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¨
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Preliminary Proxy Statement | ||||
¨
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Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
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x
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Definitive Proxy Statement
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¨
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Definitive Additional Materials
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¨
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Soliciting Material under §240.14a-12
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x
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No fee required
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Fee paid previously with preliminary materials
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¨
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Fee computed on table in exhibit required by Item 25(b) per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11
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NOTICE OF
2023 ANNUAL
MEETING AND
PROXY STATEMENT
|
Sincerely,
|
||
/s/ D. James Bidzos | ||
D. James Bidzos
|
||
Chairman of the Board of Directors,
Executive Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer
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The 2023 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “Annual Meeting”) will be held for the following purposes: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Date and Time
May 25, 2023 (Thursday) 10:00 a.m. (Eastern
Location
The Annual Meeting will be held at our corporate offices located at 12061 Bluemont Way, Reston, Virginia
Who Can Vote
Only stockholders of record at the close of business on March 31, 2023, which is the record date, are entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Annual Meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof.
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PROPOSALS |
BOARD VOTE
RECOMMENDATION
|
FOR FURTHER
DETAILS
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 |
Election of Eight Directors Named in the Proxy Statement
|
![]()
each director nominee
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Page
10
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2 | Advisory Vote to Approve Executive Compensation |
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Page
30
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3 | Advisory Vote to Approve the Frequency of the Executive Compensation Vote |
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Page
51
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4 |
Ratification of Selection of KPMG LLP as Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm for 2023
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Page
52
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5 |
Stockholder Proposal Regarding an Independent Chair Policy
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Page
54
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Stockholders will also transact such other business as may properly come before the Annual Meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof.
The foregoing items of business are more fully described in the Proxy Statement accompanying this Notice.
If you hold your shares as of the record date as a stockholder of record or as a beneficial owner, you or your proxyholder may participate, vote, or submit questions during the meeting. A list of stockholders of record entitled to vote shall be available to any stockholder for any purpose relevant to the 2023 Meeting during the 10 days prior to the Annual Meeting upon request to the Office of the Corporate Secretary. In addition, the list of stockholders of record will also be available during the Annual Meeting.
Reston, Virginia
April 11, 2023
By Order of the Board of Directors,
/s/ Thomas C. Indelicarto
Thomas C. Indelicarto
Secretary
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2023
Proxy Statement
|
1
|
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Internet | Telephone | Attending the Meeting | |||||||||
Visit the website listed on
your proxy card
|
Call the telephone number on
your proxy card
|
Sign, date, and return your
proxy card in the enclosed
envelope
|
Attend and vote at the
Annual Meeting
|
Important Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy Materials for the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be Held on May 25, 2023: The 2023 Proxy Statement, together with the 2022 Annual Report, are available at www.edocumentview.com/vrsn.
|
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2
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
Proposal
5
|
Stockholder Proposal Regarding a
n
Independent Chair Policy
|
|||||||
2023
Proxy Statement
|
3
|
$1.42 billion
Revenue
![]()
to 2021
|
$943.1 million
Operating Income
![]()
to 2021
|
173.8 million
.com and .net Domain Name Registrations in Domain Name Base at End of 2022
![]()
December 31, 2021
|
39.9 million
New Domain Name Registrations Processed for .com and .net
in 2022
compared to
44.6 million in 2021
|
||||||||
We are stewards of the internet and our Company
Billions of people and a significant portion of the world’s economy rely on the internet infrastructure we help to manage and operate. As stewards of the internet and our Company, we work to ensure every decision and action preserves the trust people place in us and creates value for our stockholder.
We are passionate about technology and continuous improvement
We embrace new technologies, ideas, and the potential they promise. We also challenge past assumptions and do not accept that what works today will work tomorrow. This enables us to continue building, sustaining, and improving on the internet’s infrastructure.
|
We respect others and exhibit integrity in our actions
The internet has made the world a smaller place, so the way we do business is more important now than ever. That’s why we demonstrate respect and integrity in all of our interactions with our stakeholders — customers, stockholders, business partners, internet users, and each other.
We take responsibility for our actions and hold ourselves to a higher standard
We understand that the role we play in supporting the global internet is a privilege and with that privilege comes great responsibility. We appreciate that our decisions and actions have consequences far beyond our own Company. Therefore, we hold ourselves to a higher standard in all we do.
|
We
protect unconditionally
.
|
We
grow responsibly
.
|
We
manage continuously
.
|
4
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
Proposal 1 |
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FOR | The Board recommends a vote FOR each director nominee. |
See page
10
|
COMMITTEE MEMBERSHIP | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
NAME | AGE |
DIRECTOR
SINCE |
AUDIT | COMPENSATION |
CORPORATE
GOVERNANCE AND NOMINATING |
CYBERSECURITY
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
D. James Bidzos
|
68 | 1995 | M | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Courtney D. Armstrong
IND
|
52 | 2021 | M | M | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Yehuda Ari Buchalter
IND
|
51 | 2019 | M | M | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Kathleen A. Cote
IND
|
74 | 2008 | M | C | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Thomas F. Frist III
IND
|
55 | 2015 | C | M | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jamie S. Gorelick
IND
|
72 | 2015 | M | M | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Roger H. Moore
Lead Independent Director
|
81 | 2002 | M | M | C | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Timothy Tomlinson
IND
|
73 | 2007 | C | M | M | M |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
5
|
Board Composition |
•
7 out of 8 directors are independent.
•
2 out of 8 directors are women.
|
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Diversity |
•
2 directors self-identify as being from underrepresented communities (meaning, an individual who self-identifies as Black, African American, Hispanic, Latinx, Asian, Native American, Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian, or Pacific Islander, or who self-identifies as gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender).
|
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Annual Election of Directors |
•
All directors are elected annually.
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Majority Voting Standard |
•
To be elected in uncontested elections, each nominee for director must receive a majority of the votes cast.
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Lead Independent Director |
•
We have a lead independent director with robust responsibilities.
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Board Committees |
•
We have an Audit Committee, Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee and Compensation Committee, each of which is composed entirely of independent directors.
•
We have a Cybersecurity Committee to assist the Board with its oversight of the Company’s cybersecurity program and risks.
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Stockholder Rights |
•
Stockholders have proxy access rights.
•
Stockholders owning together as few as 10% of outstanding common stock may call a special meeting of stockholders.
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Single Voting Class |
•
Our common stock is the only class of voting shares outstanding.
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One Share, One Vote |
•
Each share of our common stock is entitled to one vote.
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Annual Board Leadership Evaluation |
•
The Board evaluates the Board leadership structure annually.
|
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Annual Self-Evaluations
|
•
The Board conducts an annual self-evaluation to determine whether it and its committees are functioning effectively.
|
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No “Poison Pill” |
•
We do not have a stockholder rights plan, or “poison pill,” in place.
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Annual Auditor Ratification
|
•
Stockholders have the opportunity to ratify the Audit Committee’s selection of our independent registered public accounting firm annually.
|
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Stock Retention Policy
|
•
Directors and executives are subject to a stock retention policy.
|
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Political Contributions |
•
In response to stockholder feedback, we adopted our Political Contributions Policy, which formally established our general prohibition against direct political contributions by the Company to candidates, political parties, campaign committees, and political action committees.
|
6
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
Proposal 2 |
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FOR | The Board recommends a vote FOR this proposal. |
See page
30
|
ELEMENT | OBJECTIVE | FACTORS | MEASURES | |||||||||||||||||||||||
CEO | Other NEOs (Average) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Base Salary
(% of Pay Mix at Target)
|
Provide a guaranteed level of annual income in order to attract and retain our executive talent. Increases are not automatic or guaranteed. |
•
Job responsibilities and scope
•
Experience
•
Individual contributions
•
Internal pay equity
|
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CEO | Other NEOs (Average) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Annual Incentive Bonus
(% of Pay Mix at Target)
|
Provide a performance-based incentive for achieving individual goals and the Company’s financial and strategic goals. |
•
Company performance
•
Individual performance
|
•
Revenue
•
Operating margin
|
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CEO | Other NEOs (Average) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Long-Term Incentive Compensation
(% of Pay Mix at Target)
|
Provide an award that both serves a retention purpose and incentivizes executives to manage the Company from the perspective of a stockholder. |
•
Importance of the executive to Company performance
•
Individual contributions
•
Future potential of the executive
•
Value of executive’s vested and unvested outstanding equity awards (performance-based and time-based restricted stock units)
|
•
Compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of operating income
•
Total Shareholder Return (TSR)
|
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2023
Proxy Statement
|
7
|
Pay for Performance Alignment |
•
For the CEO,
92
% of targeted total compensation is performance-based.
|
|||||||
•
For other NEOs,
86
% of targeted total compensation on average is performance-based.
|
||||||||
Compensation Governance Practices and Policies |
•
Annual Benchmarking of Executive Compensation
|
|||||||
•
Independent Compensation Consultant
|
||||||||
•
Annual Say-on-Pay Vote
|
||||||||
•
Stock Ownership Requirements
|
||||||||
•
Clawback Policy
|
||||||||
•
Forfeiture Provisions
|
||||||||
•
Annual Compensation Risk Assessment
|
||||||||
Responsible Pay Practices |
•
No Employment Contracts
|
|||||||
•
No Single Trigger Benefits Upon a Change-in-Control
|
||||||||
•
No Tax Gross-Ups Upon a Change-in-Control
|
||||||||
•
No Special Pension or Retirement Plans
|
||||||||
•
No Significant Perquisites
|
Proposal 3 |
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ONE YEAR | The Board recommends voting for ONE YEAR for the non-binding stockholder advisory vote to approve executive compensation. |
See page
51
|
8
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
Proposal 4 |
![]() |
FOR | The Board recommends a vote FOR this proposal. |
See page
52
|
2022 FEES | 2021 FEES | |||||||||||||
Audit fees
(1)
|
$ | 1,815,926 | $1,986,852 | |||||||||||
Audit-related fees | – | – | ||||||||||||
Tax fees | – | – | ||||||||||||
All other fees
(2)
|
16,500 | – | ||||||||||||
Total fees | $ | 1,832,426 | $1,986,852 |
Proposal 5 |
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AGAINST |
The Board recommends a vote AGAINST this stockholder proposal.
|
See page
54
|
2023
Proxy Statement
|
9
|
Proposal 1 |
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FOR | The Board recommends a vote FOR the election of each of the foregoing director nominees. |
10
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
BIDZOS | ARMSTRONG | BUCHALTER | COTE | FRIST | GORELICK | MOORE | TOMLINSON | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Accounting, Corporate Finance, and Capital Management
|
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Corporate Governance and Ethics
|
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Executive Experience
|
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International/Global Experience
|
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Government and Public Policy
|
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Legal and Regulatory
|
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Other Public Company Board Experience
|
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Risk Management
|
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Strategic Planning and Oversight
|
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Technology and Cybersecurity
|
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Total Number of Directors | 8 | |||||||||||||
Female | Male | |||||||||||||
Gender Identity | ||||||||||||||
Directors | 2 | 6 | ||||||||||||
Demographic Background | ||||||||||||||
African American or Black | _ | 1 | ||||||||||||
Alaska Native or Native American | _ | _ | ||||||||||||
Asian | _ | _ | ||||||||||||
Hispanic or Latinx | _ | _ | ||||||||||||
Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander | _ | _ | ||||||||||||
White | 2 | 5 | ||||||||||||
Two or More Races or Ethnicities | _ | _ | ||||||||||||
LGBTQ+ | 1 | _ | ||||||||||||
Did Not Disclose Demographic Background | _ | _ |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
11
|
D. James
Bidzos
|
||||||||
Age:
68
|
Committees:
Cybersecurity
|
|||||||
Courtney D. Armstrong
IND
|
||||||||
Age:
52
|
Committees:
Corporate Governance and Nominating, Compensation
|
|||||||
12
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
Yehuda Ari Buchalter
IND
|
||||||||
Age: 51
|
Committees:
Corporate Governance and Nominating, Cybersecurity
|
|||||||
Kathleen A. Cote
IND
|
||||||||
Age:
74
|
Committees:
Audit, Corporate Governance and Nominating (Chair)
|
|||||||
2023
Proxy Statement
|
13
|
Thomas F. Frist III
IND
|
||||||||
Age:
55
|
Committees:
Compensation (Chair), Corporate Governance and Nominating
|
|||||||
Jamie S. Gorelick
IND
|
||||||||
Age:
72
|
Committees:
Compensation, Corporate Governance and Nominating
|
|||||||
14
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
Roger H. Moore
IND
|
Lead Independent Director | |||||||
Age: 81
|
Committees:
Audit, Corporate Governance and Nominating, Cybersecurity (Chair)
|
|||||||
Timothy Tomlinson
IND
|
||||||||
Age:
73
|
Committees:
Audit (Chair), Compensation, Corporate Governance and Nominating, Cybersecurity
|
|||||||
2023
Proxy Statement
|
15
|
Responsibilities Of Chairman Of The Board And Lead Independent Director | |||||||||||
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
|
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Presides at meetings of the board, and, unless another person is designated, meetings of stockholders | |||||||||
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Oversees the management, development and functioning of the board | ||||||||||
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Plans and organizes the schedule of board meetings and establishes the agendas for board meetings | ||||||||||
RESPONSIBILITIES OF LEAD INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR
|
![]() |
Presides at meetings of the board at which the chairman is not present, including executive sessions of the independent directors | |||||||||
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Serves as a liaison between the chairman and independent directors | ||||||||||
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Works with the chairman to facilitate timely and appropriate information flow to the Board | ||||||||||
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Authorized to call meetings and executive sessions of the independent directors | ||||||||||
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Meets with significant stockholders, as appropriate | ||||||||||
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Approves agendas and schedules for meetings of the board to ensure there is sufficient time for discussion | ||||||||||
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Solicits comments and feedback from each director on the operation of the Board and its committees for areas of improvement |
16
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
AUDIT COMMITTEE | |||||
Members | Principal Responsibilities | ||||
Timothy Tomlinson
(Chairperson)
Kathleen A. Cote
Roger H. Moore
Meetings in
2022
:
5
|
The Board has established an Audit Committee to:
•
oversee the accounting and financial reporting processes at the Company, internal control over financial reporting, audits of the Company’s financial statements, the qualifications of the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm, and the performance of the Company’s internal audit department and the independent registered public accounting firm;
•
be responsible for the appointment (subject to stockholder ratification), compensation, and retention of the independent registered public accounting firm, which reports directly to the Audit Committee;
•
oversee the Company’s processes to manage business and financial risk, and compliance with significant applicable legal and regulatory requirements; and
•
oversee the Company’s ethics and compliance program.
Independence
Each member of the Audit Committee meets the independence criteria of The Nasdaq Stock Market’s and the SEC’s rules. Each Audit Committee member meets The Nasdaq Stock Market’s financial knowledge requirements, and the Board has determined that the Audit Committee has at least one member who has past employment experience in finance or accounting, requisite professional certification in accounting, or any other comparable experience or background which results in the individual’s financial sophistication, including being or having been a chief executive officer, chief financial officer, or other senior officer with financial oversight responsibilities as required by Rule 5605(c)(2) of The Nasdaq Stock Market. Our Board has determined that each member of the Audit Committee is an “audit committee financial expert” as such term is defined in Item 407(d)(5) of Regulation S-K.
Charter
The Audit Committee operates pursuant to a written charter, which complies with the applicable provisions of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and related rules of the SEC and The Nasdaq Stock Market. The Audit Committee’s charter is available on our Investor Relations website at https://investor.verisign.com/corporate-governance.
|
||||
2023
Proxy Statement
|
17
|
COMPENSATION COMMITTEE | |||||
Members | Principal Responsibilities | ||||
Thomas F. Frist III (Chairperson)
Courtney D. Armstrong
Jamie S. Gorelick
Timothy Tomlinson
Meetings in 2022:
5
|
The Board has established a Compensation Committee to:
•
discharge the Board’s responsibilities with respect to all forms of compensation of the Company’s directors and employees, including executive officers;
•
administer the Company’s equity incentive plans;
•
oversee Verisign’s overall compensation philosophy and approve and evaluate executive officer compensation arrangements, plans, policies, and programs;
•
oversee Verisign’s diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives and employee health and safety matters; and
•
oversee the Company’s human capital matters, including a review of various workforce metrics, such as employee engagement, workforce demographics, hiring, turnover, and promotion rates, including diversity characteristics for each metric.
Independence
Each Compensation Committee member has been determined to be an “independent director” under the rules of The Nasdaq Stock Market for compensation committee members and a “non-employee director” pursuant to Rule 16b-3 promulgated under Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”).
Charter
The Compensation Committee operates pursuant to a written charter. The Compensation Committee’s charter is available on our Investor Relations website at https://investor.verisign.com/corporate-governance.
For further information regarding the role of management and the independent compensation consultant in setting executive compensation, see “Executive Compensation—Compensation Discussion and Analysis” elsewhere in this Proxy Statement.
|
||||
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE AND NOMINATING COMMITTEE
|
|||||
Members | Principal Responsibilities | ||||
Kathleen A. Cote
(Chairperson)
Courtney Armstrong
Yehuda Ari Buchalter
Thomas F. Frist III
Jamie S. Gorelick
Roger H. Moore
Timothy Tomlinson
Meetings in 2022:
4
|
The Board has established a Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee to:
•
recruit, evaluate, and nominate candidates for appointment or election to serve as members of the Board;
•
recommend nominees for committees of the Board;
•
assess contributions and independence of incumbent directors;
•
review and make recommendations regarding the Board’s leadership structure;
•
develop the Board’s CEO succession planning and evaluation process and oversee succession planning for positions held by senior management;
•
recommend changes to corporate governance principles and committee charters and periodically review and assess the adequacy of these documents;
•
oversee the Company’s Environmental, Social and Governance (“ESG”) initiatives; and
•
review annually the performance of the Board.
Independence
Each Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee member has been determined by the Board to be an “independent director” under the rules of The Nasdaq Stock Market.
Charter
The Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee operates pursuant to a written charter. The Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee’s charter is available on our Investor Relations website at https://investor.verisign.com/corporate-governance.
|
||||
18
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
CYBERSECURITY COMMITTEE | |||||
Members | Principal Responsibilities | ||||
Roger H. Moore
(Chairperson)
D. James Bidzos
Yehuda Ari Buchalter
Timothy Tomlinson
Meetings in 2022:
4
|
The Board has established a Cybersecurity Committee to:
•
assist the Board with its oversight of the Company’s cybersecurity program and risks
•
oversee the effectiveness of the cybersecurity program;
•
review the activities of management’s Safety and Security Council;
•
review the effectiveness of information security incident response, business continuity, and disaster recovery plans, including escalation protocols;
•
review the budget and resources allocated for the cybersecurity program; and
•
review the cybersecurity insurance program.
Independence
Each member of the Cybersecurity Committee other than Mr. Bidzos has been determined by the Board to be an “independent director” under the rules of The Nasdaq Stock Market.
Charter
The Cybersecurity Committee operates pursuant to a written charter. The Cybersecurity Committee’s charter is available on our Investor Relations website at https://investor.verisign.com/corporate-governance.
|
||||
2023
Proxy Statement
|
19
|
2022 MEETING ACTIVITY
|
|||||
BOARD | COMMITTEES | ||||
5 MEETINGS | 18 MEETINGS COLLECTIVELY | ||||
ATTENDANCE | |||||
During 2022, no director attended fewer than 90% of the aggregate of (i) the total number of meetings held by the Board and (ii) the total number of meetings held by all committees on which he or she served.
|
|||||
Board
The full Board (or the appropriate committee in the case of risks that are under the purview of a particular committee) receives reports from the appropriate member of senior management responsible for mitigating these risks within the organization to enable the Board to understand our risk identification, risk management, and risk mitigation strategies.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Committees
The Chairpersons of the relevant committees brief the full Board on the committees’ oversight of risks within their purview during the committee reports portion of each regular Board meeting. This enables the Board and its committees to coordinate the risk oversight role, particularly with respect to risk interrelationships, and enables the full Board to provide input on the Company’s risk assessment and risk management efforts. All of our Board members have experience with enterprise risk management.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
The
Audit Committee
oversees the Company’s processes to manage business and financial risk and compliance with applicable legal and regulatory requirements, including the Company’s enterprise risk management program.
|
The
Compensation Committee
oversees the Company’s risk assessment and risk management relative to the Company’s compensation programs, policies, and practices and human capital management.
|
The
Cybersecurity Committee
assists the Board with its oversight of the Company’s cybersecurity program and risks.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
20
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
RISK AREA |
FULL
BOARD
|
AUDIT
COMMITTEE
|
COMPENSATION
COMMITTEE
|
CYBERSECURITY
COMMITTEE
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
Cybersecurity/Technology | l | l | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Financial | l | l | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Litigation | l | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Enterprise (ERM) | l | l | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Legal and Compliance | l | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Compensation/Human Capital Management | l | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Strategic | l |
SPOTLIGHT: CYBERSECURITY RISK OVERSIGHT
Established in February 2020, the Cybersecurity Committee assists the Board with its oversight of the Company’s cybersecurity program and risks. The Cybersecurity Committee receives quarterly status reports on the cybersecurity program from the Company’s Chief Security Officer, with the full Board receiving regular reports from Mr. Moore, the Chairperson of the Cybersecurity Committee, on the conduct of the committee’s functions as well as quarterly status reports on the cybersecurity program from the Company’s Chief Security Officer. In addition, the Board has appointed Mr. Moore as its liaison to management’s Safety and Security Council (the “Council”). The Council’s purpose is to oversee the effectiveness and performance of the Company’s safety and security functions. The Council provides strategic direction and oversight for the Company’s initiatives to minimize cyber, physical, and other security risks to the Company and holds regular monthly meetings. The Council is composed of executives of the Company with responsibility for cybersecurity, physical security, network operations, technology, registry services, finance, and legal and is chaired by Mr. Bidzos. The Council regularly receives presentations and reports regarding risk assessments and penetration testing. Mr. Moore participates in Council meetings and receives regular, scheduled briefings from Council members regarding incidents and network operations. The Cybersecurity Committee reviews and discusses the activities of the Council at each regularly scheduled Cybersecurity Committee meeting.
|
||
2023
Proxy Statement
|
21
|
22
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
23
|
24
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
•
Community Engagement
•
Corporate Governance
•
Cybersecurity
•
Employee Engagement and Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
•
Employee Health and Safety
|
•
Environmental Stewardship
•
Ethics and Compliance
•
Privacy
•
Responsible Sourcing and DNS Abuse Mitigation
•
Risk Management
|
2023
Proxy Statement
|
25
|
Community Engagement |
•
Verisign Cares is our philanthropic and charitable program through which we seek to make a positive and lasting impact on the communities where we live and work and support meaningful social action to address issues that confront the world.
•
In 2022, Verisign made $1.35 million in direct charitable contributions. We supported food banks, community groups, and organizations providing relief efforts in response to the Ukrainian conflict, and we continued our support of social justice work with contributions to the Equal Justice Initiative and the Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project.
•
We continued our support of Byte Back, NPower, Per Scholas and Virginia Ready, organizations that help to retrain individuals affected by economic challenges for in-demand jobs in high growth sectors such as technology.
•
We match employee charitable contributions up to $3,000 to eligible organizations. In 2022, our employees supported approximately 200 unique organizations through the matching program.
•
Our employees may volunteer one paid workday per quarter to support eligible local community organizations.
|
|||||||
Corporate Governance |
•
See “Voting Roadmap-Corporate Governance Highlights” elsewhere in this Proxy Statement.
|
|||||||
Cybersecurity |
•
Verisign’s approach to cybersecurity is comprehensive, involving a multi-layered strategy where physical security, network infrastructure, software solutions, and security practices and procedures all play a key role reinforced by robust governance and oversight. We harden our infrastructure by leveraging overprovisioning and geographic redundancy.
•
Overprovisioning means that we build our infrastructure so that it’s capable of handling substantially more traffic than the highest peak traffic load that we’ve ever experienced. This makes it more difficult to flood our system with bad traffic and block good traffic – for instance through a distributed denial of service (DDOS) attack – by ensuring that we consistently maintain far more capacity than is needed for normal operations.
•
Geographic redundancy means that we maintain mission critical capabilities across multiple facilities across the globe, and we have built our infrastructure to be able to seamlessly shift demand from one location to another. The geographic redundancy of our infrastructure also makes it resilient against geopolitical and catastrophic events, helping Verisign to maintain its record of 25 years of uptime and availability for .com and .net DNS resolution.
•
We have adopted a rigorous governance framework for the oversight of cybersecurity risk, including a Board-level Cybersecurity Committee and a management-level Safety and Security Council chaired by the CEO, with the Chair of the Cybersecurity Committee appointed as the Board liaison.
•
We have adopted the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Cybersecurity Framework and perform periodic assessments against this framework to measure cybersecurity program maturity. We also have adopted the Center for Internet Security Critical Security Controls (CIS Controls), a prioritized set of safeguards to mitigate the most prevalent cyberattacks.
•
In addition to leveraging a broad array of industry frameworks and best practices applicable to our operating environments, our information security practices align with the AICPA, Trust Services Principles and Criteria (System and Organization Controls). On an annual basis, we obtain SOC 2 Type II and SOC 3 audit reports from an independent, external third-party accounting firm attesting to our system-level controls relating to the security, availability, and processing integrity of our systems.
•
We maintain a security awareness program, which is required for all employees, that includes annual information security and compliance training, monthly information security training videos, and regular phishing awareness exercises.
|
26
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
Employee Engagement and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion |
•
We are committed to attracting, developing, and retaining the best talent, and we monitor our progress in these areas through a variety of workforce metrics (e.g. workforce demographics, hiring, turnover, and promotion rates, including diversity characteristics for each of these metrics).
•
We recognize the importance of talent and culture in driving an environment that fosters high performance, inclusion and integrity in all aspects of our work. We use employee feedback to monitor employee morale and engagement, including through employee surveys. Approximately 85% of our employees participated in our most recent survey in 2022.
•
We have practices in place to deliver fair and equitable compensation for employees based on their contribution and performance.
•
To support the continued development of our people, we employ talent reviews and succession planning, management training, and continuous skill development through various methods including our online learning and development platform.
•
We are committed to diversity, equity, and inclusion in all aspects of our business. In 2021, with the assistance of outside advisors, we built on our strong foundation by holding comprehensive training on DEI principles to further emphasize the importance and advance employee understanding of a diverse and inclusive workplace. We provide DEI training for employees across all levels.
•
We continue to focus on the hiring, retention, and advancement of women and underrepresented populations. As of December 31, 2022, approximately 28% of our global workforce was female, and approximately 43% of our U.S. employees were ethnically or racially diverse.
•
Our employee resource groups, including Women in Technology, Young Professionals and Asian Pacific Islander Community, are employee led and support an inclusive workplace environment.
|
|||||||
Employee Health and Safety |
•
Verisign is committed to maintaining a safe and healthy work environment. We take physical security and wellness seriously. We have policies prohibiting workplace violence, and our Physical Security Policy requires facilities to be secure from unauthorized individuals.
•
We employ access requirements and intrusion detection systems at our facilities.
•
To help protect physical health of employees and visitors, we have installed in our U.S. facilities UVC lights on our main air handling units and we use MERV 13 air filters, both of which help increase indoor air quality by eliminating certain particulates.
•
Verisign offers a comprehensive package of employee benefits that support physical, financial and mental wellness, including comprehensive healthcare benefits, disability leave, family leave, parental leave, 401k employer match, and others. We also make available a wellness service that offers resources and tools to support the mental and emotional health of employees and their families.
|
|||||||
Environmental Stewardship |
•
We engaged a third-party environmental expert to conduct a greenhouse gas emissions inventory and a Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) roadmap and qualitative analysis, which were both completed in Q1 2023.
•
Our Reston corporate offices are LEED Gold certified for commercial interiors. Our approach to environmental management focuses on areas where we can have the greatest direct impact.
•
We work actively to reduce our emissions and our reliance on fossil fuels in our data centers. For example, from 2020-2022, we have sourced at least 50% of the energy used to run our Delaware data center from renewable energy sources. We have implemented various process and system upgrades that help reduce the amount of energy needed to operate our data centers.
•
In our offices, we seek to minimize our environmental impact by encouraging recycling, using products made from recycled materials, and leveraging sustainable products. We have also upgraded various components of our HVAC systems to more energy efficient components with lower energy usage.
|
2023
Proxy Statement
|
27
|
Ethics and Compliance |
•
Our Audit Committee oversees the ethics and compliance program which is maintained by a Board-designated compliance officer. The compliance officer regularly updates the Audit Committee on program developments and related topics and meets with the Committee in executive session.
•
We regularly assess our ethics and compliance program through annual self-assessments and through periodic external assessments. In 2022, we commissioned an external assessment by compliance experts with deep experience assessing public company compliance programs, who found that our program is strong.
•
Our Code of Conduct, which is applicable to directors, executive officers, and employees, was found by the external assessors in 2022 to include many best-practice features, such as user-friendly language, helpful Q&A, and strong sections on speaking up and raising complaints. The Code represents our mission and values and outlines our approach to ethical conduct and compliance with legal and regulatory requirements, including non-retaliation, anti-corruption, and others.
•
Our directors and employees receive annual ethics and compliance training and certify their compliance with our Code of Conduct.
•
We maintain an ethics and compliance helpline through which employees or others can seek guidance or raise a concern confidentially and anonymously if desired. All reported concerns are reviewed and, as appropriate, investigated. Verisign has a strict non-retaliation policy to protect those that report wrongdoing in good faith.
|
|||||||
Privacy |
•
Protecting the privacy of people who use our systems and technology is central to our role as stewards of critical internet infrastructure. We do not collect domain name registrants’ information in our .com and .net. TLDs.
•
Most of the queries to our DNS systems are from recursive servers and not from individual internet users, which greatly minimizes the amount of potential personal information (PI) we receive when resolving DNS queries. The limited amount of PI we receive is handled in line with our privacy commitments.
•
Verisign does not monetize or share data of internet users, and we take steps to safeguard and limit any internet users’ data that comes into our possession.
•
Our commitment to privacy is also exemplified in specific technology we use and develop to minimize the PI we receive, such as a technology called qname minimization that allows resolution of DNS queries with only a limited portion of the query information. When employed in our resolution services, qname minimization greatly reduces the amount of information, including potential PI, that we receive from internet users. Verisign pioneered the qname minimization technology and we have granted a royalty-free license to the DNS community for this technology. Due to this arrangement, a majority of all DNS queries benefit from this privacy enhancement.
•
Our privacy program is led by our Global Privacy Officer. We have a public “Privacy Center” on our website where our Privacy Statement and related privacy commitments are located.
|
28
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
Responsible Sourcing and DNS Abuse Mitigation |
•
We have a Third-Party Code of Conduct which requires compliance with all laws, including anti-corruption, employment and labor laws (such as laws prohibiting discrimination, forced labor, unlawful child labor and other practices), and competition laws, among others.
•
Our commitment to human rights is reflected in our Code of Conduct, which prohibits human rights abuses in our business, and also prohibits employees from working with any third party who engages in human rights abuses, such as forced labor, unlawful child labor, unlawful discrimination, and human trafficking, among others.
•
We partner with governmental organizations such as Interpol, The U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and US Department of Justice and trusted organizations such as ICANN, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and the Internet Watch Foundation to address domain names known to be involved in DNS abuse and illegal activity, such as child sexual abuse material (CSAM), botnets, phishing, malware, illegal sale of opioids, and fraud.
•
We play an active role in operational security forums and collaborations in the industry focusing on mitigating DNS abuse, including the ICANN Anti-Phishing Working Group and the Messaging, Malware and Mobile Anti-Abuse Working Group.
|
|||||||
Risk Management |
•
See “Board Responsibilities-Risk Oversight” elsewhere in this Proxy Statement.
|
2023
Proxy Statement
|
29
|
Proposal 2 |
![]() |
FOR | The Board recommends a vote FOR the foregoing resolution. |
30
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
D. James Bidzos | Todd B. Strubbe | George E. Kilguss, III | Danny R. McPherson | Thomas C. Indelicarto | ||||||||||
Executive Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer |
President and Chief Operating Officer | Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer | Executive Vice President, Engineering, Operations and Chief Security Officer |
Executive Vice President,
General Counsel and Secretary |
OBJECTIVE
|
PROGRAM ELEMENT
|
|||||||
Attract and retain
talented executives
|
Provide a competitive level of total target compensation (base salary, bonus, and long-term incentive).
|
|||||||
Promote a pay for performance
philosophy based on both
Company performance and
individual contributions
|
Provide a compensation program that emphasizes incentives that are tied to annual and long-term financial and strategic goals. In addition, we may modify an individual executive’s annual incentive bonus up (subject to specified limitations) or down based on individual performance to more closely align executives’ personal accomplishments with their compensation.
|
|||||||
Align the interests of our
executives with our stockholders
|
Provide a significant portion of compensation that is aligned to the long-term value of our stock, including performance-based stock awards that are measured in part based on Total Shareholder Return (“TSR”). In addition, require executives to meet stock ownership guidelines and retain minimum stock ownership until six months after termination of employment.
|
Other key features of our current executive compensation program:
•
No employment contracts.
•
Change in control agreements contain a double trigger and do not provide for tax gross-ups.
•
No special pension plans, special retirement plans, or other significant perquisites for executives.
•
Same benefit programs as all other employees.
•
An incentive compensation recovery policy applicable to our NEOs that covers both cash and performance-based equity in the event of a materially inaccurate financial statement or an inaccurately measured performance metric criterion, with or without a restatement of our financial statements.
•
Forfeiture provisions in our equity awards such that unvested awards are generally forfeited upon a termination of employment (subject to limited exceptions for death, disability, and certain terminations related to a change in control).
•
An insider trading policy that prohibits any employee or director from shorting, hedging, or pledging our stock.
|
||||||||
2023
Proxy Statement
|
31
|
EXECUTIVE CHAIRMAN AND CEO PAY MIX AT TARGET
|
AVERAGE NE
Os
EXCLUDING CEO
PAY MIX AT TARGET
|
|||||||
![]() |
![]() |
|||||||
Total Performance-Based Compensation
1
= 92%
|
Total Average Performance-Based Compensation
1
= 86%
|
32
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
ELEMENT | OBJECTIVE | FACTORS | ||||||||||||
Base Salary | Provide a guaranteed level of fixed annual income in order to attract and retain our executive talent. Increases are not automatic or guaranteed. |
•
Job responsibilities and scope
•
Experience
•
Individual contributions
•
Internal pay alignment and peer and industry benchmarking
|
||||||||||||
Annual Incentive Bonus | Provide a reward for achieving individual goals and the Company’s financial and strategic goals. |
•
Company performance
•
Individual performance
•
Peer and industry benchmarking
|
||||||||||||
Long-Term Incentive Compensation
|
Provide an award that both serves a retention purpose and incentivizes executives to manage the Company from the perspective of a long-term stockholder. |
•
Importance of the executive to Company performance
•
Individual contributions
•
Future potential of the executive
•
Value of executive’s vested and unvested outstanding equity awards
•
Peer and industry benchmarking
|
2023
Proxy Statement
|
33
|
Akamai Technologies | Equinix | Nuance Communications | ||||||||||||
ANSYS | F5 Networks | Paychex | ||||||||||||
Autodesk | Factset Research Systems | Roper Technologies | ||||||||||||
Bread Financial (formerly Alliance Data Systems) | Fiserv | Synopsys | ||||||||||||
Broadridge Financial | Fortinet | Teradata | ||||||||||||
Cadence Design Systems | Global Payments | Verisk Analytics | ||||||||||||
Citrix Systems | Intuit |
34
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
NAME |
2021 BASE
SALARY
|
2022 BASE
SALARY
|
RATIONALE FOR ADJUSTMENT | |||||||||||||||||
D. James Bidzos | $925,000 | $950,000 | Mr. Bidzos received a salary increase to better align with peer group market data. | |||||||||||||||||
Todd B. Strubbe | $575,000 | $590,000 | Mr. Strubbe received a salary increase to better align with peer group market data. | |||||||||||||||||
George E. Kilguss, III | $530,000 | $550,000 | Mr. Kilguss received a salary increase to better align with peer group market data. | |||||||||||||||||
Danny R. McPherson |
N/A
(1)
|
$550,000 | ||||||||||||||||||
Thomas C. Indelicarto | $500,000 | $515,000 | Mr. Indelicarto received a salary increase to better align with peer group market data. |
NEOS |
2022 BONUS TARGET AS A
% OF BASE SALARY
|
|||||||
D. James Bidzos
|
150% | |||||||
Todd B. Strubbe
1
|
100% | |||||||
George E. Kilguss, III
2
|
95% | |||||||
Danny R. McPherson
3
|
95% | |||||||
Thomas Indelicarto
2
|
95% |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
35
|
METRIC |
THRESHOLD
(12.5% Funding)
|
TARGET
(50% Funding)
|
MAXIMUM
(87.5% Funding)
|
ADJUSTED
ACTUAL FUNDING |
||||||||||
Revenue
(in millions)
|
![]() |
35.2 | % | |||||||||||
Operating Margin |
![]() |
58.3 | % | |||||||||||
Total Funding | 93.5 | % |
NAME |
2022
BASE
SALARY
|
BONUS
TARGET
AS A % OF
BASE
SALARY
|
2022 ACTUAL BONUS PAYMENT
|
ACTUAL
PAYOUT
AS A % OF
BASE SALARY
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
FUNDING
MULTIPLIER
AS A % OF
TARGET
|
ACTUAL
PAYOUT
AS A % OF
TARGET
|
ACTUAL
PAYOUT
AMOUNT
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
D. James Bidzos
|
$950,000 | 150% | 93.5% | 93.5 | % | $1,332,375 | 140 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Todd B. Strubbe | $590,000 | 100% | 93.5% | 93.5 | % | $551,650 | 94 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
George E. Kilguss, III
|
$550,000 | 95% | 93.5% | 93.5 | % | $488,538 | 89 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Danny R. McPherson | $550,000 | 95% | 93.5% | 93.5 | % | $488,538 | 89 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Thomas C. Indelicarto | $515,000 | 95% | 93.5% | 93.5 | % | $457,449 | 89 | % |
36
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
2022 EQUITY GRANTS
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
NAME |
TOTAL MARKET VALUE
OF EQUITY GRANT
(1)
|
GRANT DATE
FAIR VALUE PER SHARE |
TIME-BASED RSUs
GRANTED
(2)
|
TARGET PSUs
GRANTED
(3)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
D. James Bidzos | $8,999,846 | 213.56 | 16,857 | 25,285 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Todd B. Strubbe | $3,499,821 | 213.56 | 8,194 | 8,194 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
George E. Kilguss, III | $2,799,772 | 213.56 | 6,555 | 6,555 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Danny R. McPherson
4
|
$2,799,943 |
211.17-213.56
4
|
6,566 | 6,566 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Thomas C. Indelicarto | $2,399,987 | 213.56 | 5,619 | 5,619 |
NAME |
TOTAL PSUs
GRANTED IN 2020 |
GOAL
ACHIEVEMENT |
ACTUAL PSUs EARNED AND
VESTED IN FEBRUARY 2023 |
|||||||||||||||||
D. James Bidzos | 22,591 | 100% | 22,591 | |||||||||||||||||
Todd B. Strubbe
1
|
7,290 | 100% | 7,290 | |||||||||||||||||
George E. Kilguss, III | 5,732 | 100% | 5,732 | |||||||||||||||||
Danny R. McPherson
2
|
3,157 | 100% | 3,157 | |||||||||||||||||
Thomas C. Indelicarto | 3,643 | 100% | 3,643 |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
37
|
38
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
This report is submitted by the Compensation Committee
|
|||||
Thomas F. Frist III
(Chairperson)
|
|||||
Courtney D. Armstrong | |||||
Jamie S. Gorelick | |||||
Timothy Tomlinson |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
39
|
NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICER
AND PRINCIPAL POSITION |
YEAR |
SALARY
($)
(1)
|
STOCK
AWARDS
($)
(2)
|
NON-EQUITY
INCENTIVE PLAN
COMPENSATION
($)
(3)
|
ALL OTHER
COMPENSATION
($)
(4)
|
TOTAL
($) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
D. James Bidzos | 2022 | 946,154 | 8,999,846 | 1,332,375 | 720 | 11,279,095 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Executive Chairman and | 2021 | 925,000 | 7,749,845 | 1,443,000 | 720 | 10,118,565 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Chief Executive Officer | 2020 | 960,577 | 7,749,705 | 1,387,500 | 720 | 10,098,502 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Todd B. Strubbe |
2022
|
587,692 | 3,499,821 | 551,650 | 10,970 | 4,650,133 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
President and Chief | 2021 | 573,462 | 2,999,991 | 568,100 | 10,470 | 4,152,023 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Operating Officer | 2020 | 586,731 | 2,999,396 | 536,750 | 10,470 | 4,133,347 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
George E. Kilguss, III |
2022
|
546,923 | 2,799,772 | 488,538 | 10,970 | 3,846,203 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Executive Vice President, | 2021 | 529,231 | 2,399,993 | 496,080 | 10,470 | 3,435,774 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Chief Financial Officer | 2020 | 545,192 | 2,359,635 | 472,500 | 10,470 | 3,387,797 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Danny R. McPherson | 2022 | 529,039 | 2,799,943 | 488,538 | 10,970 | 3,828,490 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Executive Vice President, | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Engineering, Operations and Chief Security Officer | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Thomas C. Indelicarto | 2022 | 512,692 | 2,399,987 | 457,449 | 720 | 3,370,848 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Executive Vice President, | 2021 | 493,846 | 1,799,995 | 468,000 | 710 | 2,762,551 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
General Counsel and Secretary | 2020 | 475,769 | 1,499,677 | 414,000 | 660 | 2,390,106 |
40
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
ESTIMATED FUTURE PAYOUTS UNDER
NON-EQUITY
INCENTIVE PLAN AWARDS
(1)
|
ESTIMATED FUTURE PAYOUTS
UNDER EQUITY INCENTIVE
PLAN AWARDS
|
ALL OTHER
STOCK
AWARDS:
NUMBER OF
SHARES OF
STOCK OR
UNITS
(#)
(3)
|
GRANT
DATE FAIR VALUE OF STOCK AND OPTION AWARDS ($) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
NAMED EXECUTIVE
OFFICER |
GRANT DATE
|
THRESHOLD
($) |
TARGET
($) |
MAXIMUM
($) |
THRESHOLD
(#)
(2)
|
TARGET
(#)
(2)
|
MAXIMUM
(#)
(2)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
D. James Bidzos | N/A | 356,250 | 1,425,000 | 2,493,750 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 12,643 | 25,285 | 50,570 | 5,399,865 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 16,857 | 3,599,981 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Todd B. Strubbe | N/A | 147,500 | 590,000 | 1,032,500 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 4097 | 8,194 | 16,388 | 1,749,911 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 8,194 | 1,749,911 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
George E. Kilguss, III | N/A | 130,625 | 522,500 | 914,375 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 3,278 | 6,555 | 13,110 | 1,399,886 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 6,555 | 1,399,886 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Danny R. McPherson | N/A | 130,625 | 522,500 | 914,375 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 2,810 | 5,619 | 11,238 | 1,199,994 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 5,619 | 1,199,994 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4/25/2022 | 474 | 947 | 1,894 | 199,978 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4/25/2022 | 947 | 199,978 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Thomas C. Indelicarto | N/A | 122,313 | 489,250 | 856,188 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 2,810 | 5,619 | 11,238 | 1,199,994 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 5,619 | 1,199,994 |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
41
|
STOCK AWARDS
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
NAMED
EXECUTIVE OFFICER |
GRANT
DATE |
NUMBER
OF SHARES
OR UNITS
OF STOCK
THAT
HAVE NOT
VESTED
(#)
(1)
|
MARKET
VALUE OF
SHARES OR
UNITS OF
STOCK THAT
HAVE NOT
VESTED
($)
(2)
|
EQUITY INCENTIVE
PLAN AWARDS:
NUMBER OF
UNEARNED
SHARES, UNITS
OR OTHER RIGHTS
THAT HAVE NOT
VESTED
(#)
|
EQUITY INCENTIVE
PLAN AWARDS:
MARKET OR
PAYOUT VALUE OF
UNEARNED SHARES,
UNITS OR OTHER
RIGHTS THAT HAVE
NOT VESTED
($)
(2)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
D. James Bidzos | 2/11/2019 | 1,026 | 210,781 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/2020 | 4,705 | 966,595 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/2020 | 22,591 |
(3)
|
4,641,095 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/16/2021 | 8,798 | 1,807,461 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/16/2021 | 23,467 |
(4)
|
4,821,060 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 16,857 | 3,463,102 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 25,285 |
(5)
|
5,194,550 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Todd B. Strubbe | 2/11/2019 | 505 | 103,747 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/2020 | 2,095 | 430,397 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/2020 | 6,704 |
(3)
|
1,377,270 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/11/2020 | 180 | 36,979 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/11/2020 |
|
586 |
(3)
|
120,388 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/16/2021 | 4,257 | 874,558 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/16/2021 | 7,570 |
(4)
|
1,555,181 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 8,194 | 1,683,375 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 8,194 |
(5)
|
1,683,375 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
George E. Kilguss, III | 2/11/2019 | 421 | 86,490 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/2020 | 1,790 | 367,738 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/2020 | 5,732 |
(3)
|
1,177,582 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/16/2021 | 3,404 | 699,318 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/16/2021 | 6,056 |
(4)
|
1,244,145 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 6,555 | 1,346,659 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 6,555 |
(5)
|
1,346,659 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Danny R. McPherson | 2/11/2019 | 219 | 44,991 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/2020 | 985 | 202,358 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/2020 | 3,157 |
(3)
|
648,574 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/16/2021 | 2,376 | 488,125 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/16/2021 | 4,226 |
(4)
|
868,189 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 5,619 | 1,154,367 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 5,619 |
(5)
|
1,154,367 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4/25/2022 | 947 | 194,552 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
4/25/2022 | 947 |
(5)
|
194,552 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Thomas C. Indelicarto | 2/11/2019 | 256 | 52,593 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/2020 | 1,136 | 233,380 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/10/2020 | 3,643 |
(3)
|
748,418 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/16/2021 | 2,554 | 524,694 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/16/2021 | 4,542 |
(4)
|
933,108 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 5,619 | 1,154,367 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/14/2022 | 5,619 |
(5)
|
1,154,367 |
42
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
STOCK AWARDS | ||||||||||||||
NAME |
NUMBER OF
SHARES
ACQUIRED ON
VESTING (#)
|
VALUE
REALIZED ON
VESTING ($)
(1)
|
||||||||||||
D. James Bidzos | 29,349 | 5,995,547 | ||||||||||||
Todd B. Strubbe | 12,226 | 2,489,430 | ||||||||||||
George E. Kilguss, III | 9,962 | 2,028,720 | ||||||||||||
Danny McPherson | 6,069 | 1,236,755 | ||||||||||||
Thomas C. Indelicarto | 6,494 | 1,322,620 |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
43
|
44
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
TERMINATION AND CHANGE IN CONTROL BENEFIT ESTIMATES AS OF DECEMBER 31,
2022
|
VALUE OF CASH AND CONTINUED
HEALTH BENEFITS ($)
(1)
|
VALUE OF ACCELERATED
STOCK AWARDS ($)
|
|||||||||||||
NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICER |
CHANGE IN CONTROL
PLUS QUALIFYING
TERMINATION
|
DEATH, DISABILITY OR
CHANGE IN CONTROL
PLUS QUALIFYING
TERMINATION
(2)(3)
|
||||||||||||
D. James Bidzos | 6,136,891 | 21,104,646 | ||||||||||||
Todd B. Strubbe | 1,748,442 | 7,865,270 | ||||||||||||
George E. Kilguss, III | 1,579,373 | 6,268,591 | ||||||||||||
Danny R. McPherson | 1,532,057 | 4,950,077 | ||||||||||||
Thomas C. Indelicarto | 1,471,540 | 4,800,927 |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
45
|
EQUITY COMPENSATION PLAN INFORMATION | ||||||||||||||||||||
(A) | (B) | (C) | ||||||||||||||||||
PLAN CATEGORY |
NUMBER OF SECURITIES
TO BE ISSUED UPON EXERCISE
OF OUTSTANDING OPTIONS,
WARRANTS AND RIGHTS
(1)
|
WEIGHTED-AVERAGE
EXERCISE PRICE OF
OUTSTANDING OPTIONS,
WARRANTS AND RIGHTS
|
NUMBER OF SECURITIES
REMAINING AVAILABLE
FOR FUTURE ISSUANCE
UNDER EQUITY
COMPENSATION PLANS
(EXCLUDING SECURITIES
REFLECTED IN COLUMN (A))
|
|||||||||||||||||
Equity compensation plans approved by stockholders
(2)
|
628,073 | $0.00 |
10,095,998
(3)
|
|||||||||||||||||
Equity compensation plans not approved by stockholders | — | $ — | — | |||||||||||||||||
Total | 628,073 | $0.00 | 10,095,998 |
46
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
YEAR |
SUMMARY
COMPENSATION
TABLE TOTAL
FOR PEO ($)
(1)
|
COMPENSATION
ACTUALLY PAID
TO PEO ($)
(1)(2)
|
AVERAGE
SUMMARY
COMPENSATION
TABLE TOTAL
FOR NON-PEO
NAMED
EXECUTIVE
OFFICERS ($)
(1)
|
AVERAGE
COMPENSATION
ACTUALLY PAID
TO NON-PEO
NAMED
EXECUTIVE
OFFICERS ($)
(1)(2)
|
VALUE OF INITIAL FIXED $100
INVESTMENT BASED ON: |
NET INCOME
($ MILLIONS) |
COMPANY
SELECTED MEASURE |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
TOTAL
SHAREHOLDER RETURN ($) |
PEER GROUP
TOTAL
SHAREHOLDER
RETURN ($)
(3)
|
OPERATING
INCOME ($ MILLIONS) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2022 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2021 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2020 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(4)
|
SUMMARY
COMPENSATION TABLE TOTAL ($) |
DEDUCT SUMMARY
COMPENSATION TABLE STOCK AWARDS ($) |
ADD YEAR-END VALUE
OF UNVESTED EQUITY GRANTED IN YEAR ($) |
ADD CHANGE IN
VALUE OF UNVESTED EQUITY GRANTED IN PRIOR YEARS ($) |
ADD CHANGE IN
VALUE OF VESTED EQUITY GRANTED IN PRIOR YEARS ($) |
COMPENSATION
ACTUALLY PAID |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
PEO | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2022 |
|
(
|
|
(
|
(
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2021 |
|
(
|
|
|
(
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2020 |
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AVERAGE NON-PEO NEO | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2022 |
|
(
|
|
(
|
(
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2021 |
|
(
|
|
|
(
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2020 |
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
2023
Proxy Statement
|
47
|
METRIC | ||
|
||
|
||
|
48
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
ANNUAL CASH RETAINER | ||||||||||||||
Non-Employee Director | $40,000 | |||||||||||||
ADDITIONAL CASH RETAINERS | ||||||||||||||
Non-Executive Chairman of the Board
(1)
|
$100,000 | |||||||||||||
Lead Independent Director | $25,000 | |||||||||||||
Safety and Security Council Liaison
|
$25,000 | |||||||||||||
ADDITIONAL CASH RETAINERS FOR COMMITTEE SERVICE | CHAIRPERSON | MEMBER | ||||||||||||
Audit | $15,000 | $25,000 | ||||||||||||
Compensation | $10,000 | $20,000 | ||||||||||||
Corporate Governance and Nominating | $10,000 | $10,000 | ||||||||||||
Cybersecurity
|
$10,000 | $20,000 |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
49
|
NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTOR NAME |
FEES EARNED OR
PAID IN CASH
($)
(1)
|
STOCK
AWARDS
($)
(2)
|
TOTAL
($)
|
|||||||||||||||||
Courtney D. Armstrong | 50,000 | 249,843 | 299,843 | |||||||||||||||||
Yehuda Ari Buchalter | 70,000 | 249,843 | 319,843 | |||||||||||||||||
Kathleen A. Cote | 85,000 | 249,843 | 334,843 | |||||||||||||||||
Thomas F. Frist III
(3)
|
78,750 | 249,843 | 328,593 | |||||||||||||||||
Jamie S. Gorelick | 70,000 | 249,843 | 319,843 | |||||||||||||||||
Roger H. Moore
(4)
|
151,875 | 249,843 | 401,718 | |||||||||||||||||
Louis A. Simpson
(5)
|
26,250 | — | 26,250 | |||||||||||||||||
Timothy Tomlinson | 130,000 | 249,843 | 379,843 |
50
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
Proposal 3 |
![]() |
ONE YEAR | The Board recommends a vote for every ONE YEAR on the frequency of future votes to approve executive compensation. |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
51
|
Proposal 4 |
![]() |
FOR |
The Board recommends a vote FOR this proposal.
|
2022 FEES
|
2021 FEES
|
|||||||||||||
Audit fees
(1)
|
$ | 1,815,926 | $ | 1,986,852 | ||||||||||
Audit-related fees | – | – | ||||||||||||
Tax fees | – | – | ||||||||||||
All other fees
(2)
|
16,500 | – | ||||||||||||
Total fees | $ | 1,832,426 | $ | 1,986,852 |
52
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
This report is submitted by the Audit Committee | |||||
Timothy Tomlinson
(Chairperson)
|
|||||
Kathleen A. Cote
|
|||||
Roger H. Moore
|
2023
Proxy Statement
|
53
|
Proposal 5 |
Proposal 5 - Independent Board Chairman
![]()
Shareholders request that the Board of Directors adopt an enduring policy, and amend the governing documents as necessary in order that 2 separate people hold the office of the Chairman and the office of the CEO.
Whenever possible, the Chairman of the Board shall be an Independent Director.
The Board has the discretion to select a Temporary Chairman of the Board who is not an Independent Director to serve while the Board is seeking an Independent Chairman of the Board on an accelerated basis.
It is a best practice to adopt this policy soon. However this policy could be phased in when there is a contract renewal for our current CEO or for the next CEO transition.
A Lead Director is no substitute for an independent Board Chairman. According to the 2022 VeriSign annual meeting proxy the VRSN Lead Director lacks in having exclusive powers. For instance some of the limited duties may mostly require only Lead Director approvals, which might be done on short notice after the vast majority of work is done by others, and some of these powers are shared with others:
•
Serving as liaison between the Chairman and the independent directors. (A task shared with others.)
•
Working with the Chairman to facilitate timely and appropriate information flow to the Board. (Could be all be done in the hour before a Board meeting after the vast majority of work is done by others.)
•
Reviewing and approving agendas and schedules for meetings of the Board. (Could be all be done in the hour before a Board meeting after the vast majority of work is done by others.)
Plus management fails to give shareholders enough information on this topic to make a more informed decision. There is no comparison of the exclusive powers of the Office of the Chairman and the exclusive powers of the Lead Director.
VeriSign's so-called Lead Director is Mr. Roger Moore, age 81, who seems to have strong links to VeriSign management which runs contrary to an oversight role. Mr. Moore was CEO of a company acquired by VeriSign in 2001. Mr. Moore previously consulted for VeriSign perhaps part-time for 2-years. Mr. Moore seems to have had a day job of a few months in 2007 and does not seem to have had a day job since 2007. Mr. Moore received by far the most against vote of any VeriSign director in 2022.
Please vote yes:
Independent Board Chairman - Proposal 5
|
||
54
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
55
|
![]() |
AGAINST | The Board recommends a vote AGAINST this stockholder proposal. |
56
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP TABLE |
SHARES
BENEFICIALLY OWNED
|
||||||||||||||
NAME AND ADDRESS OF BENEFICIAL OWNER |
NUMBER
(1)
|
PERCENT
(1)
|
||||||||||||
Greater Than 5% Stockholders | ||||||||||||||
Warren Buffett
(2)
|
12,815,613 | 12.28 | % | |||||||||||
Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. | ||||||||||||||
3555 Farnam Street | ||||||||||||||
Omaha, NE 68131 | ||||||||||||||
The Vanguard Group
(3)
|
10,391,118 | 9.96 | % | |||||||||||
100 Vanguard Boulevard | ||||||||||||||
Malvern, PA 19355 | ||||||||||||||
BlackRock, Inc.
(4)
|
8,564,188 | 8.21 | % | |||||||||||
55 East 52nd Street | ||||||||||||||
New York, NY 10055 | ||||||||||||||
Directors and Named Executive Officers | ||||||||||||||
D. James Bidzos
(5
)
|
617,767 | * | ||||||||||||
Courtney D. Armstrong | 2,567 | * | ||||||||||||
Yehuda Ari Buchalter | 3,349 | * | ||||||||||||
Kathleen A. Cote | 28,759 | * | ||||||||||||
Thomas F. Frist III | 13,631 | * | ||||||||||||
Jamie S. Gorelick | 18,728 | * | ||||||||||||
Roger H. Moore | 42,215 | * | ||||||||||||
Timothy Tomlinson
(6)
|
15,000 | * | ||||||||||||
Todd B. Strubbe
(7)
|
101,344 | * | ||||||||||||
George E. Kilguss, III
(8)
|
90,812 | * | ||||||||||||
Danny R. McPherson
(9)
|
13,009 | * | ||||||||||||
Thomas C. Indelicarto
(10)
|
31,140 | * | ||||||||||||
All current directors and Executive Officers as a group (12 persons)
(11)
|
978,321 | * |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
57
|
58
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
59
|
60
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
61
|
62
|
VeriSign, Inc. |
2023
Proxy Statement
|
63
|
No information found
* THE VALUE IS THE MARKET VALUE AS OF THE LAST DAY OF THE QUARTER FOR WHICH THE 13F WAS FILED.
FUND | NUMBER OF SHARES | VALUE ($) | PUT OR CALL |
---|
DIRECTORS | AGE | BIO | OTHER DIRECTOR MEMBERSHIPS |
---|
No information found
Customers
Customer name | Ticker |
---|---|
Anthem, Inc. | ANTM |
No Suppliers Found
Price
Yield
Owner | Position | Direct Shares | Indirect Shares |
---|