other directors; considers input from the Committee’s compensation consultant; and reviews benchmarking data pertaining to CEO compensation practices at our proxy peer companies and general trends. See Employment Agreements with Executive Officers – Mr. Hall below for a detailed discussion of Mr. Hall’s agreement.

 

Effect of Stockholder Advisory Vote, or Say on Pay

 

2015 Say on Pay Approval = 98.2% of shares voted, and 88.6% of outstanding shares

 

The Board has resolved to present Say on Pay proposals to stockholders on an annual basis, respecting the sentiment of our stockholders. The Company and the Compensation Committee will consider the voting results on this year’s advisory Say on Pay proposal in future executive compensation planning activities. Over the past several years, stockholders have consistently strongly supported our executive compensation program.

 

Benchmarking and Peer Group

Executive compensation planning for 2015 began mid-year in 2014. Our Compensation Committee commissioned Exequity, an independent compensation consultant, to perform a competitive analysis of our executive compensation practices (the “Compensation Study”). Exequity’s findings were considered by the Compensation Committee and by management in planning our 2015 executive compensation program. The Compensation Study utilized market data provided by Aon Hewitt pertaining to compensation paid to individuals occupying senior executive positions at Gartner’s selected peer group of companies for executive compensation benchmarking purposes (the “Peer Group”).

 

The Compensation Committee reviews the Peer Group annually to ensure comparability based on Gartner’s operating characteristics, labor market relevance and defensibility. For 2015 executive compensation planning, the Peer Group comprised 17 publicly-traded high tech companies that resemble Gartner in size (in terms of revenues and number of employees), have a similar business model and with whom Gartner competes for executive talent. Gartner ranked in the 42nd percentile for revenues and 46th percentile for market cap, as compared to the Peer Group as follows:

 

[table follows]

19
Adobe Systems Incorporated Intuit Inc.
Autodesk, Inc. Moody’s Corporation
Cadence Design Systems, Inc. Nuance Communications, Inc.
Citrix Systems, Inc. PTC Inc.
The Dun & Bradstreet Corporation salesforce.com, inc
Equifax Inc. Synopsys, Inc.
IGATE Corp.* TIBCO Software, Inc.*
IHS Inc. VeriSign, Inc.
Informatica Corporation*  

*Our Peer Group has been revised since 2014 with the removal of IGATE Corp., Informatica Corporation and TIBCO Software, Inc., which no longer report proxy data.

 

Management and the Compensation Committee concluded that the Peer Group, which was established in mid – 2014, was appropriate for 2015 executive compensation planning purposes given size, financial performance, labor market and/or operating comparability.

 

The Compensation Committee does not target NEO’s pay to a specified percentile, but rather reviews Peer Group market data at the 25th, 50th and 75th percentile for each element of compensation, including Base Salary, Total Target Cash, Long-Term Incentive award and Total Target Compensation. Gartner has historically performed above its peer group median and has paid above median total compensation, with is consistent with the Company’s pay-for performance philosophy.

 

The Compensation Study reviewed CEO and NEO pay elements versus the Peer Group. It was determined that Target Cash Compensation was below the median of the Peer Group and that Target Long-term Incentive Compensation as well as overall Total Target Compensation approximated the median of the Peer Group. In order to remain competitive in the market place and in light of Gartner’s philosophy to pay a greater percentage of total compensation in the form of performance-based compensation and, in particular, performance-based long-term incentive compensation, the Committee approved a 3% merit increase to base salary, a 5% increase in the short term incentive compensation percentage and a 10% merit increase to the long-term incentive compensation element for all NEOs (other than Mr. Safian). Since 2015 was Mr. Safian’s first full year in the role of CFO, the Committee adjusted his compensation to approximate the Peer Group median for CFOs with a 10% increase to base salary, a 5% increase in the bonus percentage and a 20% merit increase to the long-term incentive compensation element.

 

In addition, the Compensation Committee annually reviews an analysis conducted by Exequity that evaluates the connection between Gartner’s executive pay and Company performance against the relationship exhibited by Gartner’s peer companies. The analysis indicates that pay realized by Gartner’s NEOs is generally well aligned with proven financial results.

 

 

20

Executive Compensation Elements Generally

 

Pay Mix

The following pie charts illustrate the relative mix of target compensation elements for the NEOs. Long-term incentive compensation consists of performance-based restricted stock units (PSUs) and stock appreciation rights (SARs), and represents a majority of the compensation we pay to our NEOs – 80% to the CEO, 60% to all other NEOs. We allocate more heavily to long-term incentive compensation because we believe that it contributes to a greater degree to the delivery of top performance and the retention of employees than does cash and short-term compensation (bonus).

 

 

Base Salary

We set base salaries of executive officers when they join the Company or are promoted to an executive role, by evaluating the responsibilities of the position, the experience of the individual and the marketplace in which we compete for the executive talent we need. In addition, where possible, we consider salary information for comparable positions for members of our Peer Group or other available benchmarking data. In determining whether to award salary merit increases, we consider published projected U.S. salary increase data for the technology industry and general market, as well as available world-wide salary increase data. Mr. Hall’s salary increase is established each year by the Compensation Committee after completion of Mr. Hall’s performance evaluation for the preceding year.

 

Short-Term Incentive Compensation (Cash Bonuses)

All bonuses to executive officers are awarded pursuant to Gartner’s stockholder-approved Executive Performance Bonus Plan. This plan is designed to motivate executive officers to achieve goals relating to the performance of Gartner, its subsidiaries or business units, or other objectively determinable goals, and to reward them when those objectives are satisfied. We believe that the relationship between proven performance and the amount of short-term incentive compensation paid promotes, among executives, decision-making that increases stockholder value and promotes Gartner’s success. Bonuses awarded under this plan to eligible employees are designed to qualify as deductible performance-based compensation within the meaning of Code Section 162(m).

 

In 2015, bonus targets for all executive officers, including Mr. Hall, were based solely upon achievement of 2015 company-wide financial performance objectives (with no individual performance component). The financial objectives and weightings used for 2015 executive officer bonuses were:

 

·2015 Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization (EBITDA), which measures overall profitability from business operations (weighted 50%), on a foreign exchange neutral basis, and

 

·Contract Value (CV) at December 31, 2015, which measures the long–term prospects of our business (weighted 50%), on a foreign exchange neutral basis.

 

As noted earlier, management and our Compensation Committee continue to believe that EBITDA and CV are the most significant measurements of profitability and long-term business growth for our Company, respectively. They have been successfully used for several years as performance metrics applicable to short-term incentive compensation that drive business performance and that motivate executive officers to achieve outstanding performance.

21

For 2015, each executive officer was assigned a bonus target that was expressed as a percentage of salary and varied from 50% to 100% of salary depending upon the executive’s level of responsibility. Salaries and bonuses were each increased by the amount of the merit increase. With respect to our NEOs, 2015 bonus targets, as a percentage of base salary, were 100% for Mr. Hall and 65% for each of Messrs. Safian, Schwartz, Dawkins and Waern. The maximum payout for 2015 bonus was 200% of target if the maximum level of EBITDA and CV were achieved; the minimum payout was $0 if minimum levels were not achieved.

 

The chart below describes the performance metrics applicable to our 2015 short–term incentive compensation element. As noted above, for this purpose actual results were measured on a foreign exchange neutral basis, and, in the case of EBITDA, without giving effect to acquisitions completed in 2015:

 

2015 Performance
Objective/ Weight
Target
(100%)
Target
Growth
YOY
< Minimum
(0%)
=/>
Maximum
(200%)
Actual
(measured
at 12/31/15)
Payout
(% of
Target)
Actual
Growth
YOY
2015 EBITDA/50% $411
million
10% $337 million $445 million $417 million 115.8% 13%
12/31/15 Contract
Value/50%
$1,721
million
11% $1,395 million $1,798 million $1,761 million 159.8% 13.6%

 

In 2015, the Company exceeded both the EBITDA and CV target performance objectives. Since each objective was weighted 50%, based on these results, the Compensation Committee determined that earned cash bonuses for executive officers were 137.8% of target bonus amounts. These bonuses were paid in February 2016. See Summary Compensation Table – Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation for the amount of cash bonuses earned by our Named Executive Officers in 2015. While the Compensation Committee has discretion to eliminate or reduce a bonus award, it did not take any such action in 2015.

 

Long - Term Incentive Compensation (Equity Awards)

Promoting stock ownership is a key element of our compensation program philosophy. Stock-based incentive compensation awards–especially when they are assigned a combination of performance and time-based vesting criteria – induce enhanced performance, promote retention of executive officers and align executives’ personal rewards with long-term stock price appreciation, thereby integrating management and stockholder interests. We have evaluated different types of long-term incentives based on their motivational value, cost to the Company and appropriate share utilization under our stockholder-approved 2014 Long-Term Incentive Plan (“2014 Plan”) and have determined that stock-settled stock appreciation rights (“SARs”) and performance-based restricted stock units (“PSUs”) create the right balance of motivation, retention, alignment with stockholders and share utilization.

 

SARs permit executives to benefit from an increase in stock price over time. SAR value can be realized only after the SAR vests. Our SARs are stock-settled and may be exercised seven years from grant. When the SAR is exercised, the executive receives shares of our Common Stock equal in value to the aggregate appreciation in the price of our Common Stock from the date of grant to the exercise date for all SARs exercised. Therefore, SARs only have value to the extent the price of our Common Stock exceeds the grant price of the SAR. In this way, SARs motivate our executives to increase stockholder value and thus align their interests with those of our stockholders.

 

PSUs offer executives the opportunity to receive our Common Stock contingent on the achievement of performance goals and continued service over the vesting period. PSU recipients are eligible to earn a target fixed number of restricted stock units if and to the extent stipulated one-year performance goals are achieved. They can earn more units if the Company over-performs (up to 200% of their target number of units), and they will earn fewer units (and potentially none) if the Company under-performs. Shares of Common Stock subject to earned PSU awards are released to the executive on the date they vest, or 25% per year over four years, commencing on the anniversary of the grant date, thereby encouraging executives to increase stockholder value while promoting executive retention over the long-term. Released shares have value even if our Common Stock price does not increase, which is not the case with SARs.

 

Consistent with weightings in prior years, 30% of each executive’s long-term incentive compensation award value was granted in SARs and 70% was granted in PSUs. PSUs deliver value utilizing fewer shares since the executive can earn the full share rather than just the appreciation in value over the grant price (as is the case with SARs). Additionally, the cost efficiency of PSUs enhances the Company’s ability to conservatively utilize the Plan share pool, which is why we convey a larger portion of the 2014 overall long-term incentive compensation value in PSUs rather than in SARs. For purposes of determining the number of SARs awarded, the allocated SAR award value is divided by the Black-Scholes-Merton valuation on the date of grant using assumptions appropriate on that date. For purposes of determining the target number of PSUs awarded, the allocated target PSU award value is divided by the closing price of our Common Stock on the date of grant as reported by the New York Stock Exchange.

22

Both SARs and PSUs vest 25% per year commencing one (1) year from grant and on each anniversary thereof, subject to continued service on the vesting date. We believe that this vesting schedule effectively focuses our executives on delivering long-term value growth for our stockholders and drives retention. The maximum payout for 2015 PSUs was 200% of target if the maximum level of CV was achieved; the PSUs are subject to forfeiture is minimum levels are not achieved.

 

The Compensation Committee approved CV at December 31, 2015 as the performance measure underlying PSUs awarded in 2015. As noted earlier, we continue to believe that CV is the best performance metric to measure the long–term prospects of our business. Although we are moving towards more multi-year research subscription contracts, most of these contracts have a one year term. For this reason, CV growth is measured over a one year period, which continues to be predictive of future revenue, for the PSU award.

 

The chart below describes the performance metrics applicable to the PSU portion of our 2015 long–term incentive compensation element:

 

2015 Performance Target Target <Minimum Maximum Actual Payout Actual
Objective/Weight (100%) Growth (0%) (200%) (measured at (% of Growth
    YOY     12/31/15) Target) YOY
Contract Value/100% $1,721 million 11% $1,395
million
$1,798
million
$1,761 million 159.8% 13.6%

 

As noted above, in 2015 actual CV, on a foreign exchange neutral basis, was $1,761 million, exceeding the target amount. Based on this, the Compensation Committee determined that 159.8% of the target number of PSUs would be awarded. The PSUs were adjusted by this factor in February 2016 after certification of the achievement of this performance measure by the Compensation Committee, and 25% of the adjusted awards vested on the first anniversary of the grant date. See Grants of Plan-Based Awards Table – Possible Payouts Under Equity Incentive Plan Awards and accompanying footnotes below for the actual number of SARs and PSUs awarded to our Named Executive Officers in 2015.

 

No performance objectives for any PSU intended to qualify under Code Section 162(m) (i.e., awards to executive officers) may be modified by the Committee. While the Committee does have discretion to modify other aspects of the awards (subject to the terms of the Plan), no modifications were made in 2015.

 

Additional Compensation Elements

 

We maintain a non-qualified deferred compensation plan for our highly compensated employees, including our executive officers, to assist eligible participants with retirement and tax planning by allowing them to defer compensation in excess of amounts permitted to be deferred under our 401(k) plan. This plan allows eligible participants to defer up to 50% of base salary and/or 100% of bonus to a future period. In addition, as a further inducement to participation in this plan, the Company presently matches contributions by executive officers, subject to certain limits. For more information concerning this plan, see Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Table and accompanying narrative and footnotes below.

 

In order to further achieve our objective of providing a competitive compensation package with great retention value, we provide various other benefits to our executive officers that we believe are typically available to, and expected by, persons in senior business roles. Our basic executive perquisites program includes 35 days paid time off (PTO) annually, severance and change in control benefits (discussed below) and relocation services where necessary due to a promotion. Mr. Hall’s perquisites, severance and change in control benefits are governed by his employment agreement with the Company, which is discussed in detail below under Employment Agreements With Executive Officers – Mr. Hall. For more information concerning perquisites, see Other Compensation Table and accompanying footnotes below.

 

 

23

OTHER COMPENSATION POLICIES AND INFORMATION

 

Executive Stock Ownership and Holding Period Guidelines

 

In order to align management and stockholder interests, the Company has adopted stock ownership guidelines for our executive officers as follows: the CEO is required to hold shares of Common Stock with a value at least equal to six (6) times his base salary, and all other executive officers are required to hold shares of Common Stock with a value at least equal to three (3) times their base salary. For purposes of computing the required holdings, officers may count shares directly held, as well as vested and unvested restricted stock units and PSUs, but not options or SARs.

 

Additionally, the Company imposes a holding period requirement on our executive officers. If an executive officer of the Company is not in compliance with the stock ownership guidelines, the executive is required to maintain ownership of at least 50% of the net after-tax shares of common stock acquired from the Company pursuant to any equity-based awards – PSUs and SARs - received from the Company, until such individual’s stock ownership requirement is met. At December 31, 2015, our CEO and all other executive officers were in compliance with these guidelines.

 

Clawback Policy

 

The Company has adopted a clawback policy which provides that the Board of Directors (or a committee thereof) may seek recoupment to the Company from a current or former executive officer of the Company who engages in fraud, omission or intentional misconduct that results in a required restatement of any financial reporting under the securities or other laws, and that the cash-based or equity-based incentive compensation paid to the officer exceeds the amount that should have been paid based upon the corrected accounting restatement, resulting in an excess payment. Recoupment includes the reimbursement of any cash-based incentive compensation (bonuses) paid to the Executive, cancellation of vested and unvested performance-based restricted stock units, stock options and stock appreciation rights, and reimbursement of any gains realized on the sale of released stock unit awards and the exercise of stock options or stock appreciation rights and subsequent sale of underlying shares

 

Pursuant to the Dodd-Frank Act, the SEC has issued proposed rules applicable to the national securities exchanges (including the NYSE on which our Common Stock is listed for trading) prohibiting the listing of any security of an issuer that does not provide for the recovery of erroneously awarded incentive-based compensation where there has been an accounting restatement. We are awaiting adoption of the final SEC rules on this matter, at which time we will determine whether an amendment to our policy is necessary.

 

Hedging and Pledging Policies

 

The Company’s Insider Trading Policy prohibits all executive officers and directors from engaging in any short selling, hedging and/or pledging transactions with respect to Company securities.

 

Accounting and Tax Impact

 

In setting compensation, the Compensation Committee and management consider the potential impact of Code Section 162(m), which precludes a public corporation from deducting on its corporate income tax return individual compensation in excess of $1 million for its chief executive officer or any of its three other highest-paid officers (other than the chief financial officer). Section 162(m) also provides for certain exemptions to this limitation, specifically compensation that is performance-based (within the meaning of Section 162(m)) and issued under a stockholder-approved plan. Our 2015 short-term incentive (bonus) awards were performance-based and were made pursuant to our stockholder-approved Executive Performance Bonus Plan and, therefore, are deductible under Section 162(m). The PSU component of the 2015 long–term incentive award was performance-based and issued under the 2014 Plan, which has been approved by stockholders and, therefore, is deductible under Section 162(m). Although the Compensation Committee endeavors to maximize deductibility of compensation under Section 162(m), it maintains the discretion in establishing compensation elements to approve compensation that may not be deductible under Section 162(m), if the Committee believes the compensation element to be necessary or appropriate under the circumstances.

 

Grant of Equity Awards

 

The Board of Directors has a formal policy with respect to the grant of equity awards under our equity plans. Under our 2014 Long Term Incentive Plan, equity awards may include stock options, stock appreciation rights (SARs), restricted stock awards (RSAs), restricted stock units (RSUs) and performance-based restricted stock units (PSUs). The Committee may not delegate its authority with respect to Section 16 persons, nor in any other way which would jeopardize the plan’s qualification under Code Section 162(m) or Exchange Act Rule 16b-3. Accordingly, our policy specifies that all awards to our Section 16 executive officers must be approved by

24

the Compensation Committee on or prior to the award grant date, and that all such awards will be made and priced on the date of Compensation Committee approval, except in the case of new hires, which is discussed below.

 

Our equity plan prohibits the repricing of stock options and the surrender of any outstanding option to the Company as consideration for the grant of a new option with a lower exercise price without stockholder approval. It also prohibits the granting of options with an exercise price less than the fair market value of the Company’s common stock on the date of grant, and a cash buyout of out-of-the-money options or SARs without stockholder approval.

 

Consistent with the equity plan, the Compensation Committee annually approves a delegation of authority to the CEO to make equity awards under our equity Plan to Gartner employees (other than Section 16 persons) on account of new hires, retention or promotion without the approval of the Compensation Committee. In 2015, the delegation of authority specified a maximum grant date award value of $500,000 per individual, and a maximum aggregate grant date award value of $2,000,000 for the calendar year. For purposes of this computation, in the case of RSAs, RSUs and PSUs, value is calculated based upon the fair market value (defined as the closing price on the date of grant as reported by the New York Stock Exchange) of a share of our Common Stock, multiplied by the number of RSAs, RSUs or PSUs awarded. In the case of options and SARs, the grant date value of the award will be the Black-Scholes-Merton calculation of the value of the award using assumptions appropriate on the award date. Any awards made under the CEO-delegated authority are reported to the Compensation Committee at the next regularly scheduled committee meeting.

 

As discussed above, the structure and value of annual long-term incentive awards comprising the long-term incentive compensation element of our compensation package to executive officers are established and approved by the Compensation Committee in the first quarter of each year. The specific terms of the awards (number of PSUs and SARs and related performance criteria) are determined, and the awards are approved and made, on the same date and after the release of the Company’s prior year financial results.

 

It is the Company’s policy not to make equity awards to executive officers prior to the release of material non-public information. The 2015 incentive awards to executive officers were approved by the Compensation Committee and made on February 9, 2015, after release of our 2014 financial results. Generally speaking, awards for newly hired executives that are given as an inducement to joining the Company are made on the 15th or 30th day of the month first following the executive’s start date (and after approval by the Compensation Committee), and retention and promotion awards are made on the 15th or 30th day of the month first following the date of Compensation Committee approval; however, we may delay making these awards pending the release of material non-public information.

 

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT

 

The Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors of Gartner, Inc. has reviewed and discussed the Compensation Discussion and Analysis with management. Based upon this review and discussion, the Compensation Committee recommended to the Board of Directors that the Compensation Discussion and Analysis be included in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015 and the Company’s proxy statement for the 2016 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.

 

Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors

 

Anne Sutherland Fuchs
Michael J. Bingle
Raul E. Cesan

 

April 11, 2016

 

 

25

COMPENSATION TABLES AND NARRATIVE DISCLOSURES

 

All compensation data contained in this Proxy Statement is stated in U.S. Dollars.

 

Summary Compensation Table

 

This table describes compensation earned by our CEO, CFO and next three most highly compensated executive officers (collectively, the “Named Executive Officers” or “NEOs”) in the years indicated. As you can see from the table and consistent with our compensation philosophy discussed above, long-term incentive compensation in the form of equity awards comprises a significant portion of total compensation.

 

          Non-Equity    
    Base Stock Option Incentive Plan All Other  
    Salary Awards Awards Compensation Compensation  
Name and Principal Position Year (1) (2) (2) (1), (3) (4) Total
Eugene A. Hall, Chief Executive Officer (PEO) (5) 2015 875,324 5,193,290 2,225,705 1,215,044 135,844 9,645,207
  2014 847,831 4,721,176 2,023,365 1,273,821 115,034 8,981,227
  2013 817,143 4,539,621 1,945,545 841,246 104,747 8,248,302
Craig W. Safian, SVP & Chief Financial Officer (PFO) 2015 457,402 842,783 361,205 419,223 28,239 2,108,852
  2014 409,869 949,977 - 321,216 11,349 1,692,411
Lewis G. Schwartz, SVP, General Counsel and Secretary 2015 491,520 772,577 331,090 443,483 66,679 2,105,349
  2014 472,842 702,314 300,999 429,172 51,499 1,956,826
  2013 441,908 656,374 281,306 275,484 43,633 1,698,705
Alwyn Dawkins, SVP, Events 2015 435,063 772,577 331,090 392,545 50,637 1,981,912
  2014 418,531 702,314 300,999 379,877 41,571 1,843,292
Per Anders Waern, SVP, Gartner Consulting 2015 435,063 772,577 331,090 392,545 50,480 1,981,755
  2014 418,531 702,314 300,999 379,877 41,991 1,843,712
  2013 391,151 656,374 281,306 243,842 38,283 1,610,956

 

(1) All NEOs elected to defer a portion of their 2015 salary and/or 2015 bonus under the Company’s Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Plan. Amounts reported include the 2015 deferred portion, and accordingly does not include amounts, if any, released in 2015 from prior years’ deferrals. See Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Table below.
   
(2) Represents the aggregate grant date fair value computed in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718 for performance restricted stock units, or PSUs (Stock Awards) and stock-settled stock appreciation rights, or SARs (Option Awards) granted to Messrs. Hall, Schwartz, Safian, Waern and Dawkins. The value reported for the PSUs is based upon the probable outcome of the performance objective as of the grant date, which is consistent with the grant date estimate of the aggregate compensation cost to be recognized over the service period, excluding the effect of forfeitures, for the target grant date award value. The potential maximum value of the PSUs, assuming attainment of the highest level of the performance conditions, is 200% of the target value, and all PSUs and SARs are subject to forfeiture. There were no forfeitures in 2015. See also Note 8 – Stock-Based Compensation in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements contained in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015 for additional information.
   
(3) Represents performance-based cash bonuses earned at December 31 of the applicable year and paid in the following February. See footnote (1) to Grants of Plan-Based Awards Table below for additional information.
   
(4) See Other Compensation Table below for additional information.
   
(5) Mr. Hall is a party to an employment agreement with the Company. See Employment Agreements With Executive Officers – Mr. Hall below.
26

Other Compensation Table

 

This table describes each component of the All Other Compensation column in the Summary Compensation Table.

 

    Company Company    
    Match Match Under    
    Under Non-qualified    
    Defined Deferred    
    Contribution Compensation    
    Plans Plan Other  
Name Year (1) (2) (3) Total
Eugene A. Hall 2015 7,200 78,766 49,878 135,844
  2014 7,000 60,563 47,471 115,034
  2013 7,000 57,460 40,287 104,747
Craig W. Safian 2015 7,200 11,096 9,943 28,239
  2014 7,000 - 4,349 11,349
Lewis G. Schwartz 2015 7,200 29,628 29,851 66,679
  2014 7,000 22,933 21,566 51,499
  2013 7,000 20,693 15,940 43,633
Alwyn Dawkins 2015 7,200 25,398 18,039 50,637
  2014 7,000 19,495 15,076 41,571
Per Anders Waern 2015 7,200 25,398 17,882 50,480
  2014 7,000 19,495 15,496 41,991
  2013 7,000 17,512 13,771 38,283

 

(1) Represents the Company’s 4% matching contribution in all years to the Named Executive Officer’s 401(k) account (subject to limitations).
   
(2) Represents the Company’s matching contribution to the executive’s contributions to our Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Plan. See Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Table below for additional information.
   
(3) In addition to specified perquisites and benefits, includes other perquisites and personal benefits provided to the executive, none of which individually exceeded the greater of $25,000 or 10% of the total amount of perquisites and personal benefits for the executive. In 2015, includes a car allowance of $29,204 received by Mr. Hall per the terms of his employment agreement.

 

 
27

Grants of Plan-Based Awards Table

 

This table provides information about awards made to our Named Executive Officers in 2015 pursuant to non-equity incentive plans (our short-term incentive cash bonus program) and equity incentive plans (performance restricted stock units (PSUs), restricted stock units (RSUs) and stock appreciation rights (SARs) awards comprising long-term incentive compensation under our 2014 Plan).

 

    Possible Payouts Under Non- Possible Payouts Under Equity   Grant
    Equity Incentive Plan Awards (1) Incentive Plan Awards (2) Exercise Date Fair
                or Base Value of
                Price of Stock
                Option and
    Thresh-     Thresh     Awards Option
  Grant old Target Maximum -old Target Maximum ($/Sh) Awards
Name Date ($) ($) ($) (#) (#) (#) ($)(3) ($)(4)
Eugene A. Hall 2/9/15 - - - 0 66,649 PSUs 146,076 - 5,193,290
  2/9/15 - - - - 126,750 SARs - 77.92 2,225,705
  - 0 881,744 1,763,488 - - - - -
Craig W. Safian 2/9/15 - - - 0 10,816 PSUs 21,632 - 842,783
  2/9/15 - - - - 20,570 SARs - 77.92 361,205
  - 0 304,225 608,450 - - - - -
Lewis G. Schwartz 2/9/15 - - - 0 9,915 PSUs 19,830 - 772,577
  2/9/15 - - - - 18,855 SARs - 77.92 331,090
  - 0 321,831 643,662 - - - - -
Alwyn Dawkins 2/9/15 - - - 0 9,915 PSUs 19,830 - 772,577
  2/9/15 - - - - 18,855 SARs - 77.92 331,090
  - 0 284,866 569,732 - - - - -
Per Anders Waern 2/9/15 - - - 0 9,915 PSUs 19,830 - 772,577
  2/9/15 - - - - 18,855 SARs - 77.92 331,090
  - 0 284,866 569,732 - - - - -

 

(1) Represents cash bonuses that could have been earned in 2015 based solely upon achievement of specified financial performance objectives for 2015 and ranging from 0% (threshold) to 200% (maximum) of target (100%). Bonus targets (expressed as a percentage of base salary) were 100% for Mr. Hall, and 65% for each of Messrs. Safian, Schwartz, Dawkins and Waern. Performance bonuses earned in 2015 and paid in February 2016 were adjusted to 137.8% of their target bonus and are reported under Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation in the Summary Compensation Table. See Short-Term Incentive Compensation (Cash Bonuses) in the CD&A for additional information.
   
(2) Represents the number of performance-based Restricted Stock Units (PSUs) and stock-settled Stock Appreciation Rights (SARs) awarded on February 9, 2015 under our 2014 Plan. The target number of PSUs (100%) originally awarded on that date was subject to adjustment ranging from 0% (threshold) to 200% (maximum) based solely upon achievement of an associated financial performance objective, and was adjusted to 159.8% of target in February 2016. The adjusted number of PSUs awarded was: Mr. Hall – 106,505; Mr. Safian – 17,283; and Messrs. Schwartz, Dawkins and Waern – 15,844). The PSUs, SARs and RSUs vest 25% per year commencing one year from grant, subject to continued employment on the vesting date except in the case of death, disability and retirement. See Long-Term Incentive Compensation (Equity Awards) in the CD&A for additional information.
   
(3) Represents the closing price of our Common Stock on the New York Stock Exchange on the grant date.
   
(4) See footnote (2) to the Summary Compensation Table.
28

Employment Agreements with Executive Officers

 

Only our Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Hall, is a party to a long-term employment agreement with the Company.

 

Mr. Hall – Employment Agreement

The Company and Mr. Hall are parties to an Amended and Restated Employment Agreement pursuant to which Mr. Hall has agreed to serve as chief executive officer of the Company and is entitled to be nominated to the board of directors (the “CEO Agreement”).

 

In March 2016, the Company and Mr. Hall agreed to extend the term of the CEO Agreement until December 31, 2021, and to update the CEO Agreement to reflect therein Mr. Hall’s base salary, short-term incentive award value and long-term incentive award value presently in effect and previously approved by the Compensation Committee. The CEO Agreement provides for automatic one year renewals commencing on January 1, 2022, and continuing each year thereafter, unless either party provides the other with at least 60 days prior written notice of an intention not to extend the term.

 

Under the CEO Agreement, Mr. Hall is entitled to the following annual compensation components:

 

Component Description
Base Salary Ø $908,197, subject to adjustment on an annual basis by the Compensation Committee
Target Bonus    Ø 105% of annual base salary (target), adjusted for achievement of specified Company and individual objectives
Ø The actual bonus paid may be higher or lower than target based upon over - or under - achievement of objectives, subject to a maximum actual bonus of 210% of base salary
Long – term incentive
award      
Ø Aggregate annual value on the date of grant at least equal to $9,874,375 minus the sum of base salary and target bonus for the year of grant (the “Annual Incentive Award”)
Ø The Annual Incentive Award will be 100% unvested on the date of grant, and vesting will depend upon the achievement of performance goals to be determined by the Compensation Committee
Ø The terms and conditions of each Annual Incentive Award will be determined by the Compensation Committee, and will be divided between restricted stock units (RSUs) and stock appreciation rights (SARs)
Ø The number of RSUs initially granted each year will be based upon the assumption that specified Company objectives set by the Compensation Committee will be achieved, and may be adjusted so as to be higher or lower than the number initially granted for over- or under- achievement of such specified Company objectives
Other     Ø Car allowance
Ø All benefits provided to senior executives, executives and employees of the Company generally from time to time, including medical, dental, life insurance and long-term disability
Ø Entitled to be nominated for election to the Board
29

Termination and Related Payments – Mr. Hall

 

Involuntary or Constructive Termination (no Change in Control)

Mr. Hall’s employment is at will and may be terminated by him or us upon 60 days’ notice. If we terminate Mr. Hall’s employment involuntarily (other than within 24 months following a Change In Control (defined below)) and without Business Reasons (as defined in the CEO Agreement) or a Constructive Termination (as defined in the CEO Agreement) occurs, or if the Company elects not to renew the CEO Agreement upon its expiration and Mr. Hall terminates his employment within 90 days following the expiration of the CEO Agreement, then Mr. Hall will be entitled to receive the following benefits:

 

Component Description
Base Salary Ø accrued base salary and unused paid time off (“PTO”) through termination
Ø 36 months continued base salary paid pursuant to normal payroll schedule
Short-Term
Incentive Award
(Bonus)
Ø earned but unpaid bonus
Ø 300% of the average of Mr. Hall’s earned annual bonuses for the three years preceding termination, payable in a lump sum
Long – Term
Incentive Award
Ø 36 months’ continued vesting in accordance with their terms (including achievement of applicable performance objectives) of all outstanding equity awards
Ø a lump sum payment in cash equal to the value of any ungranted Annual Incentive Awards, multiplied by the percentage of such award that would vest within 36 months following termination (i.e., 75% in the case of a four year vesting period)
Other Ø reimbursement for up to 36 months’ COBRA premiums for Mr. Hall and his family

 

Payment of severance amounts is conditioned upon execution of a general release of claims against the Company and compliance with 36 month non-competition and non-solicitation covenants. In certain circumstances, payment will be delayed for six months following termination under Code Section 409A.

 

Involuntary or Constructive Termination, and Change in Control

Within 24 months of a Change In Control: if Mr. Hall’s employment is terminated involuntarily and without Business Reasons; or a Constructive Termination occurs; or if the Company elects not to renew the CEO Agreement upon its expiration and Mr. Hall terminates his employment within 90 days following the expiration of the CEO Agreement (i.e., double trigger), Mr. Hall will be entitled to receive the following benefits:

 

Component Description
Base Salary Ø accrued base salary and unused PTO through termination
Ø 3 times base salary then in effect, payable 6 months following termination
Short-Term
Incentive Award
(Bonus)
Ø any earned but unpaid bonus
Ø 3 times target bonus for fiscal year in which Change In Control occurs, payable 6 months following termination
Long – Term
Incentive Award
Ø any ungranted but earned Annual Incentive Awards
Ø all unvested outstanding equity will vest in full, all performance goals or other vesting criteria will be deemed achieved at target levels and all stock options and SARs will be exercisable as to all covered shares
Other Ø reimbursement for up to 36 months’ COBRA premiums for Mr. Hall and his family

 

Immediately upon a Change In Control, all of Mr. Hall’s unvested outstanding equity awards will vest in full, all performance goals or other vesting criteria will be deemed achieved at target levels and all stock options and SARs will be exercisable as to all covered shares. Additionally, any ungranted, but accrued Annual Incentive Awards will be awarded prior to consummation of the Change in Control.

 

Should any payments received by Mr. Hall upon a Change In Control constitute a “parachute payment” within the meaning of Code Section 280G, Mr. Hall may elect to receive either the full amount of his Change In Control payments, or such lesser amount as will ensure that no portion of his severance and other benefits will be subject to excise tax under Code Section 4999 of the Code. Additionally, certain payments may be delayed for six months following termination under Code Section 409A.

30

The CEO Agreement utilizes the 2014 Plan definition of “Change In Control” which currently provides that a Change In Control will occur when (i) there is a change in ownership of the Company such that any person (or group) becomes the beneficial owner of 50% of our voting securities, (ii) there is a change in the ownership of a substantial portion of the Company’s assets and (iii) there is a change in the effective control of the Company such that a majority of members of the Board is replaced during any 12 month period by directors whose appointment or election is not endorsed by a majority of the members of the Board prior to the date of appointment or election.

 

In the CEO Agreement, Mr. Hall also agrees not to engage in any competitive activities and not to solicit Gartner employees for 36 months following termination of employment.

 

Termination and Related Payments – Other Executive Officers

In the event of termination for cause, voluntary resignation or as a result of death, disability or retirement, no severance benefits are provided. In the event of termination for cause or voluntary resignation, all equity awards are forfeited except as discussed below under Death, Disability and Retirement. In the event of termination without cause (including in connection with a Change In Control), other executive officers are entitled to receive the following benefits:

 

Component Description
Base Salary   Ø accrued base salary and unused PTO (not to exceed 25 days) through termination
   
Ø 12 months continued base salary paid pursuant to normal payroll schedule
Long – Term
Incentive Awards
Ø If terminated within 12 months of a Change in Control, all unvested outstanding equity will vest in full (upon adjustment if performance adjustment has not occurred on termination), and all stock options and SARs will be exercisable as to all covered shares for 12 months following termination; otherwise unvested awards are forfeited
Ø If no Change in Control, unvested equity awards are forfeited (except in the case of death, disability and retirement, discussed below)
Other Ø Reimbursement for up to 12 months’ COBRA premiums for executive and family

 

In order to receive severance benefits, the executive officers who are terminated are required to execute and comply with a separation agreement and release of claims in which, among other things, the executive reaffirms his or her commitment to confidentiality and non-competition obligations (that bind all employees for one year following termination of employment) and releases the Company from various employment-related claims. In addition, in the case of Named Executive Officers (other than Mr. Hall), severance will not be paid to any executive who refuses to accept an offer of comparable employment from Gartner or who does not cooperate or ceases to cooperate when being considered for a new position with Gartner, in each case as determined by the Company. Finally, under certain circumstances, payments and release of shares may be delayed for six months following termination under Code Section 409A.

 

Death, Disability and Retirement

For all equity awards made prior to 2015, in the case of termination due to death, disability or retirement (as defined), our executive officers are entitled to immediate vesting of all PSUs and SARs that would have vested (assuming continued service) during the 12 months following termination. Commencing with the 2015 equity awards, our executive officers are entitled to immediate vesting of all outstanding awards in the case of termination due to death or disability, and continued vesting depending upon the age of the officer in the case of retirement (as defined) as described in the following table:

 

Termination Event Treatment of Unvested Equity Awards
Death or Disability – pre 2015 awards Ø 12 months additional vesting upon event
Death or Disability – 2015 awards Ø 100% vesting upon event
Retirement – not eligible Ø Unvested awards forfeited
Retirement – pre 2015 awards - eligible Ø 12 months additional vesting upon event
Retirement – 2015 awards – eligible Ø If < 60 years of age, 12 months continued vesting
  Ø If 60, 24 months continued vesting
  Ø If 61, 36 months continued vesting
  Ø If 62 or more, unvested awards vest in full in accordance with its term

31

In order to receive retirement vesting, an officer must be retirement “eligible” on the date of retirement; if not, all unvested awards are forfeited upon retirement. Retirement eligibility is defined in our current equity award agreements as follows: (i) on the date of retirement the officer must be at least 55 years old and have at least 5 years continued service and (ii) the sum of the officer’s age and years of continued service must be 65 or greater. At December 31, 2015, of our NEOs, only Messrs. Hall and Schwartz qualified for the additional vesting benefit upon retirement. Disability is defined in our current equity award agreements as total and permanent disability.

 

For all SAR awards prior to 2015, the SARs remain exercisable for the earlier of the applicable expiration date or one year from termination in the case of death, disability or retirement. Commencing with the 2015 SAR awards, the SARs remain exercisable for the earlier of the applicable expiration date or one year from termination in the case of death and disability, and through the expiration date in the case of retirement. In each case, upon termination for any other reason, vested SARs remain exercisable for the earlier of the applicable expiration date or 90 days from the date of termination. In the case of death, disability or retirement, unvested and unadjusted PSUs to which the officer is entitled will be adjusted based upon achievement of the related performance metric upon certification by the Compensation Committee. In all cases related to retirement, the officer must be retirement eligible.

 

Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control

 

Employment Agreements With Executive Officers above contains a detailed discussion of the payments and other benefits to which our CEO and other Named Executive Officers are entitled in the event of termination of employment or upon a Change In Control, and the amounts payable assuming termination under various circumstances at December 31, 2015 are set forth below. In each case, each Named Executive Officer would also be entitled to receive accrued personal time off (PTO) and the balance in his deferred compensation plan account.

 

Mr. Hall, CEO

 

The table below quantifies (in dollars) amounts that would be payable by the Company, and the value of shares of Common Stock that would be released, to Mr. Hall had his employment been terminated on December 31, 2015 (the “Termination Date”) as a result of (i) involuntary termination without cause and/or constructive termination; (ii) death, disability or retirement; or (iii) a Change In Control. See Outstanding Equity Awards At Fiscal Year End Table below for a list of Mr. Hall’s unvested equity awards at the end of 2014. Mr. Hall was eligible for retirement benefits at December 31, 2015.

 

      Death,      
  Involuntary   disability or   Change in  
  termination   retirement   Control  
Involuntary (continued   (value of Change in (acceleration of  
termination vesting of Total unvested Control unvested Total
(severance equity Involuntary equity (severance equity Change in
benefits) awards) termination awards) benefits) awards) Control
(1) (2) (1), (2) (3) (4) (5) (4), (5)
6,838,593 31,937,793 38,776,386 15,029,709 6,574,391 31,142,805 37,717,196

 

(1) Represents the sum of (w) three times base salary in effect at Termination Date; (x) 300% of the average actual bonus paid for the prior three years (2012, 2013 and 2014); (y) unpaid 2015 bonus; and (z) the amount of health insurance premiums for Mr. Hall, his spouse and immediate family for 36 months (at rate in effect on the Termination Date).
   
(2) Represents (x) the fair market value using the closing price of our Common Stock on December 31, 2015, or $90.70 (the “Year End Price”) of unvested PSUs that would have vested within 36 months following the Termination Date, plus (y) the spread between the Year End Price and the exercise price for all in-the-money SARs that would have vested within 36 months following the Termination Date, multiplied by the number of such SARs.
   
(3) Represents (x) the fair market value using the Year End Price of unvested PSUs that would have vested within 12 months following the Termination Date, plus (y) the spread between the Year End Price and the exercise price for all in-the-money SARs that would have vested within 12 months following the Termination Date, multiplied by the number of such SARs.
32
(4) Represents the sum of (w) three times base salary in effect at Termination Date, (x) three times 2015 target bonus, (y) unpaid 2015 bonus, and (z) the amount of health insurance premiums for Mr. Hall, his spouse and immediate family for 36 months (at premiums in effect on the Termination Date).
   
(5) Represents (x) the fair market value using the Year End Price of all unvested PSUs on the Termination Date (at target in the case of unadjusted 2015 PSUs), plus (y) the spread between the Year End Price and the exercise price of all in-the-money unvested SARs on the Termination Date, multiplied by the number of such SARs.

 

Other Named Executive Officers

 

The table below quantifies (in dollars) amounts that would be payable by the Company, and the value of shares of Common Stock that would be released, to our Named Executive Officers (other than Mr. Hall) had their employment been terminated on December 31, 2015 (the “Termination Date”) as a result of (i) involuntary termination without cause and/or constructive termination; (ii) death or disability (Messrs. Safian, Dawkins and Waern) and death, disability or retirement (Mr. Schwartz); or (iii) a Change In Control. Of these NEOs, only Mr. Schwartz was eligible for retirement benefits at December 31, 2015. See Outstanding Equity Awards At Fiscal Year End Table below for a list of unvested equity awards held by each Named Executive Officer at the end of 2015.

 

    Value of    
  Involuntary unvested equity Value of  
  termination awards unvested equity  
  (severance (death, disability awards (Change Total Change In
  benefits) or retirement) In Control) Control
Named Executive Officer (1) (2) (3) (1), (3)
Craig W. Safian 487,067 1,170,726 2,771,485 3,258,552
Lewis G. Schwartz 507,774 3,433,602 4,555,741 5,063,515
Alwyn Dawkins 457,283 2,175,092 4,555,741 5,013,024
Per Anders Waern 457,283 2,175,092 4,555,741 5,013,024

 

(1) Represents 12 months’ base salary in effect on the Termination Date plus the amount of health insurance premiums for the executive, his spouse and immediate family for 12 months (at premiums in effect on the Termination Date) payable in accordance with normal payroll practices. Since the executive must be employed on the bonus payment date (February 2016 in order to receive earned but unpaid 2015 bonus, in the event of termination on December 31, 2015, 2015 bonus would have been forfeited and, therefore, is excluded. See Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation in the Summary Compensation Table above for these bonus amounts.
   
(2) Represents (x) the fair market value using the closing price of our Common Stock on December 31, 2015, or $90.70 (the “Year End Price”) of unvested PSUs that would have vested within 12 months following the Termination Date, plus (y) the spread between the Year End Price and the exercise price of all in-the-money SARs that would have vested within 12 months following the Termination Date, multiplied by the number of such SARs. Messrs. Safian, Dawkins and Waern were not eligible for retirement benefits on December 31, 2015.
   
(3) Represents (x) the fair market value using the Year End Price of all unvested PSUs on the Termination Date (at target in the case of unadjusted 2015 PSUs), plus (y) the spread between the Year End Price and the exercise price of all in-the-money unvested SARs on the Termination Date, multiplied by the number of such SARs.

 

 
33

Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End Table

 

This table provides information on each option (including stock appreciation rights or SARs) and stock (including restricted stock units (RSUs) and performance restricted stock units (PSUs) award held by each Named Executive Officer at December 31, 2015. All performance criteria associated with these awards (except for the 2015 PSU award (see footnote 4)) were fully satisfied as of December 31, 2015, and the award is fixed. The market value of the stock awards is based on the closing price of our Common Stock on the New York Stock Exchange on December 31, 2015, which was $90.70. Upon exercise of, or release of restrictions on, these awards, the number of shares ultimately issued to each executive will be reduced by the number of shares withheld by Gartner for tax withholding purposes and/or as payment of exercise price in the case of options and SARs.

 

  Option Awards Stock Awards
                Equity
              Equity Incentive
              Incentive Plan
              Plan Awards:
              Awards: Market or
              Number Payout
              of Value of
  Number of       Number of Market Unearned Unearned
  Securities Number of     Shares or Value of Shares, Shares,
  Underlying Securities     Units of Shares or Units or Units, or
  Unexer- Underlying     Stock Units of Other Other
  cised Unexercised     That Stock Rights Rights
  Options Options Option Option Have That Have That That Have
  Exercis- Unexercis- Exercise Expira- Not Not Have Not Not
Named Executive able able Price tion Vested Vested Vested Vested
Officer (#) (#) ($) Date (#) ($) (#) ($)
Eugene A. Hall                
(1), (5) 109,060 36,353 37.81 2/09/19 30,394 2,756,736 - -
(2), (5) 65,375 65,374 49.37 2/12/20 53,836 4,882,925 - -
(3), (5) 33,746 101,236 64.64 2/10/21 94,547 8,575,413 - -
(4), (5) - 126,750 77.92 2/9/22 - - 66,649 6,045,064
Craig W. Safian                
(1) - - - - 2,314 209,880 - -
(2) - - - - 4,050 367,335 - -
(3) - - - - 5,221 473,545 - -
(6) - - - - 5,349 485,154 - -
(4), (5) - 20,570 77.92 2/9/22 - - 10,816 981,011
Lewis G. Schwartz                
(1), (5) - 5,059 37.81 2/09/19 4,230 383,661 - -
(2), (5) - 9,452 49.37 2/12/20 7,784 706,009    
(3), (5) - 15,060 64.64 2/10/21 14,064 1,275,605    
(4), (5) - 18,855 77.92 2/9/22 - - 9,915 899,291
Alwyn Dawkins                
  14,217 - 38.05 2/22/18 -   - -
(1), (5) 15,180 5,059 37.81 2/09/19 4,230 383,661 - -
(2), (5) 9,453 9,452 49.37 2/12/20 7,784 706,009    
(3), (5) 5,020 15,060 64.64 2/10/21 14,064 1,275,605    
(4), (5) - 18,855 77.92 2/9/22 - - 9,915 899,291
Per Anders Waern                
(1), (5) - 5,059 37.81 2/09/19 4,230 383,661 - -
(2), (5) - 9,452 49.37 2/12/20 7,784 706,009    
(3), (5) - 15,060 64.64 2/10/21 14,064 1,275,605    
(4), (5) - 18,855 77.92 2/9/22 - - 9,915 899,291

 

  (1) Vest 25% per year commencing 2/09/13.
     
  (2) Vest 25% per year commencing 2/12/14.
     
  (3) Vest 25% per year commencing 2/10/15.
34
  (4) Vest 25% per year commencing 2/9/16. The market value of the Stock Award is presented at target (100%), and the amount ultimately awarded could range from 0% to 200% of the target award and the maximum payout value is 200% of target. After certification of the applicable performance metric in February 2016, the amount actually awarded on account of Stock Awards was adjusted to 159.8% of target. The actual number of PSUs awarded to the NEOs is reported in footnote (2) to the Grants of Plan – Based Awards Table.
     
  (5) The amounts shown under Option Awards represent SARs that will be stock-settled upon exercise; accordingly, the number of shares ultimately received upon exercise will be less than the number of SARs held by the executive and reported in this table.
     
  (6) Vest 25% per year commencing 6/13/15.

 

Option Exercises and Stock Vested Table

 

This table provides information for the NEOs for the aggregate number of SARs that were exercised, and stock awards that vested and released, during 2015 on an aggregate basis, and does not reflect shares withheld by the Company for exercise price or withholding taxes.

 

    Option Awards Stock Awards
    Number of   Number of  
    Shares Value Shares Value
    Acquired on Realized on Acquired on Realized on
    Exercise Exercise Vesting Vesting
Name   (#) ($) (1) (#) (2) ($)(3)
Eugene A. Hall   135,024 6,712,043 126,306 10,137,060
Craig W. Safian   - - 10,163 826,895
Lewis G. Schwartz   63,440 3,112,086 18,026 1,446,021
Alwyn Dawkins   27,103 1,841,457 18,026 1,446,021
Per Anders Waern   19,504 725,461 18,026 1,446,021

 

(1) Represents the spread between (i) the market price of our Common Stock at exercise and (ii) the exercise price for all SARs exercised during the year, multiplied by the number of SARs exercised.
   
(2) Represents PSUs awarded in prior years as long-term incentive compensation that released in 2015.
   
(3) Represents the number of shares that released multiplied by the market price of our Common Stock on the release date.

 

Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Table

 

The Company maintains a Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Plan for certain officers and key personnel whose aggregate compensation in 2015 was expected to exceed $325,000. This plan currently allows qualified U.S.-based employees to defer up to 50% of annual salary and/or up to 100% of annual bonus earned in a fiscal year. In addition, in 2015 the Company made a contribution to the account of each Named Executive Officer who deferred compensation equal to the amount of such executive’s contribution (not to exceed 4% of base salary and bonus), less $7,200. Deferred amounts are deemed invested in several independently-managed investment portfolios selected by the participant for purposes of determining the amount of earnings to be credited by the Company to that participant’s account. The Company may, but need not, acquire investments corresponding to the participants’ designations.

 

Upon termination of employment for any reason, all account balances will be distributed to the participant in a lump sum, except that a participant whose account balance is in excess of $25,000 may defer distributions for an additional year, or elect to receive the balance in 20, 40 or 60 quarterly installments. In the event of an unforeseen emergency (which includes a sudden and unexpected illness or accident of the participant or a dependent, a loss of the participant’s property due to casualty or other extraordinary and unforeseeable circumstance beyond the participant’s control), the participant may request early payment of his or her account balance, subject to approval.

 

The following table provides information (in dollars) concerning contributions to the Deferred Compensation Plan in 2015 by the participating Named Executive Officers, the Company’s matching contributions, 2015 earnings, aggregate withdrawals and distributions and account balances at year end:

35

 

      Aggregate Aggregate  
  Executive Company Earnings Withdrawals/ Aggregate
  Contributions Contributions (loss) in Distributions Balance at
Name in 2015 (1) in 2015 (2) 2015 in 2015 12/31/15
Eugene A. Hall 85,966 78,766 (16,591) 225,591 556,685
Craig W. Safian 18,296 11,096 (334) 0 29,058
Lewis G. Schwartz 36,828 29,628 (16,491) 0 596,858
Alwyn Dawkins 75,975 25,398 (16,384) 29,786 358,917
Per Anders Waern 32,598 25,398 (3,947) 0 375,442

 

  (1) Executive Contributions are included in the “Base Salary” and/or “Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation” columns in the Summary Compensation Table for the NEOs.
     
  (2) Company Contributions are included in the “All Other Compensation” column of the Summary Compensation Table, and in the “Company Match Under Non-qualified Deferred Compensation Plan” column of the Other Compensation Table for the NEOs.

 

EQUITY COMPENSATION PLAN INFORMATION

 

The following table provides information as of December 31, 2015 regarding the number of shares of our Common Stock that may be issued upon exercise of outstanding options, stock appreciation rights and other rights (including restricted stock units, performance stock units and common stock equivalents) awarded under our equity compensation plans (and, where applicable, related weighted-average exercise price information), as well as shares available for future issuance under our equity compensation plans. All equity plans with outstanding awards or available shares have been approved by our stockholders.

 

  Column A Column B Column C
      Number of Securities
      Remaining Available
  Number of Securities Weighted Average For Future Issuance
  to be Issued Upon Exercise Price of Under Equity
  Exercise of Outstanding Compensation Plans
  Outstanding Options Options (excluding shares in
Plan Category and Rights and Rights ($) Column A)
2003 Long - Term Incentive Plan (1) 1,865,855 49.43 -
2014 Long – Term Incentive Plan (2) 1,038,512 77.92 7,351,370
2011 Employee Stock Purchase Plan     1,011,965
Total 2,904,367   8,363,335

 

  (1) Award shares withheld for taxes, surrendered to pay exercise price or cancelled are retired; at the present time all awards are made under the 2014 Plan.
     
  (2) Award shares under the 2014 Plan withheld for taxes, surrendered to pay exercise price or cancelled are returned to the available share pool. Award shares under the 2003 Plan withheld for taxes, surrendered to pay exercise price or cancelled are retired.

 

From January 1, 2016 to April 1, 2016: 553,238 RSUs and/or PSUs were awarded to our executive officers and associates, and 353,408 SARs were awarded to our executive officers, primarily in connection with the 2016 annual equity award; 1,798 Common Stock Equivalents were issued to our directors for directors fees; 172,133 shares withheld for taxes, surrendered to pay exercise price or cancelled relating to awards made under the 2003 Plan were retired; and 57,485 shares withheld for taxes, surrendered to pay exercise price or cancelled relating to awards made under the 2014 Plan were returned to the available share pool in that plan.

 

As of April 1, 2016 under both the 2003 and 2014 Plans: there were no options and an aggregate of 1,661,578 SARs outstanding, with a weighted average exercise price of $61.31 and an average remaining term of 4.81 years; and there were an aggregate of 1,286,153 full value shares represented by unvested outstanding RSUs and PSUs outstanding. Additionally, there were 6,238,401 shares available for future grant under the 2014 Plan.

36

PROPOSAL TWO:

 

 ADVISORY APPROVAL OF THE COMPANY’S EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

 

In accordance with the requirements of Section 14A of the Exchange Act (which was added by the Dodd-Frank Act) and the related rules of the SEC, we are including in this Proxy Statement a separate resolution subject to stockholder vote to approve the compensation of our Named Executive Officers. The stockholder vote on this resolution is advisory only. However, the Compensation Committee and the Board will consider the voting results when making future executive compensation decisions.

 

The text of the resolution in respect of Proposal No. 2 is as follows:

 

Resolved, that the compensation of Gartner’s Named Executive Officers as disclosed in this Proxy Statement pursuant to Item 402 of Regulation S-K, including the Compensation Discussion and Analysis, compensation tables and narrative discussion, is hereby approved.

 

In considering your vote, stockholders may wish to review with care the information on Gartner’s compensation policies and decisions regarding the Named Executive Officers presented in the CD&A on pages 14 - 25, including, in particular, the information concerning Company performance included in the Executive Summary on pages 14 - 16 and highlights of our Compensation Practices on pages 16 - 17.

 

In particular, stockholders should note that the Compensation Committee bases its executive compensation decisions on the following:

 

Ø the need to attract, motivate and retain highly talented, creative and entrepreneurial individuals in a highly competitive industry and market place;
Ø the need to motivate our executives to maximize the performance of our Company through pay-for-performance compensation components which have led executives to deliver outstanding performance for the past several years;
Ø comparability to the practices of peers in our industry and other comparable companies generally based upon available benchmarking data; and
Ø the alignment of our executive compensation programs with stockholder value through heavily weighted performance- based compensation elements.

 

As noted in the Executive Summary on commencing on page 14, 2015 was another year of record achievement for Gartner, largely as a result of the achievements, focus and skill of our executive leadership team. We achieved Contract Value, Revenue, EBITDA and Normalized EPS growth of 14%, 13%, 13% and 7%, respectively on an FX neutral basis. Additionally, our Common Stock returned compound annual growth rates of 8%, 25% and 22% on a 1, 3 and 5 year basis, significantly out-performing the S&P 500 and NASDAQ indices for the corresponding periods.

 

The Board believes that Gartner’s executive compensation program has a proven record of effectively driving superior levels of financial performance, stockholder value, alignment of pay with performance, high ethical standards and attraction and retention of highly talented executives.

 

RECOMMENDATION OF OUR BOARD

 

Our Board unanimously recommends that you vote FOR the foregoing resolution to approve, on an advisory basis, the compensation of our Named Executive Officers as disclosed in this Proxy Statement.

37

SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

 

Based on our review of information on file with the SEC and our stock records, the following table provides certain information about beneficial ownership of shares of our Common Stock as of March 31, 2016 (including shares that will release (RSUs) or become exercisable (SARs) within 60 days following March 31, 2016) held by: (i) each person (or group of affiliated persons) which is known by us to own beneficially more than five percent (5%) of our Common Stock; (ii) each of our directors; (iii) each Named Executive Officer who was employed on that date; and (iv) all directors, Named Executive Officers (who were employed on March 31, 2016) and other current executive officers as a group. Unless otherwise indicated, the address for those listed below is c/o Gartner, Inc., 56 Top Gallant Road, Stamford, CT 06904. The amounts shown do not include CSEs that release upon termination of service as a director, or deferred RSUs that will not release within 60 days. Since all stock appreciation rights (SARs) are stock-settled (i.e., shares are withheld for the payment of exercise price and taxes), the number of shares ultimately issued upon settlement will be less than the number of SARS that were settled. Except as indicated by footnote, and subject to applicable community property laws, the persons named in the table directly own, and have sole voting and investment power with respect to, all shares of Common Stock shown as beneficially owned by them. To the Company’s knowledge, none of these shares has been pledged.

 

  Number of Shares  
  Beneficially Percent
Beneficial Owner Owned Owned
Michael J. Bingle (1) 24,969 *
Richard J. Bressler 17,488 *
Raul E. Cesan (2) 91,405 *
Karen E. Dykstra 25,030 *
Anne Sutherland Fuchs (1) 32,243 *
William O. Grabe (1) 127,507 *
Stephen G. Pagliuca (1) 52,799 *
James C. Smith (3) 1,052,765 1.3
Eugene A. Hall (4) 1,585,068 1.9
Craig W. Safian (5) 21,490 *
Alwyn Dawkins (6) 86,976 *
Per Anders Waern (7) 29,851 *
     
All current directors, Named Executive Officers and other
executive officers as a group (19 persons) (8)
3,644,452 4.4
Baron Capital Group, Inc. (9)
767 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10153
8,373,687 10.1
Blackrock, Inc. (10)
40 East 52nd Street, New York, NY 10022
7,043,271 8.5
The Vanguard Group, Inc. (11)
100 Vanguard Blvd., Malvern, PA 19335
6,267,019 7.6
T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. (12)
100 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD 21202
5,686,174 6.9
* Less than 1%

 

(1) Includes 2,267 RSUs that will release on May 28, 2016 (the “2015 Director RSU Award”).
   
(2) Includes 30,000 shares held by a family foundation as to which Mr. Cesan may be deemed a beneficial owner, and the 2015 Director RSU Award.
   
(3) Includes the 2015 Director RSU Award, 50,000 shares held by members of Mr. Smith’s immediate family and 211,900 shares held by a family foundation as to which Mr. Smith may be deemed a beneficial owner.
   
(4) Includes 342,654 shares issuable upon the exercise of stock appreciation rights (“SARs”).
   
(5) Includes 5,143 shares issuable upon the exercise of SARs.
   
(6) Includes 63,389 shares issuable upon the exercise of SARs.
   
(7) Includes 19,519 shares issuable upon the exercise of SARs.
38
(8) Includes 14,933 RSUs shares that will release within 60 days, and 708,523 shares issuable upon the exercise of SARs.
   
(9) Includes shares beneficially owned by Baron Capital Group, Inc. (“BCG”) and Ronald Baron; also includes 7,915,682 shares beneficially owned by BAMCO, Inc. and 458,005 shares beneficially owned by Baron Capital Management, Inc., subsidiaries of BCG.
   
(10) Includes shares held by various subsidiaries and/or affiliates of Blackrock, Inc.
   
(11) Includes shares beneficially owned by The Vanguard Group, Inc. as an investment adviser, and includes 55,785 shares beneficially owned by Vanguard Fiduciary Trust Company as investment manager of collective trust accounts, and 54,300 shares beneficially owned by Vanguard Investments Australia, Ltd as investment manager.
   
(12) These shares are owned by various individual and institutional investors, for which T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. (“Price Associates”) serves as an investment adviser with power to direct investments and/or sole power to vote the securities. For purposes of the reporting requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Price Associates is deemed to be a beneficial owner of such securities; however Price Associates expressly disclaims that it is, in fact, the beneficial owner of such securities.

 

 

 

SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

 

Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act requires our executive officers, directors and persons who beneficially own more than 10% of our Common Stock to file reports of ownership and changes of ownership with the SEC and to furnish us with copies of the reports they file. To assist with this reporting obligation, the Company prepares and files ownership reports on behalf of its officers and directors pursuant to powers of attorney issued by the officer or director to the Company. Based solely on our review of these reports, or written representations from certain reporting persons, there were no late filings in 2015.

 

TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PERSONS

 

Gartner is a provider of comprehensive research coverage of the IT industry to over 10,000 distinct enterprises in over 90 countries. Because of our worldwide reach, it is not unusual for Gartner to engage in ordinary course of business transactions involving the sale of research or consulting services with entities in which one of our directors, executive officers or a greater than 5% owner of our stock, or immediate family member of any of them, may also be a director, executive officer, partner or investor, or have some other direct or indirect interest. We will refer to these transactions generally as related party transactions.

 

Our Governance Committee reviews all related party transactions to determine whether any director, executive officer or a greater than 5% owner of our stock, or immediate family member of any of them, has a material direct or indirect interest, or whether the independence from management of our directors may be compromised as a result of the relationship or transaction. Our Board Principles and Practices, which are posted on www.investor.gartner.com, require directors to disclose all actual or potential conflicts of interest regarding a matter being considered by the Board or any of its committees and to excuse themselves from that portion of the Board or committee meeting at which the matter is addressed to permit independent discussion. Additionally, the member with the conflict must abstain from voting on any such matter. The Governance Committee is charged with resolving any conflict of interest issues brought to its attention and has the power to request the Board to take appropriate action, up to and including requesting the involved director to resign. Our Audit Committee and/or Board of Directors reviews and approves all material related party transactions involving our directors in accordance with applicable provisions of Delaware law and with the advice of counsel, if deemed necessary.

 

The Company maintains a written conflicts of interest policy which is posted on our intranet and prohibits all Gartner employees, including our executive officers, from engaging in any personal, business or professional activity which conflicts with or appears to conflict with their employment responsibilities and from maintaining financial interests in entities that could create an appearance of impropriety in their dealings with the Company. Additionally, the policy prohibits all Gartner employees from entering into agreements on behalf of Gartner with any outside entity if the employee knows that the entity is a related party to a Gartner employee; i.e., that the contract would confer a financial benefit, either directly or indirectly, on a Gartner employee or his or her relatives. All potential conflicts of interest and related party transactions involving Gartner employees must be reported to, and pre-approved by, the General Counsel.

 

In 2015, there were no related party transactions in which any director, executive officer or a greater than 5% owner of our stock, or immediate family member of any of them, had or will have a direct or indirect material interest.

39

PROPOSAL THREE:

 

RATIFICATION OF APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITOR

 

The Audit Committee of the Board of Directors has appointed KPMG LLP to serve as the Company’s independent auditor for the 2016 fiscal year. Additional information concerning the Audit Committee and its activities with KPMG can be found in the Audit Committee Report and the Principal Accountant Fees and Services below.

 

The Audit Committee of the Board of Directors is directly responsible for the appointment, compensation and oversight of the Company’s independent auditor. Ratification by the stockholders of the appointment of KPMG is not required by law, the Company’s bylaws or otherwise. However, the Board of Directors is submitting the appointment of KPMG for stockholder ratification to ascertain stockholders’ views on the matter. Representatives of KPMG will attend the Annual Meeting to respond to appropriate questions and to make a statement if they desire to do so.

 

Principal Accountant Fees and Services

 

During 2015, KPMG performed recurring audit services, including the audit of our annual consolidated financial statements and the audit of internal controls over financial reporting as of December 31, 2015, reviews of our quarterly financial information, and certain statutory audits and certain tax services for the Company. The aggregate fees billed for professional services by KPMG in 2014 and 2015 for various services performed by them were as follows:

 

Types of Fees 2014 ($) 2015 ($)
Audit Fees 2,638,469 2,729,400
Audit-Related Fees 15,000 7,600
Tax Fees 632,180 513,277
All Other Fees - -
Total Fees 3,285,649 3,250,277

 

Audit Fees

Audit fees relate to professional services rendered by KPMG for the audit of the Company’s annual consolidated financial statements contained in its Annual Report on Form 10-K, audit of internal controls over financial reporting and reviews of the Company’s quarterly financial information contained in its Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, as well as work performed in connection with statutory and regulatory filings.

 

Audit-Related Fees

Audit-related fees relate to professional services rendered by KPMG primarily for audit support services, such as issuance of a consent in connection with the filing of a registration statement.

 

Tax Fees

Tax fees relate to professional services rendered by KPMG for permissible tax compliance, tax advice and tax planning services.

 

All Other Fees

This category of fees covers all fees for any permissible service not included in the above categories.

 

Pre-Approval Policies

The Audit Committee’s policy is to pre-approve all audit, audit-related and permissible non-audit services provided by KPMG. These services may include domestic and international audit services, audit-related services, tax services and other services. At the beginning of each fiscal year, the Audit Committee pre-approves aggregate fee limits for specific types of permissible services (e.g., domestic and international tax compliance and tax planning services; transfer pricing services, audit-related services and other permissible services) to allow management to engage KPMG expeditiously as needed as projects arise. At each regular quarterly meeting, KPMG and management report to the Audit Committee regarding the services for which the Company has engaged KPMG in the immediately preceding fiscal quarter in accordance with the pre-approved limits, and the related fees for such services as well as year-to-date cumulative fees for KPMG services. Pre-approved limits may be adjusted as necessary during the year, and the Audit Committee may also pre-approve particular services on a case-by-case basis. All services provided by KPMG in 2015 were pre-approved by the Audit Committee.

40

AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT

 

Pursuant to its responsibilities as set forth in the Audit Committee Charter, the Audit Committee has reviewed and discussed with management and with KPMG Gartner’s audited consolidated financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2015. The Audit Committee has discussed with KPMG the matters required to be discussed by Auditing Standard No. 16, Communications with Audit Committees, as adopted by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB). The Audit Committee has received the written disclosures and letter from KPMG required by applicable requirements of the PCAOB regarding KPMG’s communications with the Audit Committee concerning independence and has discussed with KPMG that firm’s independence.

 

Based on the review and discussions noted above, as well as discussions regarding Gartner’s internal control over financial reporting and discussions with Gartner’s Internal Audit function, the Audit Committee recommended to the Board of Directors that the audited consolidated financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2015 be included in Gartner’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2015 for filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

 

Audit Committee of the Board of Directors

 

Richard J. Bressler
Karen E. Dykstra
James C. Smith

 

April 11, 2016

 

RECOMMENDATION OF OUR BOARD

 

Our Board unanimously recommends that you vote FOR ratification of the appointment of
KPMG LLP as the Company’s independent auditor for fiscal 2016.

 

 

 

MISCELLANEOUS

 

Stockholder Communications

 

Stockholders and other interested parties may communicate with any of our directors by writing to them c/o Corporate Secretary, Gartner, Inc., 56 Top Gallant Road, P.O. 10212, Stamford, CT 06904-2212. All communications other than those which on their face are suspicious, inappropriate or illegible will be delivered to the director to whom they are addressed.

 

Available Information

 

Our website address is www.gartner.com. The investor relations section of our website is located at www.investor.gartner.com and contains, under the “Corporate Governance” link, current electronic printable copies of our:

 

Ø CEO & CFO Code of Ethics which applies to our Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer, controller and other financial managers
Ø Global Code of Conduct, which applies to all Gartner officers, directors and employees
Ø Board Principles and Practices, the corporate governance principles that have been adopted by our Board
Ø Audit Committee Charter
Ø Compensation Committee Charter
Ø Governance/Nominating Committee Charter

 

This information is also available in print to any stockholder who makes a written request to Investor Relations, Gartner, Inc., 56 Top Gallant Road, P.O. Box 10212, Stamford, CT 06904 - 2212.

41

Process for Submission of Stockholder Proposals for our 2017 Annual Meeting

 

The Company has adopted advance notice requirements related to stockholder business, including director nominations. These requirements are contained in our Bylaws, which can be found at www.investor.gartner.com, under the “Corporate Governance” link, and are summarized below. This summary is qualified by reference to the full Bylaw provision.

 

If you are a stockholder of record and you want to make a proposal for consideration at the 2017 Annual Meeting without having it included in our proxy materials, we must receive your written notice not less than 90 days prior to the 2017 Annual Meeting; provided, however, that if we fail to give at least 100 days prior notice of this meeting, then we must receive your written notice not more than 10 days after the date on which notice of the 2017 Annual Meeting is mailed.

 

A stockholder’s notice must set forth certain required information including: (i) a brief description of the business to be brought before the meeting and the reasons therefore; (ii) the name and address of the proposing stockholder and certain associated persons; (iii) the number of shares of Common Stock held by such stockholder and associated persons; (iv) a description of any hedging transactions entered into by such stockholder and persons; (v) any material interest of such stockholder and associated persons in the business to be conducted; and (vi) a statement as to whether a proxy statement and form of proxy will be delivered to other stockholders. In addition, certain information in the notice must be supplemented as of the record date for the meeting. If the stockholder business involves director nominations, the stockholder’s notice must also contain detailed information concerning the nominee, including name, age, principal occupation, interests in Common Stock, any other information regarding the nominee that would be required to be included in a proxy statement under the rules of the SEC had the proposal been made by management, and an acknowledgment by the nominee of the fiduciary duties owed by a director to a corporation and its stockholders under Delaware law. If you do not comply with all of the provisions of our advance notice requirements, then your proposal may not be brought before the 2017 Annual Meeting. All stockholder notices should be addressed to the Corporate Secretary, Gartner, Inc., 56 Top Gallant Road, P.O. Box 10212, Stamford, Connecticut 06904-2212.

 

Additionally, if you want to make a proposal for consideration at next year’s Annual Meeting and have it included in our proxy materials for that meeting, we must receive your proposal by December 12, 2016, and it must comply with all other provisions of the Company’s advance notice requirements as well as the requirements of Exchange Act Rule 14a-8.

 

Annual Report

 

A copy of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015 (the “2015 10-K”) has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and is available at www.sec.gov. You may also obtain a copy at www.investor.gartner.com. A copy of the 2015 10-K is also contained in our 2015 Annual Report to Stockholders, which accompanies this Proxy Statement. A copy of the 2015 10-K will be mailed to any stockholder who makes a written request to Investor Relations, Gartner, Inc., 56 Top Gallant Road, P.O. Box 10212, Stamford, CT 06904—2212.

 

By Order of the Board of Directors

 

Daniel S. Peale
Corporate Secretary

 

Stamford, Connecticut
April 11, 2016

42

 

0              

 

GARTNER, INC.

 

Proxy for Annual Meeting of Stockholders on May 26, 2016

Solicited on Behalf of the Board of Directors

 

The undersigned hereby appoints Daniel S. Peale and Craig W. Safian, and each of them, with full power of substitution and power to act alone, as proxies to vote all the shares of Common Stock which the undersigned would be entitled to vote if personally present and acting at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Gartner, Inc., to be held May 26, 2016 at 56 Top Gallant Road, Stamford, Connecticut, and at any adjournments or postponements thereof, as follows:

 

(Continued and to be signed on the reverse side.)

 

  1.1     14475    

 

 

ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS OF

 

 

May 26, 2016

 

GO GREEN

e-Consent makes it easy to go paperless. With e-Consent, you can quickly access your proxy material, statements and other eligible documents online, while reducing costs, clutter and paper waste. Enroll today via www.amstock.com to enjoy online access.

 

NOTICE OF INTERNET AVAILABILITY OF PROXY MATERIAL:

The Annual Report to Stockholders, Notice of Meeting, Proxy Statement and Proxy Card
are available at http://www.astproxyportal.com/ast/14908/

 

Please sign, date and mail

your proxy card in the

envelope provided as soon

as possible.

 

â  Please detach along perforated line and mail in the envelope provided.  â

 

00003333333333300100    0 052616

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE “FOR” THE ELECTION OF DIRECTORS AND “FOR” PROPOSALS 2 AND 3.
PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND RETURN PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. PLEASE MARK YOUR VOTE IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS SHOWN HERE
x

     
    1. Election of Directors: Nominees to be elected for terms expiring in 2017
                 
            FOR AGAINST ABSTAIN
      1a. Michael J. Bingle     o o o
                 
      1b. Richard J. Bressler     o o o
                 
      1c. Raul E. Cesan     o o o
                 
      1d. Karen E. Dykstra     o o o
                 
      1e. Anne Sutherland Fuchs     o o o
                 
      1f. William O. Grabe     o o o
                 
      1g. Eugene A. Hall     o o o
                 
      1h. Stephen G. Pagliuca     o o o
                   
      1i. James C. Smith     o o o
                 
    2. Advisory approval of the Company’s executive compensation. o o o
             
    3. Ratify the appointment of KPMG LLP as our independent auditor for fiscal 2016. o o o
             
    NOTE: Such other business as may properly come before the meeting or any adjournment thereof.
             
To change the address on your account, please check the box at right and indicate your new address in the address space above. Please note that changes to the registered name(s) on the account may not be submitted via this method. o   MARK “X” HERE IF YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE MEETING. o    

 

Signature of Stockholder     Date:     Signature of Stockholder     Date:     

 

Note:

Please sign exactly as your name or names appear on this Proxy. When shares are held jointly, each holder should sign. When signing as executor, administrator, attorney, trustee or guardian, please give full title as such. If the signer is a corporation, please sign full corporate name by duly authorized officer, giving full title as such. If signer is a partnership, please sign in partnership name by authorized person.