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On-demand webinar: Bringing structure to startup compensation at Luminovo

For many growing startups and scaleups, managing compensation evolves from simple case-by-case decisions to something requiring more structure, consistency, and scalability.

But when is the right time to focus on compensation structure? What are the foundations needed? And how do you roll out these changes in a way that builds trust with your team?

For our Reward Community Office Hours in April 2025, Ravio's Chief People Officer Vaso Parisinou was joined by Hannah Reif, People Lead at Luminovo, who shared her journey of building a compensation structure at the growing tech company.

Catch up with the on-demand video recording, and a summary of key takeaways.

Access the webinar recording on-demand

Webinar summary

If you're more of a reader than a watcher, here's a summary of the key takeaways and insights shared by Hannah during the webinar.

Key takeaway 1: Start early but keep it simple

Both speakers emphasised that introducing compensation structures shouldn't wait until the pain of adhoc decision-making becomes unbearable.

Hannah shared that at Luminovo, the need for more structure became apparent around the 30-40 employee mark, when compensation decisions were taking up significant headspace for founders and managers, and employees were experiencing uncertainty about why their salary was what it was.

The speakers emphasised that starting early allows your managers and people to grow with the structure, and for the structure to evolve over time. 

"From my own perspective, I don’t have the capacity to look after compensation decisions for our entire team,” explained Hannah. “If I can put the principles in place and equip managers to handle new hire offers and progression conversations then it’s much more efficient.”

However, they also cautioned against over-engineering compensation. Especially for early-stage startups, keeping it simple and iterating as you scale is key.

"Get the basics right first and then extend over time. So for instance, if you make sure you’re paying at or above the market rate, you don’t need to overthink your benefits package too much to begin with.”

Hannah Reif, People Lead at Luminovo

Hannah Reif

People Lead at Luminovo

💡 Practical steps to get started with compensation structure:

  • Identify the pain points in your current approach
  • Research compensation philosophies and structures
  • Define your company's compensation principles
  • Start with a leveling framework before adding salary ranges.

Key takeaway 2: Data builds credibility and enables transparency

Data plays a crucial role in creating an effective compensation structure – both external benchmarking data and internal analytics.

Hannah emphasised that using a reliable compensation data provider to benchmark against the market adds credibility to your compensation plan, builds trust in the packages you offer, and equips managers to explain decisions to their teams.

"Good data is very difficult to argue with," Vaso noted. "If you're able to present a dataset that is complete and taken from companies that we lose talent to or want to hire from, it's much harder for someone to say 'that's not what my friend said the salary should be.'"

💡 Advice on how to use data in your compensation strategy:

  • Use external benchmarking data to understand competitive market rates – and decide how you want to position yourself against that
  • Leverage internal data to identify patterns, potential inequities to fix, and cost projections
  • Share appropriate data with managers and employees to build trust and understanding
  • Use data visualisation to tell compelling stories about your compensation approach.

Key takeaway 3: Levelling frameworks create clarity and consistency

Creating a strong levelling framework emerged as the essential foundation for any compensation structure.

Hannah explained how Luminovo built a framework with levels and sublevels (.1 new, .2 established, .3 advanced) that provided clear progression paths for employees. 

Having this structure in place is a vital starting point, because it makes it simple to:

  • Benchmark roles consistently
  • Explain where someone sits in their career journey
  • Show clear paths for growth and advancement
  • Align compensation decisions with performance and progression

The speakers stressed that a good leveling framework isn't about creating a complex hierarchy but rather providing clarity about what's expected at each stage of someone's career.

💡 Building an effective leveling framework:

  • Start with clear definitions for what each level means in terms of responsibility, impact, and skills – at Luminovo Hannah uses a ‘3 Cs’ approach of competency, consistency, and comfort to assess level placement
  • Create role-specific interpretations of the framework for each function to bring clarity to growth and progression conversations.

Key takeaway 4: Transparency builds trust and operational efficiency

A consistent theme throughout the webinar was the value of transparency in compensation structures.

Hannah took a notably transparent approach when implementing a new approach to compensation at Luminovo, showing employees:

  • The compensation philosophy and how compensation packages are determined
  • The full leveling framework
  • Compensation ranges for their role
  • Clear criteria for progression

Hannah noted that this transparency led to fewer questions and challenges than anticipated.

"I was surprised that there were very few critical questions when I presented the new approach to the team,” she notes. “One important factor that built confidence was sharing the benchmarking tools we were using, the other companies that rely on that data, how we use the market data to make our own compensation competitive, and why that approach is right for us.”

"If you are confident about your approach and you have answered all the 'why' questions, then personally I think there's no reason to keep compensation information from an employee. If we are sure about this, why are we keeping it a secret?"

Hannah Reif, People Lead at Luminovo

Hannah Reif

People Lead at Luminovo

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