Definitive Additional Materials

UNITED STATES

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SCHEDULE 14A

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AUTODESK, INC.

 

(Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)

 

 

 

  

 

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Dear Stockholder:

We are writing to ask for your support at Autodesk’s Annual Meeting of Stockholders with respect to Proposal 3, Non-Binding Vote to Approve Named Executive Compensation (Say on Pay). As you may be aware, Institutional Shareholder Services (“ISS”) and Glass-Lewis have recommended a vote against this proposal. We strongly disagree with ISS’ and Glass Lewis’ recommendations, as well as the underlying methodology used in each report, however, for the sake of brevity and because many of our objections are similar, we focus here solely on the ISS report1.

The reasons we disagree with ISS are summarized and then described in more detail below:

 

   

ISS’ Pay for Performance methodology is flawed

 

   

ISS over-inflates the valuation of stock-based compensation

 

   

ISS confuses timing of equity decisions — Equity grants made in March 2011 were based on operational performance in fiscal 2011. ISS is analyzing March 2011 pay against January 31, 2012 performance results

 

   

Realizable pay provides a more realistic metric for measuring pay for performance by measuring actual gains from equity awards and bonus payouts as of a specific date

 

   

ISS uses a flawed peer group

 

   

With their 2012 recommendation, ISS creates a new peer group and contradicts their published 2011 view that Autodesk’s peer group was of “Low Concern”

 

   

Autodesk satisfies all 2012 Pay for Performance criteria when using Autodesk’s own defined peer group (instead of using ISS’ flawed 2012 peer group)

 

   

Autodesk maintains strong compensation governance and practices

 

   

Autodesk made meaningful changes for fiscal year 2013 in response to Say on Pay feedback from stockholders, including performance stock units and mandatory holding requirements for the Board and executives

 

   

Autodesk’s operating performance (which ISS ignores) is disconnected from its stock performance. In fiscal year 2012 Autodesk made significant progress toward achieving its current long-term operating goals and other financial metrics. Despite that progress, the stock price declined during the year.

 

   

Fiscal-year 2012 financial highlights

 

   

Revenue growth of 14% year-over-year

 

   

GAAP operating margin increased 210 basis points to 16% compared to 14% in fiscal 2011. Non-GAAP operating margin increased 260 basis points to 24% compared to 21% in fiscal 2011

 

   

GAAP diluted EPS increased 36% to $1.22 compared to $0.90 in fiscal year 2011. Non-GAAP diluted EPS increased 32% to $1.74, compared to $1.32 in fiscal year 2011

 

   

Despite the above strong fiscal year 2012 financial results, ADSK declined 15% from the first trading day of fiscal year 2012 to the last trading day of fiscal year 2012

 

1. ISS’ “Pay for Performance” methodology is flawed.

 

   

ISS’ valuation of stock-based compensation is over-inflated

 

   

ISS uses a proprietary Black-Scholes calculation (not the ASC718 grant date fair value numbers disclosed in our Summary Compensation Table or realizable pay), which models a 10-year term for stock options. Autodesk’s accounting model uses 3.7 years, which is our historical average time from stock option grant to exercise. The ISS model calculates CEO stock-based option compensation at $8,289,000. Using Autodesk’s assumptions, which are based on historic data (and we believe are more reasonable), the value of our CEO’s stock options is $4,386,870. ISS’ near doubling of the estimate value of the CEO stock option grant is due to differences in Black-Scholes assumptions.

 

   

Performance/Award Timing Disconnect

 

   

Autodesk has historically made decisions about annual stock awards (along with bonus payouts and salary increases) to our executives at its March quarterly Compensation Committee meeting. The March meeting is the first meeting following the close of the prior fiscal year. As a result, the frame of reference used by the Committee in its determinations is performance during the prior fiscal year.


In fiscal year 2012, the Compensation Committee considered Autodesk’s financial performance in fiscal year 2011, which exceeded our business plan for the year:

 

    

Fiscal 2010

   

Fiscal 2011

   

Growth

 

Revenue (in millions)

   $ 1,714      $ 1,952        14

GAAP Operating Margin

     4     14     over 1,000 basis points   

Non-GAAP Operating Margin

     17     21     480 basis points   

GAAP diluted EPS

   $ 0.25      $ 0.90        263

Non-GAAP diluted EPS

   $ 0.99      $ 1.32        33

ADSK stock price

   $ 23.81      $ 40.68        71

The Compensation Committee was also aware of the strong stock price growth (71%), which continued after year end, increasing an additional 7.7% to $43.81 in the 1-1/2 month period from fiscal year 2011 year-end to the March Committee meeting.

At its March 2012 meeting, the Committee made its fiscal year 2012 compensation decisions against this backdrop of Autodesk’s strong financial, operational and stock performance,

In contrast, ISS uses a frame of reference for Autodesk’s performance at the end of fiscal year 2012. From this view point, company financial operating performance was again strong (with growth in revenue, non-GAAP income from operations and non-GAAP operating margin each exceeding our business plans for fiscal 2012, which is acknowledged by ISS in their report page 11). Our stock price was also strong through to the middle of the year as mentioned above (reaching a high closing price of $45.99/share). In the second half of the year the stock was adversely impacted by external macroeconomic market factors unrelated to the Company’s performance. Autodesk’s stock closed down 15% for fiscal 2012.

Autodesk believes a better metric to measure executive compensation is “Realizable Pay”. ISS does not incorporate this methodology.

 

   

ISS utilizes “grant date estimates” to measure equity compensation. We believe, however, that when evaluating the value of equity, it is critical to focus instead on “realizable pay,” which may increase or decrease as the Company’s stock price rises and falls.

 

   

At an extreme, stock options which expire “out of the money” (that is, without the stock price having increased from the date of grant) would in fact expire with no value at all. The ISS methodology allocates to one year (the year of grant) a lump sum amount based on the option’s grant value for accounting purposes, an amount which is (a) potentially vastly overstated; and (b) allocated in a lump sum to a single year prior to the year (if any) that any value is or can be realized.

The picture that becomes clear when performance and realizable pay are examined is quite different than that portrayed by ISS. For example, when realizable pay is compared to total shareholder return for both the Autodesk defined peer group and the ISS peer group over a 3-year period (the same period required by the SEC for disclosure in our proxy), there is clear alignment between the compensation of our CEO and Autodesk’s stock performance, as shown below:

Autodesk Defined Peer Group

 

LOGO

Vertical axis (Performance): Percentile ranking stock price performance on a point to point basis using stock price increase/decrease from 1/31/09 to 1/31/12 for each company (e.g. Autodesk: $16.56 on 1/31/09 to $36.00 on 1/31/12). Each data point represents the percentile ranking of each company vs. the array of peers.

Horizontal axis (3-year realizable pay): Percentile ranking of total realizable compensation for the 3 fiscal years (most recent) based on actual cash compensation paid and value of equity grants based upon a 1/31/12 stock price. RSUs valued at 1/31/12 stock price, options valued at gain based upon 1/31/12 stock price and performance shares at target.


ISS Peer Group

 

LOGO

Vertical axis (Performance): Percentile ranking stock price performance on a point to point basis using stock price increase/decrease from 1/31/09 to 1/31/12 for each company (e.g. Autodesk: $16.56 on 1/31/09 to $36.00 on 1/31/12). Each data point represents the percentile ranking of each company vs. the array of peers.

Horizontal axis (3-year realizable pay): Percentile ranking of total realizable compensation for the 3 fiscal years (most recent) based on actual cash compensation paid and value of equity grants based upon a 1/31/12 stock price. RSUs valued at 1/31/12 stock price, options valued at gain based upon 1/31/12 stock price and performance shares at target.

 

2. ISS’ peer group analysis is flawed and contradicts their stated “Low Concern” in fiscal 2011 for this exact same Autodesk defined peer group.

 

   

Autodesk’s defined peer group more accurately represents the industry and executive talent market in which the Company competes:

 

   

The Compensation Committee and its independent compensation advisory consultants annually review the peer group to ensure it represents the talent market in which Autodesk operates

 

   

Autodesk’s principal talent market consists of technology companies that are either software companies or companies that compete in the San Francisco Bay Area for executive talent

 

   

ISS relies solely on a GICS code to determine peers rather than factoring in other key variables that make a peer group representative. A majority (56%) of the ISS identified peers are located outside the San Francisco Bay Area

 

   

The Company’s defined peer group has a significant concentration of companies (67%) located in the San Francisco Bay Area

 

   

If ISS had used the Company’s defined peer group, which was developed with broad consideration of the industry and geographic competition for talent, ISS’ Pay for Performance analysis would have resulted in the following:

 

   

Relative Degrees of Alignment (RDA): “Medium Concern”

 

   

Multiple of Median (MOM): “Low Concern”

 

   

Pay-TSR Alignment (PTA): “Low Concern”

 

   

Overall level of concern: “Low Concern”


   

ISS identifies “problematic benchmarking practices” in their report yet in 2010 they did not comment at all, and in 2011 Autodesk benchmarking practices were of “low concern”

 

3. Autodesk maintains strong compensation governance and practices

In 2011, our Say on Pay proposal received a significant majority of support - 84% approval. However, in response to the Say on Pay vote at our 2011 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, as well as ongoing stockholder outreach efforts, we made meaningful changes to our fiscal year 2013 executive compensation programs in order to provide even better alignment between executive pay and performance, including:

 

   

Increasing the proportion of the overall equity award delivered through performance-based equity vehicles

 

   

Our stockholders approved the 2012 Employee Stock Plan and we intend to move forward with a philosophy of using restricted stock units (RSUs) and performance stock units as a vehicle for long-term incentives

 

   

Beginning in fiscal year 2013, half of the equity awards granted to company officers, including our executive officers, consist of performance stock units awards linked to revenue growth and operating margin with the other half consisting of time-based restricted stock unit awards

 

   

We have implemented stock ownership guidelines for both executive officers and members of the Board of Directors:

 

   

CEO – 100,000 shares

 

   

Executive Vice President – 30,000 shares

 

   

Senior Vice President – 15,000 shares

 

   

Board of Directors – 10,000 shares

ISS gives Autodesk no credit in its qualitative assessment for proactively implementing those program improvements derived from communication with our stockholders. However, we believe these changes will continue to improve our pay for performance orientation through fiscal year 2013, will directly address the stockholder feedback we received during our prior outreach efforts, and will result in a significantly improved score under certain of the quantitative tests applied by ISS.

Current Autodesk compensation “best practices”:

 

   

Pay-For-Performance: We emphasize variable compensation balanced between annual and long-term performance (89% of fiscal 2012 Named Executive Officer compensation was variable).

 

   

Long-Term Performance Orientation: The majority of Named Executive Officer compensation (78% in fiscal 2012) is based on the long term performance of the Company.

 

   

Significant Stock Ownership: We have implemented mandatory stock holding requirements for our Named Executive Officers as of fiscal 2013 and annually monitor ownership progress.

 

   

Independent Compensation Practices: Our compensation policy for our Named Executive Officers is determined by our independent Compensation Committee, which is informed by an independent compensation advisory consultant.

 

   

Effective Risk Management: We employ a strong risk management program with specific responsibilities assigned to management, the Board, and the Board’s committees, in addition, we have a “no-hedging” policy in our insider trading policy.

 

   

Relevant Benchmarking: The companies used to benchmark competitive compensation practices are reviewed each year, with adjustments made periodically to rebalance the group and improve its appropriateness, and supplements the use of survey data.

 

   

Multi-year Equity Grant Vesting: Equity grants, stock options and restricted stock units (“RSUs”), typically have vesting periods of three years or more.


Compensation Practices we avoid:

 

   

No “Single Trigger” Severance or Change in Control Gross-Ups: The change in control program for our Named Executive Officers and other executive officers requires both a change in control of the Company and termination of employment (“double trigger”) and does not provide any tax “gross-up” payments.

 

   

No Option Re-Pricing: Re-pricing of stock grants is prohibited without explicit stockholder approval.

 

   

No Executive Benefits and Limited Perquisites: We do not, as a general practice, provide material benefits or special considerations to our executive officers that we do not provide to other employees.

 

4. Autodesk’s operating performance is disconnected with our stock performance

In fiscal year 2012, Autodesk delivered strong financial results. However, Autodesk’s stock declined 15% from the first trading day of fiscal year 2012 to the last trading day of fiscal year 2012, which was impacted by external macroeconomic market factors unrelated to the Company’s performance.

 

    

Fiscal 2011

   

Fiscal 2012

   

Growth

 

Revenue (in millions)

   $ 1,952      $ 2,216        14

GAAP Operating Margin

     14     16     210 basis points   

Non-GAAP Operating Margin

     21     24     260 basis points   

GAAP diluted EPS

   $ 0.90      $ 1.22        36

Non-GAAP diluted EPS

   $ 1.32      $ 1.74        32

ADSK stock price

   $ 42.16      $ 36.00        -15

As shown below, for example, quarterly EPS increased consistently though fiscal year 2012 and yet the stock price did not follow.

 

LOGO

 

   

In the ISS report (page 11), they recognize the Company’s financial performance and operating targets as “rigorous” and “show improvement in operational performance”

 

   

In fiscal year 2012 we made significant progress toward achieving our current long-term operating goals and other financial metrics, and yet the stock price declined

 

   

Our current long-term operating goals are growing revenue by a compounded annual growth rate of 12-14% (capturing fiscal 2011 through fiscal 2015) and expanding our non-GAAP operating margin to at least 30%


   

In fiscal year 2012 Autodesk’s revenue grew 14%; GAAP operating margins increased 210 basis points to 16%; and non-GAAP operating margins increased by 260 basis points to 24%, compared to fiscal-year 2011

 

   

Non-GAAP diluted earnings per share increased 32% in fiscal year 2012, compared to fiscal year 2011

 

   

We continued to strengthen the balance sheet with deferred revenue growing 22%, cash and marketable securities growing 9% to approximately $1.6 billion, and no debt

 

   

ADSK stock declined 15%

 

LOGO

We recommend that you vote “FOR” the approval of Proposal 3

Autodesk is committed to aligning our executive compensation program with the interests of our stockholders. Demonstrating this commitment, our cash compensation and equity awards for many years have been tied to our financial performance, as reflected by our payouts in recent years. Recent company financial performance exceeded expectations (which again, ISS called “rigorous”) and our actual compensation aligns with our performance. Further, the realizable value of our equity compensation awards is subject to fluctuations in our stock price – thereby strongly aligning the interests of our executive officers with our stockholders.

With these facts in mind, we are committed to continuing to undertake specific stockholder engagement efforts to obtain feedback about our executive compensation practices and welcome your feedback about our program. Autodesk urges our stockholders to cast an advisory vote “FOR” Proposal 3 (Say on Pay) and to continue to work with us to refine our executive compensation programs to best align pay with performance.

 

1 

We have similar and related disagreements with Glass-Lewis’ methodology, degree of transparency, findings and conclusions in terms of executive equity grant valuation, peer group selection, performance analysis.


Appendix

GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliation of operating margin

 

     FY 2008     FY 2009     FY 2010     FY 2011     FY 2012  

GAAP Operating Margin

     21     11     4     14     16

Stock-based compensation expense

     5     4     5     4     5

Amortization of purchased intangibles

     1     2     4     3     3

Restructuring

     0     2     3     0     0

Impairment of goodwill and intangibles

     0     5     1     0     0

IPR&D

     0     1     0     0     0

Non-GAAP Operating Margin

     27     25     17     21     24

Reconciliation for Long Term Operating Margins:

Autodesk is not able to provide targets for our long term (ending with fiscal year 2015) GAAP operating margins at this time because of the difficulty of estimating certain items that are excluded from non-GAAP that affect operating margin, such as charges related to stock-based compensation expense and amortization of acquisition related intangibles, the effect of which may be significant.

GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliation of EPS

 

     Fiscal 2010     Fiscal 2011  

GAAP EPS

   $ 0.25      $ 0.90   

Stock-based compensation expense

   $ 0.40      $ 0.34   

Amortization of developed technology

   $ 0.14      $ 0.14   

Amortization of customer relationships and trade names

   $ 0.11      $ 0.10   

Impairment goodwill

   $ 0.09        —     

Restructuring charges

   $ 0.21      $ 0.05   

Establishment of valuation allowance on deferred tax assets

   $ 0.09        —     

Discreet GAAP tax provision items (1)

   $ (0.04   $ (0.03

Income tax effect of non-GAAP adjustments

   $ (0.26   $ (0.18
  

 

 

   

 

 

 

Non-GAAP diluted net income per share

   $ 0.99      $ 1.32   
  

 

 

   

 

 

 

GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliation of EPS

 

     Fiscal 2011     Fiscal 2012  

GAAP EPS

   $ 0.90      $ 1.22   

Stock-based compensation expense

   $ 0.34      $ 0.47   

Amortization of developed technology

   $ 0.14      $ 0.16   

Amortization of customer relationships and trade names

   $ 0.10      $ 0.14   

Restructuring charges

   $ 0.05      $ (0.01

Discreet GAAP tax provision items (1)

   $ (0.03   $ (0.03

Income tax effect of non-GAAP adjustments

   $ (0.18   $ (0.21
  

 

 

   

 

 

 

Non-GAAP diluted net income per share

   $ 1.32      $ 1.74