def14a
SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment
No. )
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Filed by the Registrant x |
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant o |
Check the appropriate box:
o Preliminary Proxy
Statement
x Definitive Proxy
Statement
o Definitive Additional
Materials
o Soliciting Material
Pursuant to §240.14a-11(c) or §240.14a-12
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Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by
Rule 14a-6(e)(2)) |
Progress Software Corporation
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
Progress Software Corporation
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement)
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
o Fee computed on table
below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.
1) Title of each
class of securities to which transaction applies:
2) Aggregate
number of securities to which transaction applies:
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3) |
Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed
pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (Set forth the
amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it
was determined): |
4) Proposed
maximum aggregate value of transaction:
5) Total fee paid:
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o |
Fee paid previously with preliminary materials. |
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Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by
Exchange Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which
the offsetting fee was paid previously. Identify the previous
filing by registration statement number, or the Form or Schedule
and the date of its filing. |
1) Amount
Previously Paid:
2) Form, Schedule
or Registration Statement No.:
3) Filing Party:
4) Date Filed:
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PROGRESS
SOFTWARE CORPORATION
14 Oak Park
Bedford, Massachusetts 01730
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF
SHAREHOLDERS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Annual Meeting of Shareholders
of Progress Software Corporation (the Company) will
be held on Thursday, April 26, 2007, commencing at
10:00 A.M., local time, at the principal executive offices
of the Company, 14 Oak Park, Bedford, Massachusetts 01730, for
the following purposes:
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1.
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To fix the number of directors constituting the full Board of
Directors of the Company at six;
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2.
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To elect six directors;
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3.
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To approve an amendment to the Companys 1991 Employee
Stock Purchase Plan, as amended, to increase the maximum number
of shares that may be issued under such plan from
3,200,000 shares to 4,000,000 shares;
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4.
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To approve the amendment and restatement of the Companys
1997 Stock Incentive Plan;
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5.
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To consider and act upon the shareholder proposal described in
the accompanying Proxy Statement if properly presented at the
meeting; and
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6.
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To transact such other business as may properly come before the
meeting and any adjournment or postponement thereof.
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The Board of Directors has fixed the close of business on
February 28, 2007 as the record date for determination of
shareholders entitled to receive notice of and vote at the
meeting and any adjournment or postponement thereof.
By Order of the Board of Directors,
James D. Freedman
Secretary
March 27, 2007
YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND THE
MEETING. WHETHER OR NOT YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE
MEETING, PLEASE SIGN AND RETURN THE ENCLOSED PROXY AS SOON AS
POSSIBLE. A POSTAGE-PAID ENVELOPE IS ENCLOSED FOR YOUR
CONVENIENCE.
PROGRESS
SOFTWARE CORPORATION
14 Oak Park
Bedford, Massachusetts 01730
PROXY
STATEMENT
This Proxy Statement is furnished in connection with the
solicitation by the Board of Directors of Progress Software
Corporation (the Company) of proxies for use at the
2007 Annual Meeting of Shareholders (the 2007 Annual
Meeting) to be held on April 26, 2007, at
10:00 A.M., local time, at the principal executive offices
of the Company, 14 Oak Park, Bedford, Massachusetts 01730. It is
anticipated that this Proxy Statement and the accompanying form
of proxy will first be mailed to shareholders on or about
March 27, 2007.
At the 2007 Annual Meeting, the shareholders of the Company will
be asked to consider and vote upon the following proposals:
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1.
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To fix the number of directors constituting the full Board of
Directors of the Company at six;
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2.
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To elect six directors;
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3.
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To approve an amendment to the Companys 1991 Employee
Stock Purchase Plan, as amended, to increase the maximum number
of shares that may be issued under such plan from
3,200,000 shares to 4,000,000 shares;
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4.
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To approve the amendment and restatement of the Companys
1997 Stock Incentive Plan; and
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5.
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To consider and act upon the shareholder proposal described in
this Proxy Statement if properly presented at the 2007 Annual
Meeting.
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The information contained in the Audit Committee
Report on pages 11 and 12, the Compensation
Committee Report on pages 14 and 15 and the Stock
Performance Graph on page 16 shall not be deemed
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(the Commission) or subject to Regulations 14A or
14C or to the liabilities of Section 18 of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.
VOTING
PROCEDURES
Only holders of record of the Companys common stock, par
value $.01 per share (Common Stock),
outstanding at the close of business on February 28, 2007
are entitled to vote at the 2007 Annual Meeting and any
adjournment or postponement thereof. As of that date, there were
40,830,754 shares outstanding and entitled to vote. Each
outstanding share entitles the holder to one vote on any
proposal presented at the 2007 Annual Meeting. A list of the
shareholders entitled to notice of the 2007 Annual Meeting is
available for inspection by any shareholder at the
Companys principal office at the address above.
Any shareholder who has given a proxy may revoke it at any time
prior to its exercise at the 2007 Annual Meeting by giving
written notice of such revocation to the Secretary of the
Company, by signing and duly delivering a proxy bearing a later
date or by attending and voting in person at the 2007 Annual
Meeting. Duly executed proxies received and not revoked prior to
the 2007 Annual Meeting will be voted in accordance with the
instructions indicated in the proxy. If no instructions are
indicated, such proxies will be voted FOR the proposal to fix
the number of directors constituting the full Board of Directors
at six, FOR the election of the nominees for director named in
the proxy, FOR the amendment to the Companys 1991 Employee
Stock Purchase Plan, as amended, FOR the approval of the
amendment and restatement of the Companys 1997 Stock
Incentive Plan, AGAINST the Shareholder Proposal and in
the discretion of the proxies as to other matters that may
properly come before the 2007 Annual Meeting or any adjournment
or postponement thereof.
A quorum at the 2007 Annual Meeting shall consist of a majority
in interest of the shares of Common Stock outstanding on the
record date for the meeting. Votes withheld from any nominee for
election as director, abstentions and broker
non-votes will be counted as present or represented
at the 2007 Annual Meeting for purposes of determining the
presence or absence of a quorum for the meeting. A broker
non-vote occurs when a broker or other nominee who
holds shares for a beneficial owner withholds its vote on a
particular proposal with respect to which it does not have
discretionary voting power or instructions from the beneficial
owner. Abstentions and broker non-votes with respect
to a proposal are not included in calculating the number of
votes cast on the proposal and therefore do not have the effect
of voting against the proposal. An automated system administered
by the Companys transfer agent tabulates the votes.
The Board of Directors of the Company knows of no other matters
to be presented at the 2007 Annual Meeting. If any other matter
should be presented at the meeting upon which a vote properly
may be taken, shares represented by all proxies received by the
Board of Directors will be voted in accordance with the judgment
of the persons named as proxies.
Some banks, brokers and other nominee record holders may be
participating in the practice of householding proxy
statements and annual reports. This means that only one copy of
this Proxy Statement and the Companys 2006 Annual Report
may have been sent to multiple shareholders in a single
household. The Company will promptly deliver a separate copy of
either document to shareholders who so request by calling or
writing to the Company at the following address: Progress
Software Corporation, 14 Oak Park Drive, Bedford,
Massachusetts 01730, phone
781-280-4000,
Attn: Investor Relations, or by submitting an email request to
finance-info@progress.com.
Shareholders who would like to receive separate copies of the
Companys annual report and proxy statement in the future,
or who would like to receive only one copy per household should
contact his or her bank, broker or other nominee record holder,
or contact the Company at the above address, phone number or
email.
PROPOSALS 1
AND 2: ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
The Companys by-laws provide for a Board of Directors, the
number of which shall be fixed from time to time by the
shareholders of the Company, and may be enlarged or reduced by
vote of a majority of the Board of Directors. Currently the
Board of Directors is comprised of seven members. The Nominating
and Corporate Governance Committee of the Board of Directors has
recommended that the number of directors be fixed at six and has
nominated for election as directors Joseph W. Alsop, Barry N.
Bycoff, Roger J. Heinen, Charles F. Kane, Michael L. Mark, and
Scott A. McGregor, each of whom is currently a director of the
Company. Amram Rasiel, who has been a director of the Company
since 1983, will not stand for re-election to the Board at the
2007 Annual Meeting. Each director elected at the 2007 Annual
Meeting will hold office until the next Annual Meeting of
Shareholders or special meeting in lieu thereof and until his
successor has been duly elected and qualified, or until his
earlier death, resignation or removal. There are no family
relationships among any of the executive officers or directors
of the Company.
Each of the nominees has agreed to serve as a director if
elected, and the Company has no reason to believe that any
nominee will be unable to serve. In the event that before the
2007 Annual Meeting one or more nominees should become unwilling
or unable to serve, the persons named in the enclosed proxy will
vote shares represented by any proxy received by the Board of
Directors for such other person or persons as may thereafter be
nominated for director by the Nominating and Corporate
Governance Committee of the Board of Directors of the Company.
If a quorum is present at the 2007 Annual Meeting, a majority of
the votes properly cast will be required to fix the number of
directors at six and a plurality of the votes properly cast will
be required to elect a nominee to the office of director.
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The Board of Directors recommends that you vote FOR
fixing the number of directors at six and FOR the election of
the six individuals named below as directors of the Company.
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Nominee
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Age
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Present Principal Employer and Recent Business Experience
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Joseph W. Alsop
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61
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Mr. Alsop, a Co-Founder of the
Company, has been a director and Chief Executive Officer of the
Company since its inception in 1981.
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Barry N. Bycoff
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58
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Mr. Bycoff has been a director of
the Company since March 2007. He has been a Partner of Pequot
Ventures since 2005. From 1996 to 2004, Mr. Bycoff was
Chairman and CEO of Netegrity.
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Roger J. Heinen, Jr.
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56
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Mr. Heinen has been a director of
the Company since March 1999. Mr. Heinen has been a Partner
of Flagship Ventures, a venture capital company, since 1997.
Mr. Heinen formerly served as Senior Vice President,
Developer Division, Microsoft Corporation. Mr. Heinen is
also a director of ANSYS Inc. and Monotype Imaging Holdings Inc.
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Charles F. Kane
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49
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Mr. Kane has been a director of
the Company since November 2006. Mr. Kane is currently CFO
of One Laptop Per Child. From May 2006 to October 2006
Mr. Kane served as CFO of RSA Security and from July 2002
to May 2006 as CFO of Aspen Technology. Mr. Kane is also a
director of Applix Inc.
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Michael L. Mark
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61
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Mr. Mark was elected Chairman of
the Board in December 2006 and has been a director of the
Company since July 1987. Mr. Mark is a private investor.
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Scott A. McGregor
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50
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Mr. McGregor has been a director
of the Company since March 1998. Mr. McGregor has been
President and CEO of Broadcom Corp. since January 2005. From
2002 to 2004, he was CEO of Philips Semiconductors.
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THE BOARD
OF DIRECTORS AND COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD
The Board of Directors of the Company held nine meetings during
the fiscal year ended November 30, 2006. No director
attended fewer than 75% of the aggregate number of meetings of
the Board of Directors and of any committee of the Board of
Directors on which he served. There are three standing
committees of the Board of Directors, the Audit Committee, the
Compensation Committee and the Nominating and Corporate
Governance Committee. Upon consideration of the requirements
regarding director independence set forth in Marketplace
Rules 4200 and 4350 of The Nasdaq Stock Market, the Board
of Directors has determined that, with the exception of
Mr. Alsop, all members of the Board of Directors are
independent within the meaning of such rules, and all members of
the committees of the Board are likewise independent.
The Audit Committee, of which Messrs. Heinen, Kane, Mark
and Rasiel are the current members, assists the Board of
Directors in fulfilling its oversight responsibilities relating
to the financial information which will be provided to
shareholders and others, the internal control system which
management and the Board of Directors have established, the
independence and performance of the Companys independent
registered public accounting firm and the audit process. The
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee and the Audit
Committee monitor developments related to corporate governance
and update the Companys practices as they deem
appropriate. The Audit Committee held four meetings during the
fiscal year ended November 30, 2006. Mr. Kane is
currently the Chairman of the Audit Committee. The Board of
Directors has determined that Mr. Kane qualifies as an
audit committee financial expert under the rules of
the Commission. The Audit Committee operates under a written
charter, a copy of which can be found on the Companys
website at
http://www.progress.com
under the Corporate Governance page.
The Compensation Committee, of which Messrs. Heinen and
McGregor are the current members, held one meeting during the
fiscal year ended November 30, 2006. The Compensation
Committee makes recommendations concerning salaries and
incentive compensation for employees of the Company and
determines the salaries and
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incentive compensation for executive officers of the Company.
The Compensation Committee also administers the Companys
stock plans. The Compensation Committee operates under a written
charter, a copy of which can be found on the Companys
website at http://www.progress.com under the
Corporate Governance page.
The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee, of which
Messrs. Heinen, Kane and Rasiel are the current members,
held one meeting during the fiscal year ended November 30,
2006. Mr. Heinen is currently the Chairman of the
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. The Nominating
and Corporate Governance Committee is responsible for
identifying qualified candidates for election to the Board of
Directors and nominating the candidates proposed for election as
directors at the annual meeting. It also assists in determining
the composition of the Board of Directors and its committees, in
developing and monitoring a process to assess Board
effectiveness and in developing and implementing the
Companys Corporate Governance Guidelines. The Nominating
and Corporate Governance Committee operates under a written
charter, a copy of which can be found on the Companys
website at http://www.progress.com under the
Corporate Governance page. A copy of the Companys
Corporate Governance Guidelines can also be found on the
Companys website at http://www.progress.com
under the Corporate Governance page.
The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee may solicit
recommendations for director nominees from any or all of the
following sources: non-management directors, the Chairman, the
Chief Executive Officer, other executive officers, third-party
search firms or any other source it deems appropriate. In 2006,
the Company engaged a third-party search firm for assistance in
identifying potential director candidates. The same identifying
and evaluating procedures apply to all candidates for director
nomination, including candidates submitted by shareholders.
In selecting director nominees, the Nominating and Corporate
Governance Committee seeks candidates who have the highest
personal and professional integrity, who have demonstrated
exceptional ability and judgment and who will be effective, in
conjunction with the other nominees to the Board, in
collectively serving the long-term interests of the
shareholders. The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee
has established the following minimum requirements: having at
least five years of business experience, having no identified
conflicts of interest as a prospective director of the Company,
having not been convicted in a criminal proceeding aside from
traffic violations during the five years prior to the date of
selection, and being willing to comply with the Companys
Code of Conduct and Finance Code of Professional Ethics. The
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee retains the right
to modify these minimum qualifications from time to time.
Exceptional candidates who do not meet all of these criteria may
still be considered.
The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee reviews the
qualifications and backgrounds of the directors, as well as the
overall composition of the Board, and nominates candidates for
election at the annual meeting of shareholders. In the case of
incumbent directors, the Nominating and Corporate Governance
Committee reviews each such directors overall past service
to the Company, including the number of meetings attended, level
of participation, quality of performance, and whether the
director continues to meet applicable independence standards. In
the case of a new director candidate, the Nominating and
Corporate Governance Committee determines whether the candidate
meets the applicable independence standards, and the level of
the candidates financial expertise. The candidate will
also be interviewed by the Nominating and Corporate Governance
Committee. Qualified candidates for membership on the Board will
be considered without regard to race, color, religion, sex,
ancestry, national origin or disability.
The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee will consider
director candidates recommended by shareholders. Shareholders
may recommend director candidates for consideration by the
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee by sending a
written communication to the committee at the Companys
offices located at: 14 Oak Park, Bedford, Massachusetts
01730. Recommendations sent by shareholders must provide the
candidates name, biographical data and qualifications,
including age, five-year employment history with employer names
and a description of the employers business, whether such
individual can read and understand fundamental financial
statements, other board memberships (if any), and such other
information as reasonably available and sufficient to
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enable the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee to
evaluate the minimum qualifications stated above. The submission
must be accompanied by a written consent of the individual to
stand for election if nominated by the Board of Directors and to
serve if elected by the shareholders. Shareholder
recommendations of candidates for election as directors at an
annual meeting of shareholders must be given at least
90 days prior to the date of the next annual meeting of
shareholders.
The Board of Directors has adopted a Finance Code of
Professional Ethics that applies to the Chief Executive Officer,
Chief Financial Officer, Corporate Controller and other
employees of the finance organization and a Code of Conduct that
applies to all officers, directors and employees of the Company.
Copies of the Code of Conduct and the Finance Code of
Professional Ethics can be found on the Companys website
at http://www.progress.com under the Corporate
Governance page.
During 2006, the Company undertook a review of its historical
stock option practices and related accounting in connection with
an inquiry made by the Commission into the Companys
option-granting practices. Following such review, in February
2007, the Board of Directors adopted a Stock Option Grant Policy
providing for stock options and other equity awards to be made
on fixed grant dates during the year. A copy of the
Companys Stock Option Grant Policy can be found on the
Companys website at http://www.progress.com
under the Corporate Governance page.
The Company does not require members of the Board of Directors
to attend its annual meeting of shareholders. Other than
Mr. Alsop, no members of the Board of Directors attended
the 2006 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.
The Board of Directors welcomes communications from the
Companys shareholders. Any shareholder may communicate
either with the Board as a whole, or with any individual
director, by sending a written communication addressed to the
Board of Directors or to such director at the Companys
offices located at: 14 Oak Park, Bedford, Massachusetts
01730 or by submitting an email communication to
board@progress.com. All communications sent to the Board of
Directors will be forwarded to the Board, as a whole, or to the
individual director to whom such communication was addressed.
DIRECTORS
COMPENSATION
Each of the Companys non-employee directors who rendered
services during fiscal 2006 were granted options to purchase
20,000 shares of Common Stock pursuant to the
Companys 1997 Stock Incentive Plan and has been
reimbursed, upon request, for expenses incurred in attending
Board of Directors meetings. In addition, each member of
the Audit Committee was awarded an additional grant of options
to purchase 1,500 shares. Members of each of the other
Committees were awarded a grant of options to purchase
1,000 shares for service on each such Committee. The Chair
of the Audit Committee was awarded an option to purchase an
additional 750 shares and the Chairs of the other
Committees were awarded additional grants of options to purchase
500 shares. Each of these options was exercisable in full
commencing on the date of grant. Each option expires on the
seventh anniversary of the date of grant and has an exercise
price equal to the closing price of the Common Stock, as
reported by The Nasdaq Stock Market on the date of grant.
Charles F. Kane joined the Board on November 9, 2006 and
was awarded a new Director grant of 10,000 stock options
that vests in equal monthly installments over 60 months
starting on December 1, 2006.
It was recently brought to the Companys attention that the
Companys 1997 Stock Incentive Plan contains language that
prohibits directors who serve on the Compensation Committee from
receiving option grants under such plan. It is the
Companys position that such language was a result of a
scriveners error and should not have been included in the
plan. Nevertheless, Messrs. Heinen and McGregor agreed to
forfeit the stock options granted to them in fiscal 2006 and the
Company has taken action to cancel such stock options. The
Company has committed to grant make-whole equity awards and/or
cash payments to Messrs. Heinen and McGregor. Additional
information regarding the 1997 Stock Incentive Plan and the
scriveners error is set forth in proposal four commencing
on page 19.
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Mr. Bycoff joined the Board of Directors in March 2007 and,
thus, he did not receive any compensation during fiscal 2006.
Mr. Alsop who is an employee of the Company is not paid any
separate fees and does not receive stock options for his service
in the capacity of director.
SECURITY
OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN HOLDERS AND MANAGEMENT
The following table sets forth the number of shares of the
Companys Common Stock beneficially owned by all persons
known by the Company to be the beneficial owners of more than 5%
of the Companys outstanding Common Stock, by each of the
Companys current directors, by each of the executive
officers named in the Summary Compensation Table appearing on
pages 8 and 9, and by all current executive officers and
directors of the Company as a group, as of March 15, 2007.
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Beneficially Owned Shares
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Name and Address of Beneficial Owner (1)
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Number
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Percent
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T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.(2)
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3,296,917
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8.1
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%
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100 East Pratt Street
Baltimore, MD 21202
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Private Capital Management, L.P.(3)
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3,174,357
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7.8
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%
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8889 Pelican Bay Blvd.,
Suite 500
Naples, FL 34108
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FMR Corp., Edward C. Johnson 3d(4)
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2,382,878
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5.8
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%
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82 Devonshire Street
Boston, MA 02109
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Joseph W. Alsop(5)
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2,290,253
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5.4
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%
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14 Oak Park
Bedford, MA 01730
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Barclays Global Investors, N.A.(6)
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2,133,002
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5.2
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%
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45 Fremont Street
San Francisco, CA 94015
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Amram Rasiel(7)
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574,000
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1.4
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%
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Richard D. Reidy(8)
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413,902
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1.0
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%
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David G. Ireland(9)
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341,406
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*
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Norman R. Robertson(10)
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271,867
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*
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Michael L. Mark(11)
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169,250
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*
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James D. Freedman(12)
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107,890
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*
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Scott A. McGregor(13)
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93,547
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*
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Roger J. Heinen, Jr.(14)
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41,794
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*
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Charles F. Kane(15)
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1,000
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*
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Barry N. Bycoff
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0
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*
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All executive officers and
directors as a group (13 persons)(16)
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4,417,295
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10.0
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%
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* |
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Less than 1% |
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(1) |
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All persons named in the table have sole voting and investment
power with respect to all shares of Common Stock shown as
beneficially owned by them, subject to community property laws
where applicable and subject to the other information contained
in the footnotes to this table. |
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(2) |
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Derived from Schedule 13G/A filed February 14, 2007.
The Schedule 13G/A reported that T. Rowe Price held sole
voting power over 936,700 shares and sole dispositive power
over 3,296,917 shares. |
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(3) |
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Derived from Schedule 13G/A filed February 14, 2007.
The Schedule 13G/A reported sole voting and dispositive
power over 3,200 shares and shared voting and dispositive
power over 3,171,157 shares. |
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(4) |
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Derived from Schedule 13G filed February 14, 2007. The
Schedule 13G reported that Fidelity Management and Research
Company (Fidelity) is the beneficial owner of
2,382,878 shares. Edward C. Johnson 3d and FMR,
through its control of Fidelity, each has sole power to dispose
of the 2,382,878 shares. |
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(5) |
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Includes 1,949,500 shares issuable upon the exercise of
outstanding options that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 15, 2007. |
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(6) |
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Derived from Schedule 13G/A filed January 23, 2007 by
Barclays Global Investors, N.A., Barclays Global
Fund Advisors and Barclays Global Investors, Ltd. The
Schedule 13G/A reported sole voting power over
1,961,300 shares and sole dispositive power over
2,133,002 shares. |
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(7) |
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Includes 33,000 shares issuable upon the exercise of
outstanding options that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 15, 2007. |
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(8) |
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Includes 412,832 shares issuable upon the exercise of
outstanding options that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 15, 2007. |
|
(9) |
|
Includes 320,100 shares issuable upon the exercise of
outstanding options that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 15, 2007. |
|
(10) |
|
Includes 264,025 shares issuable upon the exercise of
outstanding options that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 15, 2007. |
|
(11) |
|
Includes 93,250 shares issuable upon the exercise of
outstanding options that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 15, 2007. |
|
(12) |
|
Includes 105,750 shares issuable upon the exercise of
outstanding options that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 15, 2007. |
|
(13) |
|
Includes 81,547 shares issuable upon the exercise of
outstanding options that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 15, 2007. |
|
(14) |
|
Includes 35,500 shares issuable upon the exercise of
outstanding options that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 15, 2007. |
|
(15) |
|
Includes 1,000 shares issuable upon the exercise of
outstanding options that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 15, 2007. |
|
(16) |
|
Includes 3,399,626 shares issuable upon the exercise of
outstanding options that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 15, 2007 |
SECTION 16(a)
BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE
Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
requires the Companys directors and executive officers,
and persons who beneficially own more than 10% of the
Companys Common Stock, to file reports of ownership of,
and transactions in, the Companys securities with the
Commission. This information is also filed with The Nasdaq Stock
Market. Such directors, executive officers and 10% shareholders
are also required to furnish the Company with copies of all
Section 16(a) forms they file.
Based solely on a review of the copies of such forms received by
it, and on written representations from certain reporting
persons, the Company believes that with respect to the fiscal
year ended November 30, 2006, its directors, officers and
10% shareholders complied with all applicable Section 16(a)
filing requirements.
7
CERTAIN
RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS
The Company has certain indemnification obligations to its
directors and executive officers, including the advancement of
expenses in certain circumstances. In connection with the
Commissions inquiry regarding the Companys
option-granting practices, during fiscal year 2006, the Company
advanced approximately $86,876 to Mr. Alsop, approximately
$61,919 to Mr. Robertson, and approximately $132,547 to
Mr. Freedman to pay for their respective legal expenses.
The Company engaged Mintz Levin Cohn Ferris Glovsky and Popeo PC
(Mintz) during fiscal 2006 to provide legal
services, principally relating to immigration. Neil H. Aronson,
the brother-in-law of James D. Freedman, is a partner of Mintz.
For fiscal 2006, legal fees billed by Mintz to the Company
aggregated approximately $109,872. Also during fiscal 2006, the
Company entered into a contract with High Performance Learning
Inc. (HPL), pursuant to which the Company retained
the services of HPL to assist the Company in preparing and
submitting an application for training program grants from the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts Workforce Training Fund (the
HPL Contract). The Company was approved for grants
of a total amount of $203,403. Pursuant to the HPL Contract the
Company is required to utilize HPL for the provision of a
minimum of 75% of the training programs covered by the grants.
The Company is therefore committed to pay to HPL for training
services a minimum of $152,551 under the HPL Contract. Steven
Aronson, the brother-in-law of Mr. Freedman, is President
of HPL.
The Company did not engage in any other transactions or series
of similar transactions in which the amount involved exceeded
$60,000 and in which any of the Companys directors or
executive officers, any holder of more than 5% of the
Companys class of our voting securities or any member of
the immediate family of any of the foregoing persons had a
direct or indirect material interest.
EXECUTIVE
COMPENSATION
The following table sets forth a summary of the compensation
earned by (i) the Companys Chief Executive Officer
(CEO) and (ii) the Companys four most highly
compensated executive officers other than the CEO during the
2006 fiscal year (collectively, the Named Executive
Officers), for services rendered in fiscal 2006, 2005 and
2004.
Summary
Compensation Table
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Long Term
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Compensation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Awards(1)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Securities
|
|
|
All Other
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Annual Compensation
|
|
|
Underlying
|
|
|
Compensation ($)
|
|
|
|
|
Name and Principal Position
|
|
Year
|
|
|
Salary($)
|
|
|
Bonus($)
|
|
|
Options/SARS
|
|
|
(2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Joseph W. Alsop
|
|
|
2006
|
|
|
$
|
350,000
|
|
|
$
|
299,000
|
|
|
|
180,000
|
|
|
$
|
46,587
|
|
|
|
|
|
Co-Founder and
|
|
|
2005
|
|
|
$
|
350,000
|
|
|
$
|
357,300
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
45,228
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chief Executive Officer
|
|
|
2004
|
|
|
$
|
350,000
|
|
|
$
|
302,250
|
|
|
|
200,000
|
|
|
$
|
44,984
|
|
|
|
|
|
James D. Freedman
|
|
|
2006
|
|
|
$
|
224,133
|
|
|
$
|
106,307
|
|
|
|
30,000
|
|
|
$
|
23,502
|
|
|
|
|
|
Senior Vice President and
|
|
|
2005
|
|
|
$
|
218,400
|
|
|
$
|
122,519
|
|
|
|
25,000
|
|
|
$
|
22,418
|
|
|
|
|
|
General Counsel
|
|
|
2004
|
|
|
$
|
217,350
|
|
|
$
|
95,288
|
|
|
|
45,000
|
|
|
$
|
22,058
|
|
|
|
|
|
David G. Ireland
|
|
|
2006
|
|
|
$
|
306,000
|
|
|
$
|
261,960
|
|
|
|
60,000
|
|
|
$
|
39,261
|
|
|
|
|
|
President, OpenEdge
|
|
|
2005
|
|
|
$
|
306,000
|
|
|
$
|
281,758
|
|
|
|
54,000
|
|
|
$
|
36,950
|
|
|
|
|
|
Division
|
|
|
2004
|
|
|
$
|
303,500
|
|
|
$
|
217,581
|
|
|
|
100,000
|
|
|
$
|
35,172
|
|
|
|
|
|
Richard D. Reidy
|
|
|
2006
|
|
|
$
|
255,000
|
|
|
$
|
200,090
|
|
|
|
40,000
|
|
|
$
|
28,010
|
|
|
|
|
|
President, DataDirect
|
|
|
2005
|
|
|
$
|
255,000
|
|
|
$
|
184,330
|
|
|
|
40,000
|
|
|
$
|
27,246
|
|
|
|
|
|
Technologies
|
|
|
2004
|
|
|
$
|
253,333
|
|
|
$
|
150,462
|
|
|
|
70,000
|
|
|
$
|
27,539
|
|
|
|
|
|
Norman R. Robertson
|
|
|
2006
|
|
|
$
|
255,000
|
|
|
$
|
172,040
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
$
|
30,101
|
|
|
|
|
|
Senior Vice President,
|
|
|
2005
|
|
|
$
|
255,000
|
|
|
$
|
199,530
|
|
|
|
40,000
|
|
|
$
|
28,845
|
|
|
|
|
|
Finance and Administration
|
|
|
2004
|
|
|
$
|
252,916
|
|
|
$
|
158,439
|
|
|
|
70,000
|
|
|
$
|
28,717
|
|
|
|
|
|
and Chief Financial Officer
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
8
|
|
|
(1) |
|
The Company did not make any restricted stock awards, grant any
stock appreciation rights or make any long-term incentive plan
payouts during fiscal 2006, fiscal 2005 or fiscal 2004. |
|
(2) |
|
The amounts disclosed in this column include: |
|
|
|
|
(a)
|
Company contributions for fiscal 2006 of $13,200 to a defined
contribution plan, the Progress Software Corporation 401(k) Plan
(the 401(k) Plan) for each of the Named Executive
Officers.
|
|
|
|
|
(b)
|
Payments by the Company for fiscal 2006 401(k) Plan matching
contributions in excess of participation limits imposed on
higher-paid individuals under federal tax law, as follows:
Mr. Alsop, $29,250; Mr. Freedman, $7,615;
Mr. Ireland, $22,096; Mr. Reidy, $13,186; and
Mr. Robertson, $14,102.
|
|
|
|
|
(c)
|
Payments by the Company in fiscal 2006 of elected taxable
long-term disability insurance premiums for the benefit of the
following executive officers: Mr. Alsop, $1,365;
Mr. Freedman, $853; Mr. Ireland, $1,193;
Mr. Reidy, $994; and Mr. Robertson, $994.
|
|
|
|
|
(d)
|
Imputed income in fiscal 2006 of term life insurance premiums
for the benefit of the following executive officers:
Mr. Alsop, $2,772; Mr. Freedman, $1,834;
Mr. Ireland, $2,772; Mr. Reidy, $630; and
Mr. Robertson, $1,805.
|
|
|
|
|
(e)
|
Company contributions for fiscal 2005 to the 401(k) Plan of
$13,230 for each of the Named Executive Officers.
|
|
|
|
|
(f)
|
Payments by the Company for fiscal 2005 401(k) Plan matching
contributions in excess of participation limits imposed on
higher-paid individuals under federal tax law, as follows:
Mr. Alsop, $27,861; Mr. Freedman, $6,532;
Mr. Ireland, $19,755; Mr. Reidy, $12,391; and
Mr. Robertson, $12,816.
|
|
|
|
|
(g)
|
Payments by the Company in fiscal 2005 of elected taxable
long-term disability insurance premiums for the benefit of the
following executive officers: Mr. Alsop, $1,365;
Mr. Freedman, $851; Mr. Ireland, $1,193;
Mr. Reidy, $994; and Mr. Robertson, $994.
|
|
|
(h)
|
Imputed income in fiscal 2005 of term life insurance premiums
for the benefit of the following executive officers:
Mr. Alsop, $2,772; Mr. Freedman, $1,805;
Mr. Ireland, $2,772; Mr. Reidy, $631; and
Mr. Robertson, $1,805.
|
|
|
|
|
(i)
|
Company contributions for fiscal 2004 to the 401(k) Plan of
$12,300 for each of the Named Executive Officers.
|
|
|
(j)
|
Payments by the Company for fiscal 2004 401(k) Plan matching
contributions in excess of participation limits imposed on
higher-paid individuals under federal tax law, as follows:
Mr. Alsop, $29,760; Mr. Freedman, $7,103;
Mr. Ireland, $19,911; Mr. Reidy, $13,669; and
Mr. Robertson, $13,644.
|
|
|
|
|
(k)
|
Payments by the Company in fiscal 2004 of elected taxable
long-term disability insurance premiums for the benefit of the
following executive officers: Mr. Alsop, $1,194;
Mr. Freedman, $786; Mr. Ireland, $1,127;
Mr. Reidy, $939; and Mr. Robertson, $939.
|
|
|
|
|
(l)
|
Imputed income in fiscal 2004 of term life insurance premiums
for the benefit of the following executive officers:
Mr. Alsop, $1,730; Mr. Freedman, $1,869;
Mr. Ireland, $1,834; Mr. Reidy, $631; and
Mr. Robertson, $1,834.
|
9
OPTION
GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
The following table sets forth certain information with respect
to the grant of stock options in fiscal year 2006 to each of the
Named Executive Officers.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Potential
|
|
|
|
Individual Grants
|
|
|
Realizable Value at
|
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
% of Total
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Assumed Annual
|
|
|
|
Securities
|
|
|
Options
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Rates of Stock Price
|
|
|
|
Underlying
|
|
|
Granted to
|
|
|
Exercise
|
|
|
|
|
|
Appreciation for
|
|
|
|
Options
|
|
|
Employees in
|
|
|
Price
|
|
|
Expiration
|
|
|
Option Term(5)
|
|
Name
|
|
Granted (#)
|
|
|
Fiscal Year(3)
|
|
|
($/Share)(4)
|
|
|
Date
|
|
|
5% ($)
|
|
|
10% ($)
|
|
|
Joseph W. Alsop
|
|
|
90,000
|
(1)
|
|
|
4.65
|
%
|
|
$
|
23.07
|
|
|
|
5/21/13
|
|
|
$
|
845,263
|
|
|
$
|
1,969,821
|
|
|
|
|
90,000
|
(2)
|
|
|
4.65
|
%
|
|
$
|
25.01
|
|
|
|
9/19/13
|
|
|
$
|
916,342
|
|
|
$
|
2,135,467
|
|
James D. Freedman
|
|
|
15,000
|
(1)
|
|
|
0.78
|
%
|
|
$
|
23.07
|
|
|
|
5/21/13
|
|
|
$
|
140,877
|
|
|
$
|
328,304
|
|
|
|
|
15,000
|
(2)
|
|
|
0.78
|
%
|
|
$
|
25.01
|
|
|
|
9/19/13
|
|
|
$
|
152,724
|
|
|
$
|
355,911
|
|
David G. Ireland
|
|
|
30,000
|
(1)
|
|
|
1.55
|
%
|
|
$
|
23.07
|
|
|
|
5/21/13
|
|
|
$
|
281,754
|
|
|
$
|
656,607
|
|
|
|
|
30,000
|
(2)
|
|
|
1.55
|
%
|
|
$
|
25.01
|
|
|
|
9/19/13
|
|
|
$
|
305,447
|
|
|
$
|
711,822
|
|
Richard D. Reidy
|
|
|
20,000
|
(1)
|
|
|
1.03
|
%
|
|
$
|
23.07
|
|
|
|
5/21/13
|
|
|
$
|
187,836
|
|
|
$
|
437,738
|
|
|
|
|
20,000
|
(2)
|
|
|
1.03
|
%
|
|
$
|
25.01
|
|
|
|
9/19/13
|
|
|
$
|
203,632
|
|
|
$
|
474,548
|
|
Norman R. Robertson
|
|
|
25,000
|
(1)
|
|
|
1.29
|
%
|
|
$
|
23.07
|
|
|
|
5/21/13
|
|
|
$
|
234,795
|
|
|
$
|
547,173
|
|
|
|
|
25,000
|
(2)
|
|
|
1.29
|
%
|
|
$
|
25.01
|
|
|
|
9/19/13
|
|
|
$
|
254,540
|
|
|
$
|
593,185
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
Except as noted in the following sentence with respect to
Mr. Alsop, these non-qualified options vest on the date of
grant with respect to 5% of the total amount, thereafter in
equal monthly installments over a
57-month
period commencing on June 1, 2006. Options to purchase
30,000 shares granted to Mr. Alsop vest on the date of
grant with respect to 25% of such amount, thereafter in equal
monthly installments over a
45-month
period commencing on June 1, 2006. |
|
(2) |
|
Except as noted in the following sentence with respect to
Mr. Alsop, these non-qualified options vest on the date of
grant with respect to 12% of the total amount, thereafter in
equal monthly installments over a
53-month
period commencing on October 1, 2006. Options to purchase
30,000 shares granted to Mr. Alsop vest on the date of
grant with respect to 31% of such amount, thereafter in equal
monthly installments over a
41-month
period commencing on October 1, 2006. |
|
(3) |
|
The Company granted options to purchase a total of
1,933,950 shares of Common Stock to employees in fiscal
2006. The Company granted no SARs during fiscal 2006. |
|
(4) |
|
All options were granted at fair market value, which was
determined by the Compensation Committee to be the closing price
of the Common Stock on the date of grant, as reported by The
Nasdaq Stock Market. |
|
(5) |
|
The amounts shown represent hypothetical values that could be
achieved for the respective options if exercised at the end of
their option terms. These gains are based on assumed rates of
stock appreciation of 5% and 10%, compounded annually from the
date the respective options were granted to the date of their
expiration. The gains shown are net of the option price, but do
not include deductions for taxes or other expenses that may be
associated with the exercise. Actual gains, if any, on stock
option exercises will depend on future performance of the Common
Stock, the optionholders continued employment through the
option period, and the date on which the options are exercised. |
10
AGGREGATED
OPTION EXERCISES IN LAST
FISCAL YEAR AND FISCAL YEAR-END OPTION VALUES
The following table sets forth certain information with respect
to option exercises in fiscal 2006 and the value of unexercised
options, as of November 30, 2006, for each of the Named
Executive Officers.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
Value of
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Securities Underlying
|
|
Unexercised
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Unexercised
|
|
In-the-Money
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Options at
|
|
Options at
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fiscal Year-End (#)(1)
|
|
Fiscal Year-End ($) (1)(2)
|
|
|
Shares Acquired
|
|
Value
|
|
Exercisable/
|
|
Exercisable/
|
Name
|
|
On Exercise (#)
|
|
Realized ($)
|
|
Unexercisable
|
|
Unexercisable
|
|
Joseph W. Alsop
|
|
|
10,000
|
|
|
$
|
238,751
|
|
|
|
1,981,000
|
/306,500
|
|
$
|
28,687,860
|
/$1,872,722
|
James D. Freedman
|
|
|
16,794
|
|
|
$
|
244,183
|
|
|
|
97,070
|
/ 84,500
|
|
$
|
670,898
|
/$ 458,959
|
David G. Ireland
|
|
|
100
|
|
|
$
|
1,592
|
|
|
|
276,200
|
/176,100
|
|
$
|
2,248,433
|
/$ 954,773
|
Richard D. Reidy
|
|
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
|
381,365
|
/128,469
|
|
$
|
4,304,645
|
/$ 760,597
|
Norman R. Robertson
|
|
|
10,000
|
|
|
$
|
159,090
|
|
|
|
250,440
|
/130,000
|
|
$
|
2,346,026
|
/$ 674,625
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
As of November 30, 2006, the Company had issued no SARs. |
|
(2) |
|
Calculated on the basis of an assumed value of $27.05 per
share, which was the average of the high and the low sale prices
of the Companys Common Stock on November 30, 2006, as
reported by The Nasdaq Stock Market, less the applicable
exercise price. |
EMPLOYEE
RETENTION AND MOTIVATION AGREEMENTS
The Company has entered into an agreement (an Employee
Retention and Motivation Agreement) with each of the Named
Executive Officers (Covered Persons), with respect
to which amendments were approved by the Board of Directors in
March 2007. Each Employee Retention and Motivation Agreement
provides for certain payments and benefits upon a Change in
Control (as defined in such agreement) of the Company and upon
an Involuntary Termination (as defined in such agreement) of the
Covered Persons employment by the Company. Upon a Change
in Control, each Covered Persons annual cash bonus award
shall be fixed and guaranteed at his respective target level.
Payment of such bonus will immediately occur on a pro-rata basis
with respect to the elapsed part of the relevant fiscal year.
In addition, upon a Change in Control, all outstanding unvested
options and restricted equity of the Covered Person will fully
accelerate, unless the acquirer assumes all such options and
restricted equity. Upon Involuntary Termination of a Covered
Person within twelve months following a Change in Control, all
remaining outstanding options and restricted equity of the
Covered Person shall automatically become vested, the Covered
Person shall be entitled to receive a lump sum payment equal to
15 months of total target compensation, and such Covered
Persons benefits shall continue for 15 months.
AUDIT
COMMITTEE REPORT
In accordance with its written charter, the Audit Committee
assists the Board of Directors in fulfilling its oversight
responsibilities relating to the financial information which
will be provided to the shareholders and others, the internal
control system which management and the Board have established,
the independence and performance of the independent registered
public accounting firm and the audit process. Each member of the
Audit Committee is independent as defined by The Nasdaq Stock
Markets listing standards.
Management is responsible for establishing and maintaining
adequate internal control over financial reporting to ensure the
integrity of the Companys financial statements. The
Companys independent registered public
11
accounting firm, Deloitte & Touche LLP, is responsible
for performing an audit of managements assessment and
effectiveness of the Companys internal control over
financial reporting in conjunction with an audit of the
consolidated financial statements in accordance with standards
of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States)
(PCAOB) and issuing opinions on the financial
statements and managements assessment and effectiveness of
internal control over financial reporting. The Audit Committee
has met and held discussions with management and Deloitte &
Touche LLP regarding the attestation of internal control over
financial reporting and the financial audit process of the
Company.
The Audit Committee obtained from Deloitte & Touche LLP
the written disclosures and letter required by Independence
Standards Board Standard No. 1, Independence
Discussions with Audit Committees. The Audit Committee and
Deloitte & Touche LLP have discussed such disclosures
and letter, as well as the independence of Deloitte &
Touche LLP.
The Audit Committee reviewed and discussed the audited
consolidated financial statements of the Company for the fiscal
year ended November 30, 2006 with management and Deloitte
& Touche LLP. Management has represented to the Audit
Committee that the financial statements were prepared in
accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the
United States of America.
The Audit Committee reviewed and discussed with
Deloitte & Touche LLP the communications required by
standards established by the PCAOB (United States), including
those described in Statement on Auditing Standards No. 61,
Communication with Audit Committees, as amended, and
discussed the results of Deloitte & Touche LLPs
examination of the financial statements.
Based on the above-mentioned reviews and discussions with
management and Deloitte & Touche LLP, the Audit
Committee recommended to the Board that the Companys
audited consolidated financial statements be included in its
Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended November 30, 2006, for filing
with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Charles F. Kane, Chairman
Roger J. Heinen, Jr.
Michael L. Mark
Amram Rasiel
12
INDEPENDENT
REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM FEES
Aggregate fees billed to the Company for services performed for
the fiscal year ended November 30, 2006 and
November 30, 2005 by the Companys independent
registered public accounting firm, Deloitte & Touche
LLP, are as follows:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fiscal 2006
|
|
|
Fiscal 2005
|
|
|
Audit Fees(1)
|
|
$
|
2,178,000
|
|
|
$
|
1,792,000
|
|
Tax Fees(2)
|
|
$
|
659,000
|
|
|
$
|
451,000
|
|
Audit-Related Fees(3)
|
|
$
|
11,000
|
|
|
$
|
99,000
|
|
All Other Fees
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
$
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
Includes statutory audit fees related to the Companys
wholly owned foreign subsidiaries, as the results of these
audits are utilized in the audit of the consolidated financial
statements. Audit fees during 2006 also include fees relating to
compliance with Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
2002 and restatement of the Companys previous years
financial statements. In accordance with the policy on audit
committee pre-approval, 100% of audit services provided by the
independent registered public accounting firm are pre-approved. |
|
(2) |
|
Includes fees primarily for tax compliance, tax advice and tax
planning (domestic and international). In accordance with the
policy on audit committee pre-approval, 100% of tax services
provided by the independent registered public accounting firm
are pre-approved. |
|
(3) |
|
Includes fees related to the performance of audits and attest
services not required by statute or regulations, due diligence
related to mergers, acquisitions, proposed transactions, and
accounting consultations regarding the application of generally
accepted accounting principles to proposed transactions. In
accordance with the policy on audit committee pre-approval, 100%
of audit-related services provided by the independent registered
public accounting firm are pre-approved. |
POLICY ON
AUDIT COMMITTEE PRE-APPROVAL OF AUDIT AND PERMISSIBLE
NON-AUDIT
SERVICES OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING
FIRM
The Audit Committee is responsible for appointing, setting
compensation, and overseeing the work of the Companys
independent registered public accounting firm. The Audit
Committee has established a policy regarding pre-approval of all
audit and permissible non-audit services provided by the
independent registered public accounting firm.
Requests for specific services by the independent registered
public accounting firm which comply with the auditor services
policy are reviewed by the Companys Finance, Tax, and
Internal Audit departments. Requests approved by the group are
aggregated and submitted to the Audit Committee in one of the
following ways:
(1) Request for approval of services at a meeting of the
Audit Committee; or
(2) Request for approval of services by the Chairman of the
Audit Committee and then the approval by the full committee at
the next meeting of the Audit Committee.
The request may be made with respect to either specific services
or a type of service for predictable or recurring services.
COMPENSATION
COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION
The members of the Compensation Committee of the Companys
Board of Directors during fiscal 2006 were Messrs. Heinen
and McGregor. Neither of them is or has ever been an officer or
employee of the Company or of any
13
of its subsidiaries. No member of the Compensation Committee is
a party to any relationship required to be disclosed in this
Proxy Statement under Item 404 of
Regulation S-K
promulgated by the Commission.
COMPENSATION
COMMITTEE REPORT
The Companys executive compensation program is established
by the Compensation Committee.
The Companys executive compensation
philosophy. The Companys philosophy is
to reward executives based upon corporate and individual
performance as well as to provide long-term incentives for the
achievement of future financial and strategic goals, thereby
advancing both the short and long-term interests of
shareholders. These goals include growth of the Company, defined
primarily in terms of growth in revenue and operating profit. It
is also the Companys philosophy to base a significant
portion of the executives total compensation opportunity
on performance incentives consistent with the scope and level of
the executives responsibilities.
Elements of executive compensation
program. The executive compensation program
for fiscal 2006 consisted of the following three elements:
(1) base salary; (2) incentive compensation in the
form of annual cash bonus awards earned under the Companys
Fiscal 2006 Bonus Programs for Executives and Key Contributors
(the 2006 Bonus Programs); and (3) equity-based
long-term incentive compensation in the form of stock options.
The Compensation Committee believes that executive compensation
should be aligned with long-term shareholder value. Therefore,
the elements of the executive compensation program are weighted
such that the equity-based long-term element is potentially the
most rewarding element. All elements of the executive
compensation program are designed to be competitive with those
of comparable technology companies.
Cash Compensation. Total cash
compensation is comprised of base salary and annual bonus. Base
salary increases for fiscal 2006 were based upon individual,
business unit or departmental contribution and performance. The
2006 Bonus Programs were established by the Compensation
Committee. For each participant, the 2006 Bonus Programs
provided for a specified payment as a percentage of base salary
depending on the attainment of specific operating metrics of the
Companys various business units, primarily focused on
revenue growth and operating profit. The targets for the
operating metrics are approved by the Board of Directors. If the
Company or relevant business unit achieves 100% of its targeted
operating metrics, 100% of the specified bonus is paid. More or
less than 100% of the specified bonus may be paid depending on
the Companys level of achievement and the Compensation
Committees assessment of the Companys strength,
stability and strategic position, as well as individual
contribution. A further explanation of the elements of the
executive compensation program as they relate to the CEO is
provided below.
Cash Compensation of Chief Executive
Officer. Total cash compensation received by
Mr. Alsop decreased for fiscal year 2006 compared to fiscal
year 2005 by 8.2%. The decrease in Mr. Alsops fiscal
2006 total cash compensation was due to a lower payout of cash
bonus resulting from under-achievement of operating profit and
targeted revenue growth. Base salary for Mr. Alsop remained
the same in fiscal 2006 as compared to fiscal 2005.
Equity Compensation. Long-term
incentive compensation, in the form of stock options and shares
of restricted stock, is intended to correlate executive
compensation with the Companys long-term success as
measured by the Companys stock price. Stock options are
tied to the future success of the Company because options
granted have an exercise price equal to the closing market value
at the date of the grant and will only provide value to the
extent that the price of the Companys stock increases
above the exercise price. Since options granted generally vest
monthly over a five-year period, option participants are
encouraged to continue employment with the Company. Based on the
foregoing considerations, during fiscal 2006, the Named
Executive Officers received grants of stock options as disclosed
in the Option Grant Table on page 10.
The stock options listed in the Option Grant Table for
Mr. Alsop include options to purchase 120,000 shares
related to fiscal 2006, and options to purchase
60,000 shares related to his annual option award for fiscal
2005. The
14
stock option grant to Mr. Alsop for fiscal 2005 was
deferred due to an insufficient number of shares being available
for grant under the Companys 1997 Stock Incentive Plan.
The Companys shareholders approved an increase in the
number of shares authorized under the 1997 Plan at the 2006
Annual Meeting of Shareholders, and the Compensation Committee
thereafter made a grant to Mr. Alsop related to one-half of
his award for fiscal 2005, with the remaining portion of the
grant (options to purchase an additional 60,000 shares) to
be made in fiscal 2007. The grants for fiscal 2005 will vest as
if they had been granted as originally scheduled in 2005. Each
grant relating to fiscal 2005 is granted with an exercise price
equal to the closing market value at the date of grant.
Benefits. All employees who
participated in the 401(k) Plan received a discretionary
matching contribution for fiscal 2006, representing up to 6% of
each eligible employees calendar year compensation,
including base salary, commissions and bonus, depending on the
employees length of service with the Company and the
employees contribution level. Such matching contribution
was approved by the Compensation Committee. The Named Executive
Officers also received such a contribution, except that, due to
limitations imposed on 401(k) matching contributions to
higher-paid individuals under federal tax law, a portion of the
contributions that otherwise would have been received by
Mr. Alsop and the other Named Executive Officers disclosed
in the Summary Compensation Table, pursuant to the 401(k) Plan
were instead paid directly to such individuals. All such amounts
are disclosed under Other Compensation in the
Summary Compensation Table on pages 8 and 9. The
Companys health and insurance plans are the same for all
employees. The Companys stock purchase plan is available
to all employees except Mr. Alsop, who is ineligible to
participate in the plan due to his percentage of ownership of
the Company.
Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended (the Code), imposes an annual limit of
$1,000,000 on tax deductions that an employer may claim for
compensation of certain executives. Section 162(m) of the
Code provides exceptions to the deduction limitation for
performance-based compensation, and it is the intent
of the Compensation Committee to take advantage of such
exceptions to the extent feasible and in the best interests of
the Company.
Roger J. Heinen, Jr.
Scott A. McGregor
15
STOCK
PERFORMANCE GRAPH
The following line graph compares the Companys cumulative
shareholder return with that of a broad market index (NASDAQ
Stock Market Index for U.S. Companies) and a published
industry index (NASDAQ Computer and Data Processing Services
Stocks). Each of these indices is calculated assuming that $100
was invested on November 30, 2001.
Comparative
5-Year
Cumulative Total Return*
Among Progress Software Corporation, Nasdaq Stock Market
Index
and Nasdaq Computer and Data Processing Services
Stocks
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|
Cumulative Total Return
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11/01
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11/02
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11/03
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11/04
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11/05
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11/06
|
Progress Software Corporation
|
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100
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79
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122
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|
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132
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180
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158
|
|
Nasdaq Stock Market Index (U.S.)
|
|
|
100
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|
|
78
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|
|
102
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|
|
|
111
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|
|
|
119
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|
|
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133
|
|
Nasdaq Computer & Data
Processing Services Stocks
|
|
|
100
|
|
|
|
84
|
|
|
|
90
|
|
|
|
105
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114
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128
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* |
$100 invested on 11/30/01 in stock or index-including
reinvestment of dividends. Fiscal year ending November 30.
|
PROPOSAL
3: AMENDMENT TO THE PROGRESS SOFTWARE CORPORATION
1991 EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN
The Progress Software Corporation 1991 Employee Stock Purchase
Plan (the ESPP) was adopted by the shareholders of
the Company at a special meeting of shareholders held on
July 1, 1991. The ESPP was amended and restated in March
1998, and further amended in September 2006. As of March 15,
2007, a total of 3,200,000 shares of Common Stock were
authorized for issuance under the ESPP, of which approximately
203,000 remained available and reserved for issuance. The
Company believes that the availability of an adequate reserve of
shares for issuance under the ESPP will benefit the Company by
providing employees with an opportunity to acquire shares of the
Companys Common Stock and will enable the Company to
attract, retain and motivate valued employees. In March 2007,
the Board of Directors unanimously approved an increase in the
number of shares of Common Stock reserved for issuance under the
ESPP by 800,000 shares to a total of 4,000,000 shares,
which increase is subject to shareholder approval being received
at the 2007 Annual Meeting. A copy of the ESPP, as proposed to
be amended, is attached as Appendix A to this Proxy
Statement.
16
If a quorum is present at the 2007 Annual Meeting, a majority of
the votes properly cast will be necessary to approve the
proposed amendment to the ESPP.
The Board of Directors recommends that you vote FOR the
proposal to amend the ESPP to increase the maximum number of
shares issuable thereunder from 3,200,000 shares to
4,000,000 shares.
Summary
of the Provisions of the ESPP
The following summary of the ESPP, as amended, is qualified in
its entirety by the specific language of the ESPP, a copy of
which is attached as Appendix A.
Any employee of the Company or any present or future subsidiary
of the Company is eligible to participate in the ESPP so long as
the employee is customarily employed for at least 20 hours
per week and for more than five months in a calendar year.
No person who owns or holds, or as a result of participation in
the ESPP would own or hold, stock or options to purchase stock,
together equal to 5% or more of the total outstanding Common
Stock of the Company is entitled to participate in the ESPP. No
employee may exercise an option granted under the ESPP that
permits the employee to purchase Common Stock having a value of
more than $25,000 (determined using the fair market value of the
stock at the time such option is granted) in any calendar year.
Participation in the ESPP is limited to eligible employees who
authorize payroll deductions (within ranges specified by the
Compensation Committee) pursuant to the ESPP. There are
currently approximately 1,650 employees eligible to participate
in the ESPP, of whom approximately 641 are participating. Once
an employee becomes a participant in the ESPP, that employee
will automatically participate in successive Offering Periods,
as described below, until such time as that employee withdraws
from the ESPP, becomes ineligible to participate in the ESPP, or
his or her employment ceases. A participant may be enrolled in
only one Offering Period at a time.
Each offering of Common Stock under the ESPP is for a period of
27 months (an Offering Period). Offering
Periods are overlapping, with a new
27-month
Offering Period beginning every three months. New Offering
Periods begin on each January 1, April 1, July 1
and October 1. Each Offering Period is comprised of nine
three-month exercise periods (Exercise Periods).
Shares are purchased on the last business day of each Exercise
Period, in March, June, September and December (Exercise
Dates). The Board of Directors may establish different
Offering Periods or Exercise Periods under the ESPP.
On the first day of an Offering Period, the Company grants to
employees participating in such Offering Period an option to
purchase shares of Common Stock. On the Exercise Date of each
Exercise Period, the employee is deemed to have exercised the
option, at the exercise price, to the extent of accumulated
payroll deductions. The option exercise price is an amount equal
to 85% of the fair market value per share of the Common Stock on
either the first day of the Offering Period or the Exercise
Date, whichever is lower. If the fair market value of the Common
Stock on an Exercise Date (other than the last Exercise Date of
an Offering Period) is less than its fair market value on the
first day of an Offering Period, then after the exercise of the
option, all participants will automatically be withdrawn from
that offering and enrolled in the new Offering Period.
No Offering Period shall commence, and no Exercise Date shall
occur, if at any time it is determined that the Company is not
then lawfully permitted to offer, issue and sell shares of
Common Stock in accordance with the terms of the ESPP pursuant
to an effective registration statement under the Securities Act
of 1933. If an Offering Period cannot commence for this reason,
it may commence on a date other than January 1,
April 1, July 1 or October 1, and may be for a
duration of less than 27 months, as determined in the sole
discretion of the Compensation Committee. If an Exercise Date
cannot occur, the automatic exercise of an option shall occur on
the next succeeding Exercise Date in the Offering Period, or if
there is no such Exercise Date in the Offering Period, all of
the participants outstanding payroll deductions will be
returned.
17
Subject to certain limitations, the number of shares of Common
Stock a participant purchases in each Exercise Period is
determined by dividing the total amount of payroll deductions
withheld from the participants compensation during the
Exercise Period by the option exercise price. In general, if an
employee is no longer a participant on an Exercise Date, the
employees option, which would have been automatically
exercised on such date, will be automatically terminated, and
the amount of the employees accumulated payroll deductions
will be refunded.
A participant may elect to increase or decrease the amount of
his or her payroll deductions at any time, subject to a minimum
of 1% and a maximum percentage established by the Compensation
Committee. A reduction in the amount of a participants
payroll deductions will be effective seven business days after
the Company receives written notice from the participant and
will apply to the first full pay period commencing after such
date. An increase in the amount of a participants payroll
deductions will be effective seven business days after the
Company receives written notice from the participant and will
apply to the first full Exercise Period commencing after such
date. A participant may withdraw from an Offering Period at any
time without affecting his or her eligibility to participate in
future Offering Periods. If a participant withdraws from an
Offering Period, that participant may not again participate in
the same Offering Period.
The ESPP is administered by the Compensation Committee of the
Board of Directors. The Compensation Committee, at its sole
discretion, may establish a minimum holding period, for shares
of stock acquired by a participant or a participants
beneficiary upon exercise of an option granted under the ESPP.
Currently, the Compensation Committee has set a three month
holding period. The ESPP will continue until terminated by the
Board of Directors.
If the increase in the number of shares reserved for issuance
under the ESPP is approved by the shareholders of the Company,
the Company intends to file a Registration Statement on
Form S-8
covering the shares of Common Stock issuable as a result of such
increase, and upon the effectiveness of such registration
statement all such shares will be, when issued, eligible for
resale in the public market.
The Company is unable to determine the dollar value and number
of options or amounts that will be received by or allocated to
any of the Companys executive officers, such officers as a
group, or employees who are not executive officers as a group,
as a result of the increase in the number of shares subject to
purchase under the ESPP. If the proposed amendment had been in
effect during fiscal 2006, it would not have affected the number
of options received by or allocated to participants in fiscal
2006.
The Board of Directors may, in its discretion, at any time,
terminate or amend the ESPP except that no such termination may
affect options previously granted nor may any amendment make a
change in any option previously granted which would adversely
affect the rights of an option holder under the ESPP.
Summary
of Federal Income Tax Consequences
A participant in the ESPP recognizes no taxable income either as
a result of participation in the ESPP or upon exercise of an
option to purchase shares of Common Stock under the terms of the
ESPP.
If a participant disposes of shares purchased upon exercise of
an option granted under the ESPP within two years from the first
day of the applicable Offering Period or within one year from
the Exercise Date (a Disqualifying Disposition), the
participant will realize ordinary income in the year of such
disposition equal to the amount by which the fair market value
of the shares on the date the shares were purchased exceeds the
purchase price. The amount of ordinary income will be added to
the participants basis in the shares, and any additional
gain or resulting loss recognized on the disposition of the
shares will be a capital gain or loss. A capital gain or loss
will be long-term if the participants holding period is
more than 12 months, or short-term if the
participants holding period is 12 months or less.
18
If the participant disposes of shares purchased upon exercise of
an option granted under the ESPP at least two years after the
first day of the applicable Offering Period and at least one
year after the Exercise Date, the participant will realize
ordinary income in the year of disposition equal to the lesser
of (i) the excess of the fair market value of the shares on
the date of disposition over the exercise price or (ii) the
excess of the fair market value of the shares on the first day
of the applicable Offering Period over the exercise price. The
amount of any ordinary income will be added to the
participants basis in the shares, and any additional gain
recognized upon the disposition after such basis adjustment will
be a long-term capital gain. If the fair market value of the
shares on the date of disposition is less than the exercise
price, there will be no ordinary income and any loss recognized
will be a long-term capital loss.
If the participant still owns the shares at the time of death,
the lesser of (i) the excess of the fair market value of
the shares on the date of death over the exercise price or
(ii) the excess of the fair market value of the shares on
the first day of the Offering Period in which the shares were
purchased over the exercise price will constitute ordinary
income in the year of death.
The Company is generally entitled to a tax deduction in the year
of a Disqualifying Disposition equal to the amount of ordinary
income recognized by the participant as a result of such
disposition. In all other cases, no deduction is allowed by the
Company.
The foregoing is only a summary of the effect of the United
States income tax laws and regulations upon an employee and the
Company with respect to an employees participation in the
ESPP. This summary does not purport to be a complete description
of all federal tax implications of participation in the ESPP,
nor does it discuss the income tax laws of any municipality,
state or foreign country in which a participant may reside or
otherwise be subject to tax. Participants are strongly urged
to consult their own tax advisor concerning the application of
the various tax laws that may apply to a participants
particular situation.
PROPOSAL 4:
PROPOSED AMENDMENT AND RESTATEMENT OF THE
COMPANYS 1997 STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN
The Companys 1997 Stock Incentive Plan (the 1997
Plan) was adopted by the shareholders of the Company at
the Annual Meeting of Shareholders held on April 25, 1997.
Shares were added to the 1997 Plan in 1999, 2000 and 2006, and
shareholder approval was obtained each time. As of March 15,
2007, a total of 9,540,000 shares of Common Stock were
authorized for issuance under the 1997 Plan, of which 3,570,562
had already been issued upon exercise of options under the 1997
Plan, 189,560 had been granted subject to restricted stock
awards, 4,514,568 were reserved for issuance upon exercise of
outstanding stock options, and 1,265,310 remained available for
future grant. The exercise prices and expiration dates of
options outstanding under the 1997 Plan ranged from $10.47 to
$30.81 per share and from February 1, 2008 to
September 26, 2014, respectively.
In the Companys 1997 proxy statement, pursuant to which
shareholders initially approved the 1997 Plan, shareholders were
told specifically that the 1997 Plan permits the granting
to officers, directors, employees and others who provide
services to the Company, at the discretion of the Committee, of
a variety of stock incentive awards based on the Common Stock of
the Company (emphasis added). This same sentence also
appeared in the Companys 1999, 2000 and 2006 proxy
statements in which shareholders were asked to approve increases
in shares authorized to be issued under the 1997 Plan. In fact,
on numerous occasions since 1997 the Company made option grants
from the 1997 Plan to its directors, including directors who
served on the Compensation Committee.
It was recently brought to the Companys attention that the
1997 Plan contains language that prohibits directors who serve
on the Compensation Committee from receiving any option grants
under the 1997 Plan. It is the Companys position that such
language was a result of a scriveners error and should not
have been included in the 1997 Plan. Nevertheless, under Nasdaq
listing requirements, the Company must obtain shareholder
approval before
19
it can amend the 1997 Plan to delete the language prohibiting
grants to directors who serve on the Compensation Committee.
Further, after discussions with Nasdaq officials, the Company
has taken action to cancel all outstanding stock options granted
to members of the Board while serving on the Compensation
Committee. With respect to options that have already been
exercised, the affected director has agreed to return to the
Company the shares acquired through option exercise and the
Company has agreed to refund to the director the exercise price.
In instances where the director has already sold the shares, the
director has agreed to return to the Company the net profit from
the sale of the shares.
On March 22, 2007, the Board of Directors unanimously
approved the amendment and restatement of the 1997 Plan, subject
to shareholders approval. No additional shares of Common
Stock will be added to the 1997 Plan as a result of this
amendment and restatement. The main purpose of this amendment
and restatement is to correct the eligibility provisions of the
1997 Plan so that members of the Compensation Committee may be
eligible to receive grants in the future. Other material changes
include adding two new types of awards that may be granted under
the 1997 Plan: deferred stock units and dividend equivalent
rights. These additional awards would give the Company more
flexibility in the use of stock-based awards to compensate its
employees, directors and consultants.
If the amended and restated 1997 Plan is approved by the
shareholders, the Company has committed to grant make-whole
equity awards and/or cash payments to Messrs. Heinen and
McGregor, the two directors whose stock options were cancelled.
The size and amount of the make-whole awards have not been
finally determined, but it is expected to be a mix of stock
options, and deferred stock units designed to compensate the two
directors for the value of the cancelled stock options.
If a quorum is present at the 2007 Annual Meeting, a majority of
the votes properly cast at the meeting will be required to
approve the proposed amendment and restatement of the
Companys 1997 Plan.
The Board of Directors recommends that shareholders
vote FOR the proposal to approve the amendment and
restatement of the 1997 Plan to change, among other things, the
eligibility provisions to include directors who serve on the
Compensation Committee and expand the type of awards that may be
granted under the 1997 Plan to include deferred stock units and
dividend equivalent rights.
Summary
of the Provisions of the 1997 Plan
The following summary of the 1997 Plan is qualified in its
entirety by the specific language of the 1997 Plan, a copy of
which is attached as Appendix B to this Proxy Statement.
The 1997 Plan is administered by either the Board of Directors
or the Compensation Committee (in either case, the
Administrator) consisting of at least two
Outside Directors. An Outside Director
means any director who (i) is not an employee of the
Company or of any affiliated group, as such term is
defined in Section 1504(a) of the Code which includes the
Company (an Affiliate), (ii) is not a former
employee of the Company or any Affiliate who is receiving
compensation for prior services (other than benefits under a
tax-qualified retirement plan) during the Companys or any
Affiliates taxable year, (iii) has not been an
officer of the Company or any Affiliate and (iv) does not
receive remuneration from the Company or any Affiliate, either
directly or indirectly, in any capacity other than as a director.
The 1997 Plan permits the granting to officers, directors,
employees and others who provide services to the Company, at the
discretion of the Administrator, of a variety of stock incentive
awards based on the Common Stock of the Company. Awards under
the 1997 Plan include stock options (both incentive and
non-qualified), grants of conditioned stock, unrestricted grants
of stock, grants of stock contingent upon the attainment of
performance goals, stock appreciation rights, deferred stock
units and dividend equivalent rights. The Administrator selects
the person to whom awards are granted and the number, type and
terms of the award granted. No person may be granted awards
under the 1997 Plan with respect to more than
300,000 shares of Common Stock in any calendar year
(including
20
shares subject to awards that are forfeited, cancelled or
otherwise terminated in that year). As of March 15, 2007,
the Company had six non-employee directors and approximately
1,650 employees eligible to receive awards under the 1997 Plan.
Stock Options. The 1997 Plan permits the
granting of (i) options to purchase Common Stock intended
to qualify as incentive stock options (Incentive
Options) under Section 422 of the Code, and
(ii) options that do not so qualify (Non-Qualified
Options). The option exercise price of each option is
determined by the Administrator but may not be less than 100% of
the fair market value of the shares on the date of grant. The
option exercise price of each option cannot be reduced without
shareholder approval.
The term of each option is fixed by the Administrator and may
not exceed 10 years from date of grant in the case of an
Incentive Option. The Administrator determines at what time or
times each option may be exercised and, subject to the
provisions of the 1997 Plan, the period of time, if any, after
death, disability or termination of employment during which
options may be exercised. Options may be made exercisable in
installments, and the exercisability of options may be
accelerated by the Administrator.
The exercise price of options granted under the 1997 Plan may be
paid in cash or bank check or other instrument acceptable to the
Administrator, or, with the consent of the Administrator, in
shares of Common Stock. The exercise price may also be delivered
by a broker pursuant to irrevocable instructions to the broker
from the optionee.
To qualify as Incentive Options, options must meet additional
requirements, including a $100,000 per year limitation on
the value of shares subject to Incentive Options which first
become exercisable in any one year, and a maximum
5-year term
and exercise price of at least 110% of fair market value in the
case of greater-than-10% shareholders.
Conditioned Stock. The Administrator may also
award shares of Common Stock subject to such conditions and
restrictions as the Administrator may determine
(Conditioned Stock). These conditions and
restrictions may include provisions for vesting conditioned upon
the achievement of certain performance objectives and/or
continued employment with the Company through a specified
vesting period. In the event awards of Conditioned Stock granted
to employees have a performance-based goal, the restriction
period will be at least one year, and in the event awards of
Conditioned Stock granted to employees have a time-based
restriction, the restriction period will be at least three
years, but vesting can occur incrementally over the three-year
period. The purchase price, if any, of shares of Conditioned
Stock is determined by the Administrator.
If a participant who holds unvested shares of Conditioned Stock
terminates employment for any reason (including death), the
Company has the right to repurchase the unvested shares or to
require their forfeiture in exchange for the amount, if any,
which the participant paid for them. Prior to the fulfillment of
the applicable conditions, the participant will have all rights
of a shareholder with respect to the shares of Conditioned
Stock, including voting and dividend rights, subject only to the
conditions and restrictions set forth in the 1997 Plan and in
the participants Conditioned Stock award.
Unrestricted Stock. The Administrator may also
grant shares of Common Stock (at no cost or for a purchase price
determined by the Administrator which shall not be less than
fair market value) which are free from any restrictions under
the 1997 Plan (Unrestricted Stock). Unrestricted
Stock may be issued to employees in recognition of past services
or other valid consideration, and may be issued in lieu of cash
bonuses to be paid to employees pursuant to other bonus plans of
the Company. Participants may elect to receive all or a portion
of their compensation in shares of Unrestricted Stock by
entering into an irrevocable agreement with the Company no later
than the date specified by the Administrator.
Performance Share Awards. The Administrator
may also grant performance share awards entitling the recipient
to receive shares of Common Stock upon the achievement of
individual or Company performance goals
21
and such other conditions as the Administrator determines
(Performance Share Awards). Except as otherwise
determined by the Administrator, rights under a Performance
Share Award not yet earned will terminate upon a
participants termination of employment.
Stock Appreciation Rights. The Administrator
may also grant stock appreciation rights (Stock
Appreciation Rights) which entitle the holder to receive,
upon exercise, Common Stock having a fair market value equal to
the amount by which the fair market value of the Common Stock on
the date of exercise exceeds the exercise price of the Stock
Appreciation Right, multiplied by the number of shares with
respect to which the Stock Appreciation Right is exercised.
Stock Appreciation Rights may be granted in conjunction with an
option, in which event, upon exercise of one of the awards, the
number of shares with respect to which the other award may be
exercised is correspondingly reduced.
Deferred Stock Awards. The Administrator may
award phantom stock units as deferred stock awards to
participants. Deferred stock awards are ultimately payable in
the form of shares of Common Stock and may be subject to such
conditions and restrictions as the Administrator may determine.
These conditions and restrictions may include the achievement of
certain performance objectives and/or continued employment with
the Company through a specified vesting period. However, in the
event these awards granted to employees have a performance-based
goal, the restriction period will be at least one year, and in
the event these awards granted to employees have a time-based
restriction, the restriction period will be at least three
years, but vesting can occur incrementally over the three-year
period. In the Administrators sole discretion and subject
to the participants compliance with the procedures
established by the Administrator and requirements of
Section 409A of the Code, it may permit a participant to
make an advance election to receive a portion of his or her
future cash compensation otherwise due in the form of a fully
vested deferred stock award. During the deferral period, the
deferred stock awards may be credited with dividend equivalent
rights.
Dividend Equivalent Rights. The Administrator
may grant dividend equivalent rights which entitle the
participant to receive credits for dividends that would be paid
if the participant had held specified shares of Common Stock.
Dividend equivalent rights may be granted as a component of
another award or as a freestanding award. Dividend equivalent
rights may be settled in cash, shares of Common Stock or a
combination thereof, in a single installment or installments, as
specified in the award.
Amendments and Terminations. The Board of
Directors may at any time amend or discontinue the 1997 Plan and
the Administrator may at any time amend or cancel outstanding
awards (or provide substitute awards at the same exercise or
purchase price) for the purpose of satisfying changes in the law
or for any other lawful purpose. Among other things, the
Administrator has the authority to accelerate the exercisability
or vesting of an award (except Conditioned Stock Awards) or
extend the period for exercise of an award. However, no such
action may be taken which adversely affects any rights under
outstanding awards without the holders consent. No
amendment, unless approved by the shareholders of the Company,
shall be effective if it would permit the repricing of Options
or Stock Appreciation Rights granted to directors, and officers
of the Company or permit the granting of Non-Qualified Options
or Stock Appreciation Rights at less than 100% of the fair
market value of the Common Stock on the date of grant. Moreover,
no such amendment, unless approved by the shareholders of the
Company, shall be effective if it would cause the 1997 Plan to
fail to satisfy any then applicable incentive stock option rules
under Federal tax law. In addition, no such amendment, unless
approved by the shareholders of the Company, shall be effective
if it would cause a material increase in the number of shares
authorized under the Plan, a material increase in the benefits
accruing to participants under the Plan, or a material increase
in the eligible class of recipients under the Plan.
Change of Control Provisions. The 1997 Plan
provides that in the event of a Change of Control
(as defined in the 1997 Plan) of the Company, options and
certain other awards will become exercisable for the securities,
cash or property that the holders of Common Stock received in
connection with the Change of Control. In addition, the
22
Administrator may accelerate awards and waive conditions and
restrictions on any awards to the extent it may determine
appropriate. The Administrator may also, in its discretion,
cancel outstanding options and other awards effective upon the
Change of Control, provided that holders have at least
30 days prior to such date in which to exercise such
options and awards, to the extent then exercisable.
New Plan
Benefits
Because the grant of awards under the 1997 Plan is generally
within the discretion of the Administrator, the Company is
unable to determine the dollar value or number of shares of
Common Stock that will in the future be received by or allocated
to any participant in the 1997 Plan, except as described below.
Accordingly, in lieu of providing information regarding benefits
that will be received under the 1997 Plan, the following table
provides information concerning the benefits that were received
by the following persons or groups during fiscal 2006: each
Named Executive Officer; all current executive officers, as a
group; all current directors who are not executive officers, as
a group; and all employees who are not executive officers, as a
group.
The amounts in the following table represent shares of Common
Stock subject to options granted during fiscal 2006 under the
1997 Plan, regardless of whether such options have been
exercised, and shares of Common Stock subject to Conditioned
Stock Awards.
New Plan
Benefits
1997 Stock Incentive Plan
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
|
Dollar Value
|
|
|
Shares of
|
|
Name and Position
|
|
($)(1)
|
|
|
Common Stock
|
|
|
Joseph W. Alsop
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
180,000
|
|
Co-Founder, Chief Executive
Officer and director-nominee
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
James D. Freedman
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
30,000
|
|
Senior Vice President and General
Counsel
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
David G. Ireland
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
60,000
|
|
President, OpenEdge Division
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Richard D. Reidy
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
40,000
|
|
President, DataDirect Technologies
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Norman R. Robertson
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
Senior Vice President, Finance and
Administration and Chief Financial Officer
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
All current executive officers, as
a group
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
395,000
|
|
All current directors who are not
executive officers, as a group
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
99,250
|
|
All employees who are not
executive officers, as a group
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
522,375
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
Grants of options to purchase shares of Common Stock have not
been assigned a dollar value. |
Equity
Compensation Plan Information as of November 30,
2006
The following table provides information as of November 30,
2006 regarding shares of Common Stock that may be issued under
the Companys equity compensation plans. The table sets
forth the total number of shares of
23
Common Stock issuable upon the exercise of outstanding options
as of November 30, 2006, the weighted average exercise
price of these options and the number of shares of Common Stock
remaining available for future issuance.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Securities to be
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Issued Upon
|
|
|
Weighted-average
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Exercise of
|
|
|
Exercise Price of
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
|
Outstanding
|
|
|
Outstanding
|
|
|
Securities
|
|
|
|
Options, Warrants
|
|
|
Options, Warrants
|
|
|
Remaining Available
|
|
Plan Category
|
|
and Rights
|
|
|
and Rights
|
|
|
For Future Issuance
|
|
|
Equity compensation plans approved
by shareholders(1)
|
|
|
5,705,000
|
(2)
|
|
$
|
17.08
|
|
|
|
1,241,000
|
(3)
|
Equity compensation plans not
approved by shareholders(4)
|
|
|
4,773,000
|
|
|
$
|
21.30
|
|
|
|
329,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
|
|
|
10,478,000
|
|
|
$
|
19.00
|
|
|
|
1,570,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
Consists of the 1992 Incentive and Nonqualified Stock Option
Plan, 1994 Stock Incentive Plan, 1997 Plan, and the ESPP. |
|
(2) |
|
Does not include purchase rights accruing under the ESPP because
the purchase price (and therefore the number of shares to be
purchased) will not be determined until the end of the purchase
period. |
|
(3) |
|
Includes shares available for future issuance under the ESPP. |
|
(4) |
|
Consists of the 2002 Nonqualified Stock Plan and the 2004
Inducement Plan described below. |
The Company has adopted two equity compensation plans, the 2002
Nonqualified Stock Plan (the 2002 Plan), and the
2004 Inducement Stock Plan (the 2004 Plan), for
which the approval of shareholders was not required. The 2004
Plan is intended to be reserved for persons to whom the Company
may issue securities as an inducement to become employed by the
Company pursuant to the rules and regulations of The Nasdaq
Stock Market. Executive officers and members of the Board of
Directors are not eligible for awards under the 2002 Plan. An
executive officer or director would be eligible to receive an
award under the 2004 Plan only as an inducement to join the
Company. Awards under the 2002 Plan and the 2004 Plan may
include nonqualified stock options, grants of conditioned stock,
unrestricted grants of stock, grants of stock contingent upon
the attainment of performance goals and stock appreciation
rights. A total of 7,200,000 shares are issuable under the
two plans.
Federal
Tax Aspects of the 1997 Plan
The following is a summary of the principal Federal income tax
consequences of transactions under the 1997 Plan. It does not
describe all Federal tax consequences under the 1997 Plan, nor
does it describe state, local or foreign tax consequences.
Incentive Options. No taxable income is
realized by an optionee upon the grant or exercise of an
Incentive Option, but the exercise of an Incentive Option will
give rise to an item of tax preference that may result in
alternative minimum tax liability for the optionee. If shares
issued to an optionee pursuant to the exercise of an Incentive
Option are not sold or transferred within two years from the
date of grant and within one year after the date of exercise,
then (a) upon sale of such shares, any amount realized in
excess of the option price (the amount paid for the shares) will
be taxed to the optionee as a long-term capital gain and any
loss sustained will be a long-term capital loss, and
(b) there will be no deduction for the Company for Federal
income tax purposes.
If shares of Common Stock acquired upon the exercise of an
Incentive Option are disposed of prior to the expiration of the
two-year or one-year holding periods described above (a
disqualifying disposition), generally (a) the
optionee will realize ordinary income in the year of disposition
in an amount equal to the excess (if any) of the fair market
value of the shares at exercise (or, if less, the amount
realized on a sale of such shares) over the option
24
price thereof, and (b) the Company will be entitled to
deduct such amount. Special rules apply where all or a portion
of the exercise price of the Incentive Option is paid by
tendering shares of Common Stock.
If an Incentive Option is exercised at a time when it no longer
qualifies for the tax treatment described above, the option is
treated as a Non-Qualified Option. Generally, an Incentive
Option will not be eligible for the tax treatment described
above if it is exercised more than three months following
termination of employment (or one year in the case of
termination of employment by reason of disability).
Non-Qualified Options. With respect to
Non-Qualified Options under the 1997 Plan, no income is realized
by the optionee at the time the option is granted. Generally,
(a) at exercise, ordinary income is realized by the
optionee in an amount equal to the difference between the option
price and the fair market value of the shares on the date of
exercise, and the Company receives a tax deduction for the same
amount, and (b) at disposition of the shares acquired upon
exercise, appreciation or depreciation after the date of
exercise is treated as either short-term or long-term capital
gain or loss depending on how long the shares have been held.
Conditioned Stock. A recipient of Conditioned
Stock generally will be subject to tax at ordinary income rates
on the fair market value of the stock at the time that the stock
is no longer subject to forfeiture, minus any amount paid for
such stock. However, a recipient who so elects under
Section 83(b) of the Code, within 30 days of the date
of issuance of the Conditioned Stock, will realize ordinary
income on the date of issuance equal to the fair market value of
the shares of Conditioned Stock at that time (measured as if the
shares were unrestricted and could be sold immediately), minus
any amount paid for such stock. If the shares subject to such
election are forfeited, the recipient will not be entitled to
any deduction, refund or loss for tax purposes with respect to
the forfeited shares. The Company generally will receive a tax
deduction equal to the amount includable as ordinary income to
the recipient.
Unrestricted Stock. The recipient of
Unrestricted Stock will generally be subject to tax at ordinary
income rates on the fair market value of such Unrestricted Stock
on the date that such Unrestricted Stock is issued to the
participant, minus any amount paid for such stock. The Company
generally will be entitled to a deduction equal to the amount
treated as compensation that is taxable as ordinary income to
the recipient.
Performance Shares. The recipient of a
Performance Share Award will generally be subject to tax at
ordinary income rates on the fair market value of any Common
Stock issued under the award on the date of issuance of the
shares, and the Company will generally be entitled to a
deduction equal to the amount of ordinary income realized by the
recipient.
Stock Appreciation Rights. The recipient of a
Stock Appreciation Right will generally be subject to tax at
ordinary income rates on the fair market value of any Common
Stock received upon exercise of the Stock Appreciation Right.
The Company generally will be entitled to a deduction equal to
the amount of ordinary income realized by the recipient.
Deferred Stock Awards. The recipient of a
Deferred Stock Award will not be subject to any income tax until
the award is settled in shares of Common Stock so long as the
requirements of Section 409A of the Code are satisfied.
Upon settlement of the award in shares of Common Stock, the
recipient will be subject to tax at ordinary income rates on the
fair market value of the Common Stock. The Company generally
will be entitled to a deduction equal to the amount of ordinary
income realized by the recipient.
Dividends and Dividend Equivalents. Dividends
paid on Common Stock (including Conditioned Stock) and dividend
equivalents paid with respect to Deferred Stock Awards will be
taxed at ordinary income rates to the recipient. Generally, the
Company will not be entitled to any deduction for dividends,
except in the case of dividends paid on Conditioned Stock with
respect to which no Section 83(b) election has been filed.
The Company will be entitled to a deduction for dividend
equivalents.
25
Parachute Payments. The vesting of any portion
of an option or other award that is accelerated due to the
occurrence of a change in control may cause a portion of the
payments with respect to such accelerated awards to be treated
as parachute payments as defined in the Code. Any
such parachute payments may be non-deductible to the Company, in
whole or in part, and may subject the recipient to a
non-deductible 20% federal excise tax on all or a portion of
such payment (in addition to other taxes ordinarily payable).
Limitation on Deductions. As a result of
Section 162(m) of the Code, the Companys deduction
for certain awards under the 1997 Plan may be limited to the
extent that the Chief Executive Officer or other executive
officer whose compensation is required to be reported in the
summary compensation table receives compensation in excess of
$1 million a year (other than performance-based
compensation that otherwise meets the requirements of
Section 162(m) of the Code). The 1997 Plan is structured to
allow options and Stock Appreciation Rights to qualify as
performance-based compensation.
The foregoing is only a summary of the principal Federal income
tax consequences of transactions under the 1997 Plan. This
summary does not purport to be a complete description of all
Federal tax implications, nor does it discuss the income tax
laws of any municipality, state or foreign country in which a
recipient under the 1997 Plan may reside or otherwise be subject
to tax. Recipients of equity under the 1997 Plan are strongly
urged to consult their own tax advisor concerning the
application of various tax laws that may apply to a
recipients particular situation.
PROPOSAL 5:
SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL
Proposal Concerning
Executive Compensation
The Company has been notified that the International Brotherhood
of Teamsters, Teamsters General Fund, 25 Louisiana Avenue,
N.W., Washington, D.C. 20001, beneficial holder of
13,700 shares of the Companys Common Stock, intends
to present the following proposal at the 2007 Annual Meeting and
has furnished the following statement in support of its
proposal. The Company accepts no responsibility for the contents
of the proposed resolution or supporting statement.
Resolved: That the shareholders of Progress
Software (Company) request that the Board of
Directors Executive Compensation Committee establish a
pay-for-superior-performance
standard in the Companys executive compensation plan for
senior executives (Plan), by incorporating the
following principles into the Plan:
1. The annual incentive or bonus component of the Plan
should utilize defined financial performance criteria that can
be benchmarked against a disclosed peer group of companies, and
provide that an annual bonus is awarded only when the
Companys performance exceeds its peers median or
mean performance on the selected financial criteria;
2. The long-term compensation component of the Plan should
utilize defined financial
and/or stock
price performance criteria that can be benchmarked against a
disclosed peer group of companies. Options, restricted shares,
or other equity or non-equity compensation used in the Plan
should be structured so that compensation is received only when
the Companys performance exceeds its peers median or
mean performance on the selected financial and stock price
performance criteria; and
3. Plan disclosure should be sufficient to allow
shareholders to determine and monitor the pay and performance
correlation established in the Plan.
Supporting Statement: We feel it imperative
that compensation plans for senior executives be designed and
implemented to promote long-term corporate value.
26
We believe common compensation practices contribute to excessive
executive compensation. Compensation committees typically target
senior executive total compensation at the median level of a
selected peer group, then design any annual and long-term
incentive plan performance criteria and benchmarks to deliver a
significant portion of the total compensation target regardless
of the companys performance. High total compensation
targets combined with less than rigorous performance benchmarks
yield a pattern of superior-pay-for-average-performance. The
problem is exacerbated when companies include annual bonus
payments among earnings used to calculate supplemental executive
retirement plan (SERP) benefit levels, guaranteeing excessive
levels of lifetime income through inflated pension payments.
The Corporate Library determined several causes for concern with
the Companys compensation practices. Chiefly, while the
Company has underperformed the industry and the S&P 500 at 3
and 1-year
periods, the CEOs total compensation, including realized
options, exceeds the median for a company of its size by more
than 20 percent.
We believe the Companys Plan fails to promote
pay-for-superior-performance
principles. Our Proposal offers a straightforward solution: The
Compensation Committee should establish and disclose financial
and stock price performance criteria and set peer group-related
performance benchmarks that permit awards or payouts in annual
and long-term incentive compensation plans only when the
Companys performance exceeds the median of its peer group.
A senior executive compensation plan based on sound
pay-for-superior-performance
principles will help moderate excessive executive compensation
and create competitive compensation incentives that will focus
senior executives on building sustainable long-term value.
We urge shareholders to vote FOR this proposal.
Progress
Software Corporations Statement in Opposition
The Board of Directors recommends a vote AGAINST this
proposal. While the Board supports the concept of
pay-for-superior-performance,
the proposal is unnecessary and too restrictive. The Board
believes that the Companys executive compensation programs
are already significantly performance-related in a manner that
aligns the interests of executives with those of the
Companys shareholders. Superior performance is
multi-faceted and should not be limited to stock price
performance or financial criteria benchmarked against peer group
performance, as requested by this proposal. In addition, the
Board believes that adopting the proposal would put the Company
at a competitive disadvantage in hiring and retaining executives.
The report of the Compensation Committee included in this Proxy
Statement describes the principles that guide the Compensation
Committee in setting executive compensation. The Companys
philosophy is to reward executives based upon corporate and
individual performance, as well as to provide long-term
incentives for the achievement of future financial and strategic
goals. The Compensation Committee believes that this philosophy
advances both the short- and long-term interests of
shareholders. The Companys bonus program is designed to
reward executives for the achievement of specific operating
metrics, primarily focused on revenue growth and operating
profit. The Companys executives also receive long-term
incentive compensation in the form of stock options, which are
inherently performance-based because their value is measured by
the Companys stock price.
The Compensation Committee requires flexibility to design
executive compensation based on a number of different measures,
incentives and objectives, including operational and strategic
objectives. The Compensation Committee has designed a
compensation program that ties a significant portion of an
executives compensation to the achievement of performance
goals that are appropriate for the scope and level of that
executives responsibilities (including company-wide,
business unit
and/or
individual performance goals). In determining the appropriate
performance goals, the Compensation Committee uses a variety of
tools, including the review of benchmarks and comparative market
data for a peer group of technology companies. However, with
respect to peer group data, the
27
Compensation Committee does not believe in the application of
rigid standards or mere mathematical averages that may not be
sufficient to ascertain the Companys performance versus
the peer group.
Moreover, the Companys executive compensation program is
designed to attract and retain talented executives in
todays highly competitive market. The Board believes that
limiting the Compensation Committees flexibility in
awarding compensation to executives based on a variety of
performance standards could place the Company at a competitive
disadvantage in recruiting and retaining executives relative to
comparable technology companies.
For the reasons stated above, the Board believes that the
adoption of the shareholder proposal is unnecessary and not in
the best interests of the Company and its shareholders.
Recommendation
of the Companys Board of Directors
If a quorum is present at the 2007 Annual Meeting, a majority of
the votes properly cast will be necessary to approve the
shareholder proposal.
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS, WITH THE CONCURRENCE AND APPROVAL OF
THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE, RECOMMENDS A VOTE AGAINST
THIS PROPOSAL. PROXIES SOLICITED BY THE BOARD WILL BE VOTED
AGAINST THIS PROPOSAL UNLESS INSTRUCTIONS TO
THE CONTRARY ARE GIVEN.
SELECTION
OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
The Audit Committee of the Board of Directors has selected the
firm of Deloitte & Touche LLP, independent registered
public accounting firm, to serve as the Companys
independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal
year ending November 30, 2007. The Company has been advised
that a representative of Deloitte & Touche LLP will be
present at the 2007 Annual Meeting. This representative will
have the opportunity to make a statement if he desires and will
be available to respond to appropriate questions presented at
the meeting.
EXPENSES
OF SOLICITATION
The cost of solicitation of proxies will be borne by the
Company. In addition to soliciting shareholders by mail, the
Company will reimburse banks, brokers and other custodians,
nominees and fiduciaries for their reasonable
out-of-pocket
costs in forwarding proxy materials to the beneficial owners of
shares held of record by them. Directors, officers and regular
employees of the Company may, without additional compensation,
solicit shareholders in person or by mail, telephone, facsimile,
or otherwise following the original solicitation.
PROPOSALS OF
SHAREHOLDERS FOR 2008 ANNUAL MEETING
The Company anticipates that its 2008 Annual Meeting of
Shareholders will be held on or about April 24, 2008.
Proposals of shareholders of the Company intended to be
presented at the 2008 Annual Meeting must, in order to be
included in the Companys proxy statement and the form of
proxy for the 2008 Annual Meeting, be received at the
Companys principal executive offices by November 28,
2007.
Under the by-laws of the Company, any shareholder intending to
present any proposal (other than a proposal made by, or at the
direction of, the Board of Directors of the Company) at the 2008
Annual Meeting, must give written notice of such proposal
(including certain information about any nominee or matter
proposed and the proposing shareholder) to the Secretary of the
Company not less than 60 days nor more than 90 days
prior to the date of the scheduled annual meeting; provided,
however, that if less than 70 days notice or prior
public disclosure of the
28
scheduled annual meeting is given or made, such notice, to be
timely, must be given within 10 days following such public
disclosure or mailing of such notice, whichever is earlier.
AVAILABLE
INFORMATION
Shareholders of record on February 28, 2007 will receive
with this Proxy Statement a copy of the Companys 2006
Annual Report on
Form 10-K,
containing detailed financial information concerning the
Company. The Companys 2006 Annual Report filed on
Form 10-K
is also available on-line from the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commissions EDGAR database at the following
address: www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/srch-edgar?progress+software.
29
Appendix A
PROGRESS
SOFTWARE CORPORATION
1991 EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN
(Amended and Restated 22 March 2007)
The Progress Software Corporation Employee Stock Purchase Plan
(the Plan) is intended to provide a method whereby
employees of Progress Software Corporation (the
Company) will have an opportunity to acquire an
ownership interest (or increase an existing ownership interest)
in the Company through the purchase of shares of the Common
Stock of the Company. It is the intention of the Company that
the Plan qualify as an employee stock purchase plan
under Section 423 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended (the Code). The provisions of the Plan
shall, accordingly, be construed so as to extend and limit
participation in a manner consistent with the requirements of
that section of the Code.
(a) Eligible Compensation for
purposes of the Plan means: (i) with respect to individuals
who are hourly employees, base salary plus payments for overtime
and bonuses or (ii) with respect to individuals who are
salaried employees, base salary plus sales commissions and
bonuses. Eligible Compensation shall not include any deferred
compensation other than contributions by an individual through a
salary reduction agreement to a cash or deferred plan pursuant
to Section 401(k) of the Code or to a cafeteria plan
pursuant to Section 125 of the Code.
(b) Board means the Board of
Directors of the Company.
(c) Committee means the
Compensation Committee of the Board.
(d) Common Stock means the common
stock, $.01 par value per share, of the Company.
(e) Company shall also include
any subsidiary of Progress Software Corporation designated as a
participant in the Plan by the Board, unless the context
otherwise requires.
(f) Employee means any person who
is customarily employed at least 20 hours per week and more
than five months in a calendar year by (i) the Company or
(ii) any subsidiary corporation.
(g) Subsidiary Corporation shall
mean any present or future corporation which is or would
constitute a subsidiary corporation as that term is
defined in Section 424(f) of the Code.
(a) Participation in the Plan is completely voluntary.
Participation during any one or more of the Offering Periods, as
hereafter defined, under the Plan shall neither limit, nor
require, participation during any other Offering Period.
(b) Each Employee of the Company and its Subsidiary
Corporations shall be eligible to participate in the Plan on any
Offering Period commencement date, as hereafter identified,
following the completion of three months of continuous service
with the Company
and/or its
Subsidiary Corporations; provided, however, that no Employee
shall be granted an option under the Plan:
(i) if, immediately after the grant, such Employee would
own stock,
and/or hold
outstanding options to purchase stock, possessing 5% or more of
the total combined voting power or value of all classes of stock
of the
A-1
Company or any Subsidiary Corporation; for purposes of this
Paragraph the rules of Section 424(d) of the Code shall
apply in determining stock ownership of any employee; or
(ii) which permits
his/her
rights to purchase stock under all Section 423 employee
stock purchase plans of the Company and its Subsidiary
Corporations to exceed US $25,000 of the fair market value
of the stock (determined at the time such option is granted) for
each calendar year in which such option is outstanding; for
purposes of this Paragraph, the rules of Section 423 (b)(8)
of the Code shall apply.
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4.
|
OFFERING
PERIOD / EXERCISE PERIOD
|
The right to purchase stock hereunder shall be made available by
a series of Exercise Periods during an
Offering Period to employees eligible in accordance
with Paragraph 3 hereof.
Offering Period. Each participant in the Plan
will be enrolled in an Offering Period. An Offering Period has a
duration of 27 consecutive months unless a participant:
withdraws from the Plan, ceases to be an eligible employee, or
is automatically transferred to a new Offering Period. Offering
Periods commence on each of the following dates: January 1,
April 1, July 1, or October 1.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, no Offering Period shall commence
if at any time it is determined that the Company is not then
lawfully permitted to offer, issue and sell shares of Common
Stock in accordance with the terms of this Plan pursuant to an
effective registration statement under the Securities Act of
1933, as amended. If an Offering Period cannot commence upon any
date for the reason set forth above, an Offering Period may
commence upon a date other than January 1, April 1,
July 1 or October 1, and such Offering Period may be
for a duration of less than 27 months. Any determination as
to whether an Offering Period shall so commence on another date,
and the duration of such Offering Period, shall be in the sole
discretion of the Committee.
Exercise Period. Each
27-month
Offering Period consists of nine consecutive Exercise Periods
lasting three months each. Exercise Periods start on
January 1, April 1, July 1, and October 1.
Exercise Date. During each
27-month
Offering Period there will be nine Exercise Dates. An Exercise
Date is the last date of each Exercise Period. Therefore,
Exercise Dates will be as follows: March 31, June 30,
September 30, and December 31.
Notwithstanding the foregoing and subject to Paragraph 22,
in the event that, on any Exercise Date provided for herein, it
is determined that the Company is not then lawfully permitted to
offer, issue and sell shares of Common Stock in accordance with
the terms of this Plan pursuant to an effective registration
statement under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, such
Exercise Date shall be of no force or effect.
Any eligible employee may become a participant by completing a
payroll deduction authorization form provided by the Company and
filing it with their payroll department and the Plan
administrator 20 days prior to an Offering Period
commencement date.
A participant may be enrolled in only one Offering Period at a
time. A participant will be re-enrolled automatically as a
participant in future Offering Periods when an Offering Period
in which such participant is currently enrolled ends, unless
such participant withdraws from participation, is terminated or
terminates employment, becomes ineligible to participate for any
reason, or the Plan terminates.
(a) At the time a participant files
his/her
authorization for a payroll deduction,
he/she shall
specify a percentage of
his/her
Eligible Compensation to be deducted from
his/her pay
on each payday during any Offering
A-2
Period in which
he/she is a
participant in the Plan. Such percentage shall be in increments
of one percent (1%) up to a maximum percentage to be established
for each Offering Period by the Committee.
(b) Payroll deductions for participants shall commence on
the Offering Period commencement date following the effective
date of
his/her
authorization for such payroll deductions.
(c) A participant may, at any time, reduce the percentage
(but not below 1%) of
his/her
Eligible Compensation to be deducted on each payday that
he/she
participates in the Plan. A reduction in payroll deductions will
be effective on the seventh business day following receipt of
notice by the Company and will apply to the first full pay
period commencing after such date.
(d) A participant may, at any time, increase the percentage
(but not above the maximum established by the Committee) of
his/her
Eligible Compensation to be deducted on each payday that
he/she
participates in the Plan. An increase in payroll deductions will
be effective on the seventh business day following receipt of
notice by the Company and will apply to the first full Exercise
Period commencing after such date.
(e) All payroll deductions made for a participant shall be
credited to
his/her
account under the Plan. A participant may not make any separate
cash payment into such account.
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7.
|
GRANTING
OF OPTION / EXERCISE PRICE
|
(a) On the commencement date of each Offering Period, a
participant in such Offering Period shall be deemed to have been
granted an option to purchase on each Exercise Date during such
Offering Period (at the per share exercise price) up to a number
of shares of the Companys Common Stock determined by
dividing such participants payroll deductions accumulated
during the applicable Exercise Period by eighty-five (85%) of
the market value per share of the Companys Common Stock on
the Offering Period commencement date or on the Exercise Date,
whichever is lower, provided that the number of shares subject
to the option shall not exceed 200% of the number of shares
determined by dividing 10% of the participants Eligible
Compensation over the Offering Period (determined as of the
Offering Period commencement date) by 85% of the market value
per share of the Companys Common Stock on the Offering
Period commencement date, subject to the limitations set forth
in Section 3 (b) and 12 hereof. The Market value per
share of the Companys Common Stock shall be determined as
provided in Section 7(b) herein.
(b) The exercise price per share to be paid for Common
Stock purchased under the Plan shall be equal to the lower of
85% of the market value per share of the Common Stock on the
first day of the Offering Period in which the Exercise Date
falls, or 85% of the market value per share of the Common Stock
on the Exercise Date. Market value per share of the Common Stock
on a particular date is the closing price (or closing bid, if no
sales were reported) of the Common Stock on the National
Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System,
Inc. (NASDAQ), or, in the event the Common Stock is
listed on a stock exchange, the market value per share shall be
the closing price on such exchange, for that date, as reported
in the Wall Street Journal. If a closing price is not available
for a particular date, then the market value per share to be
used for that date will be the closing stock price as of the
last preceding trading day on the NASDAQ or a stock exchange for
which a closing price is available. If the Common Stock is not
listed on the NASDAQ or a stock exchange then the market value
per share will be determined by the Committee.
For purpose of calculating the number of shares of Common Stock
to be purchased with payroll deductions from participants
outside of the United States, the Company will use the exchange
rate published in the Wall Street Journal on the Exercise Date.
A-3
Unless a participant withdraws from the Plan or is terminated
from participating in the Plan pursuant to paragraph 10
hereof,
his/her
option for the purchase of Common Stock will be deemed to have
been exercised automatically on each Exercise Date for the
purchase of the number of full shares of Common Stock which the
accumulated payroll deductions in
his/her
account at that time will purchase at the price of the Common
Stock as determined in Paragraph 7 (b). Fractional shares
will not be issued under the Plan and any excess funds in a
participants account representing any fractional shares
after Common Stock purchases made on each Exercise Date will be
automatically carried forward to the next Exercise Period unless
the participant elects, by written notice to their payroll
department, to have the excess returned to him/her.
In the event that an Exercise Date is of no force or effect
pursuant to the provisions of Paragraph 4 above, the
automatic exercise described in this Paragraph shall occur on
the next succeeding Exercise Date in such Offering Period that
has not been determined to be of no force or effect. If there is
no such Exercise Date in the Offering Period, all of the
participants outstanding payroll deductions for such
Offering Period shall be returned to the participant, without
interest.
If the market value of the Common Stock is lower on an Exercise
Date than it was on the first day of the Offering Period, then
all participants in such Offering Period will be automatically
withdrawn from that Offering Period immediately after the
participants exercise of the option on such Exercise Date,
and such participants will be automatically re-enrolled in a new
Offering Period commencing immediately after that Exercise Date.
The old Offering Period terminates upon such automatic
re-enrollment.
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10.
|
WITHDRAWAL
AND TERMINATION
|
(a) Prior to the Exercise Date for each Exercise Period,
any participant may withdraw all but not less than all of
his/her
payroll deductions under the Plan for such Exercise Period by
giving written notice to
his/her
payroll department. All of the participants payroll
deductions credited to such account will be paid to him/her
after receipt of notice of withdrawal, without interest, and no
future payroll deductions will be made. Withdrawal from an
Exercise Period will be deemed to be a withdrawal from the
Offering Period which includes such Exercise Period. The Company
will treat any attempt to borrow by a participant on the
security of accumulated payroll deductions as an election to
withdraw such deductions.
(b) A participant may elect not to exercise an option by
giving written notice to their payroll department no less than
seven (7) business days prior to the applicable Exercise
Date. Any such election will be treated as a withdrawal pursuant
to section (a) above.
(c) A participants election not to participate in, or
withdrawal from, any Offering Period or Exercise Period within
such Offering Period will not have any effect upon his/her
eligibility to participate in any succeeding Offering Period or
in any similar plan which may hereafter be adopted by the
Company.
(d) Upon termination of the participants employment
for any reason, including retirement but excluding death, all of
his/her
payroll deductions accrued during the relevant Exercise Period
will be returned to the participant.
(e) Upon termination of the participants employment
because of death, the participants beneficiary (as defined
in Paragraph 14) shall have the right to elect, by
written notice given to the participants former payroll
A-4
department prior to the expiration of a period of 90 days
commencing with the date of the death of the participant but in
no event later than the applicable Offering Period, either
(i) to withdraw all of the payroll deductions credited to
the participants account under the Plan; or
(ii) to exercise the participants option for the
purchase of stock on the Exercise Date next following the date
of the participants death for the purchase of the number
of full shares which the participants accumulated payroll
deductions, at the date of the participants death, will
purchase at the applicable price, and any excess deductions will
be returned to said beneficiary. In the event that no such
written notice of election shall be duly received by the
appropriate payroll department of the Company, the beneficiary
shall automatically be deemed to have elected to withdraw the
payroll deductions credited to the participant at the date of
the participants death and the same will be paid promptly
to said beneficiary.
No interest will be paid or allowed on any money paid into the
Plan or credited to any participant.
(a) The maximum number of shares of Common Stock available
for issuance and purchase by participants under the Plan,
subject to adjustment upon changes in capitalization of the
Company as provided in Paragraph 17, shall be
4,000,000 shares of Common Stock, par value $.01 per
share, of the Company. If on a given Exercise Date the number of
shares with respect to which options are to be exercised exceeds
the number of shares then available, the Company shall make a
pro rata allocation of the shares available for delivery and
distribution in an equitable manner, with the balances of
payroll deductions credited to each participant under the Plan
carried forward to the next Exercise Period in the applicable
Offering Period or returned to the participant if the
participant so chooses, by giving written notice to their
payroll department to this effect.
(b) The participant will have no interest in stock
underlying
his/her
option until such option has been exercised.
(c) The Committee, in its sole discretion, may establish a
minimum holding period, if any, for shares of stock acquired
pursuant hereto by any participant or his beneficiary pursuant
to Paragraph 14 hereof. Certificates representing said
shares of stock issued pursuant to this Plan may bear legends to
that effect.
The Plan shall be administered by the Committee. The
interpretation and construction of any provision of the Plan and
adoption of rules and regulations for administering the Plan
shall be made by the Committee. Determinations made by the
Committee with respect to any matter or provision contained in
the Plan shall be final, conclusive and binding upon the Company
and upon all participants, their heirs or legal representatives.
Any rule or regulation adopted by the Committee shall remain in
full force and effect unless and until altered, amended, or
repealed by the Committee.
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14.
|
DESIGNATION
OF BENEFICIARY
|
A participant shall file with their payroll department a written
designation of a beneficiary who is to receive any Common Stock
and/or cash
under the Plan. Such designation of beneficiary may be changed
by the participant at any time by written notice. Upon the death
of a participant and upon receipt by the Company of proof of the
identity and existence at the participants death of a
beneficiary validly designated by him under the Plan, the
Company shall deliver such Common Stock
and/or cash
to such beneficiary validly designated under the Plan who is
living at the time of such participants death, the Company
shall deliver such Common Stock
and/or cash
to the
A-5
executor or administrator of the estate of the participant. No
beneficiary shall prior to the death of the participant by whom
he has been designated, acquire any interest in the Common Stock
and/or cash
credited to the participant under the Plan.
Neither payroll deductions credited to a participant nor any
rights with regard to the exercise of an option or to receive
Common Stock under the Plan may be assigned, transferred,
pledged, or otherwise disposed of in any way by the participant
other than by will or the laws of descent and distribution. Any
such attempted assignment, transfer, pledge, or other
disposition shall be without effect, except that the Company may
treat such act as an election to withdraw funds in accordance
with Paragraph 10(a).
All payroll deductions received or held by the Company under
this Plan may be used by the Company for any corporate purpose,
and the Company shall not be obligated to segregate such payroll
deductions.
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17.
|
EFFECT OF
CHANGES OF COMMON STOCK
|
If the Company shall subdivide or reclassify the Common Stock
which has been or may be optioned under this Plan, or shall
declare thereon any dividend payable in shares of such Common
Stock, or shall take any other action of a similar nature
affecting such Common Stock, then the number and class of shares
of Common Stock which may thereafter be optioned (in the
aggregate and to any participant) shall be adjusted accordingly
and in the case of each option outstanding at the time of any
such action, the number and class of shares which may thereafter
be purchased pursuant to such option and the option price per
share shall be adjusted to such extent as may be determined by
the Committee, with the approval of independent public
accountants and counsel, to be necessary to preserve the rights
of the holder of such option.
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18.
|
AMENDMENT
OR TERMINATION
|
The Board may at any time terminate or amend the Plan. No such
termination shall affect options previously granted, nor may an
amendment make any change in any option theretofore granted
which would adversely affect the rights of any participant
holding options under the Plan.
All notices or other communications by a participant to the
Company under or in connection with the Plan shall be deemed to
have been duly given when received by the participants
payroll department.
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20.
|
MERGER OR
CONSOLIDATION
|
If the Company shall at any time merge into or consolidate with
another corporation, the holder of each option then outstanding
will thereafter be entitled to receive at the next Exercise Date
upon the exercise of such option for each share as to which such
option shall be exercised, the securities or property which a
holder of one share of the Common Stock was entitled to upon and
at the time of such merger or consolidation. In accordance with
this Paragraph and Paragraph 17, the Committee shall
determine the kind and amount of such securities or property
which such holder of an option shall be entitled to receive. A
sale of all or substantially all of the assets of the Company
shall be deemed a merger or consolidation for the foregoing
purposes.
A-6
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21.
|
APPROVAL
OF STOCKHOLDERS
|
The Plan is subject to the approval of the stockholders of the
Company at their next annual meeting or at any special meeting
of the stockholders for which one of the purposes of such a
special meeting shall be to act upon the Plan.
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22.
|
GOVERNMENTAL
AND OTHER REGULATIONS
|
The Plan, and the grant and exercise of the rights to purchase
shares hereunder, and the Companys obligation to sell and
deliver shares upon the exercise of rights to purchase shares,
shall be subject to all applicable federal, state and foreign
laws, rules and regulations, and to such approvals by any
regulatory or governmental agency as may, in the opinion of
counsel for the Company, be required. The Plan shall be governed
by, and construed and enforced in accordance with, the
provisions of Sections 421, 423 and 424 of the Code and the
substantive laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. In the
event of any inconsistency between such provisions of the Code
and any such laws, said provisions of the Code shall govern to
the extent necessary to preserve favorable federal income tax
treatment afforded employee stock purchase plans under
Section 423 of the Code.
A-7
Appendix B
PROGRESS
SOFTWARE CORPORATION
1997
STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN
(Amended
and Restated 22 March 2007)
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Section 1.
|
GENERAL
PURPOSE OF THE PLAN;
DEFINITIONS.
|
The name of the plan is the Progress Software Corporation 1997
Stock Incentive Plan (the Plan). The purpose of the
Plan is to encourage and enable the officers, employees and
directors of, and other persons providing services to, Progress
Software Corporation (the Company) and its
Subsidiaries upon whose judgment, initiative and efforts the
Company largely depends for the successful conduct of its
business, to acquire a proprietary interest in the Company. It
is anticipated that providing such persons with a direct stake
in the Companys welfare will assure a closer
identification of their interests with those of the Company,
thereby stimulating their efforts on the Companys behalf
and strengthening their desire to remain with the Company.
The following terms shall be defined as set forth below:
Act means the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, as amended.
Administrator means either the Board or the
Committee.
Award or Awards, except where
referring to a particular category of grant under the Plan,
shall include Incentive Stock Options, Non-Qualified Stock
Options, Conditioned Stock Awards, Unrestricted Stock Awards,
Deferred Stock Awards, Performance Share Awards, Stock
Appreciation Rights and Dividend Equivalent Rights.
Board means the Board of Directors of the
Company.
Cause means (i) any material breach by
the participant of any agreement to which the participant and
the Company are both parties, (ii) any act or omission to
act by the participant which may have a material and adverse
effect on the Companys business or on the
participants ability to perform services for the Company,
including, without limitation, the commission of any crime
(other than ordinary traffic violations), or (iii) any
material misconduct or material neglect of duties by the
participant in connection with the business or affairs of the
Company or any affiliate of the Company.
Change of Control shall have the meaning set
forth in Section 18.
Code means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended, and any successor Code, and related rules,
regulations and interpretations.
Conditioned Stock Award means an Award
granted pursuant to Section 6.
Committee means a committee consisting of two
Outside Directors.
Deferred Stock Award means an Award granted
pursuant to Section 8.
Disability means disability as set forth in
Section 22(e)(3) of the Code.
Dividend Equivalent Right means an Award
granted pursuant to Section 11.
Effective Date means the date on which the
Plan is approved by shareholders as set forth in Section 20.
Eligible Persons shall have the meaning set
forth in Section 4.
B-1
Fair Market Value on any given date means the
closing price per share of the Stock on such date as reported by
NASDAQ, or, if there are no market quotations on NASDAQ on such
date, the closing price per share of the Stock on the last date
preceding such date for which market quotations are available.
If the Stock is not quoted on NASDAQ, the fair market value of
the Stock shall be as determined by the Committee.
Incentive Stock Option means any Stock Option
designated and qualified as an incentive stock
option as defined in Section 422 of the Code.
Non-Qualified Stock Option means any Stock
Option that is not an Incentive Stock Option.
Normal Retirement means retirement from
active employment with the Company and its Subsidiaries in
accordance with the retirement policies of the Company and its
Subsidiaries then in effect.
Outside Director means any director who
(i) is not an employee of the Company or of any
affiliated group, as such term is defined in
Section 1504(a) of the Code, which includes the Company (an
Affiliate), (ii) is not a former employee of
the Company or any Affiliate who is receiving compensation for
prior services (other than benefits under a tax-qualified
retirement plan) during the Companys or any
Affiliates taxable year, (iii) has not been an
officer of the Company or any Affiliate and (iv) does not
receive remuneration from the Company or any Affiliate, either
directly or indirectly, in any capacity other than as a director.
Option or Stock Option means any
option to purchase shares of Stock granted pursuant to
Section 5.
Performance Share Award means an Award
granted pursuant to Section 9.
Sale Event shall mean (i) the sale of
all or substantially all of the assets of the Company on a
consolidated basis to an unrelated person or entity, (ii) a
merger, reorganization or consolidation in which the outstanding
shares of Stock are converted into or exchanged for securities
of the successor entity and the holders of the Companys
outstanding voting power immediately prior to such transaction
do not own a majority of the outstanding voting power of the
successor entity immediately upon completion of such
transaction, or (iii) the sale of all of the Stock of the
Company to an unrelated person or entity.
Section 409A means Section 409A of
the Code and the regulations and other guidance promulgated
thereunder.
Stock means the Common Stock, $.01 par
value per share, of the Company, subject to adjustments pursuant
to Section 3.
Stock Appreciation Right means an Award
granted pursuant to Section 10. Subsidiary
means a subsidiary as set forth in Section 424 of the Code.
Unrestricted Stock Award means Awards granted
pursuant to Section 7.
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Section 2.
|
ADMINISTRATION
OF PLAN; ADMINISTRATOR AUTHORITY TO SELECT PARTICIPANTS AND
DETERMINE
AWARDS.
|
(a) Administration of Plan. The
Plan shall be administered by the Administrator. In the event
the Administrator is the Committee rather than the Board, it is
the intention of the Company that the Committee shall consist of
disinterested persons within the meaning of
Section 162(m) of the Code, but the authority and validity
of any act taken or not taken by the Committee shall not be
affected if any person serving on the Committee is not a
disinterested person. Except as specifically reserved to the
Board under the terms of the Plan or when the Board is serving
as Administrator, the Committee shall have full and final
authority to operate, manage and administer the Plan on behalf
of the Company. Action by the Committee shall require the
affirmative vote of a majority of all members thereof.
B-2
(b) Powers of Administrator. The
Administrator shall have the power and authority to grant Awards
consistent with the terms of the Plan, including the power and
authority:
(i) to select the officers and other employees of, members
of the Board of and other persons providing services to, the
Company and its Subsidiaries to whom Awards may from time to
time be granted;
(ii) to determine the time or times of grant, and the
extent, if any, of Incentive Stock Options, Non-Qualified Stock
Options, Conditioned Stock, Unrestricted Stock, Deferred Stock,
Performance Shares, Stock Appreciation Rights, and Dividend
Equivalent Rights, or any combination of the foregoing, granted
to any one or more participants;
(iii) to determine the number of shares to be covered by
any Award;
(iv) to determine and modify the terms and conditions,
including restrictions, not inconsistent with the terms of the
Plan, of any Award, which terms and conditions may differ among
individual Awards and participants, and to approve the form of
written instruments evidencing the Awards;
(v) to accelerate the exercisability or vesting of all or
any portion of any Award with the exception of a Conditioned
Stock Award;
(vi) subject to the provisions of Section 5(a)(ii), to
extend the period in which any outstanding Stock Option or Stock
Appreciation Right may be exercised;
(vii) to reduce the per-share exercise price of any
outstanding Stock Option or Stock Appreciation Right awarded to
any employee of the Company, including any officer or director
of the Company (but not to less than 100% of Fair Market Value
on the date the reduction is made) provided, however, that such
reduction shall be effective only if approved by the
shareholders of the Company;
(viii) to determine whether, to what extent, and under what
circumstances Stock and other amounts payable with respect to an
Award shall be deferred either automatically or at the election
of the participant and whether and to what extent the Company
shall pay or credit amounts equal to interest (at rates
determined by the Administrator) or dividends or deemed
dividends on such deferrals; and
(ix) to adopt, alter and repeal such rules, guidelines and
practices for administration of the Plan and for its own acts
and proceedings as it shall deem advisable; to interpret the
terms and provisions of the Plan and any Award (including
related written instruments); to make all determinations it
deems advisable for the administration of the Plan; to decide
all disputes arising in connection with the Plan; and to
otherwise supervise the administration of the Plan.
All decisions and interpretations of the Administrator shall be
binding on all persons, including the Company and Plan
participants.
(c) Indemnification. Neither the
Board nor the Committee, nor any member of either or any
delegate thereof, shall be liable for any act, omission,
interpretation, construction or determination made in good faith
in connection with the Plan, and the members of the Board and
the Committee (and any delegate thereof) shall be entitled in
all cases to indemnification and reimbursement by the Company in
respect of any claim, loss, damage or expense (including,
without limitation, reasonable attorneys fees) arising or
resulting therefrom to the fullest extent permitted by law
and/or under
the Companys articles or bylaws or any directors and
officers liability insurance coverage which may be in
effect from time to time
and/or any
indemnification agreement between such individual and the
Company.
B-3
|
|
Section 3.
|
SHARES ISSUABLE
UNDER THE PLAN; MERGERS;
SUBSTITUTION.
|
(a) Shares Issuable. The
maximum number of shares of Stock with respect to which Awards
may be granted under the Plan shall be 9,540,000. For purposes
of this limitation, the shares of Stock underlying any Awards
which are forfeited, cancelled, reacquired by the Company or
otherwise terminated (other than by exercise) shall be added
back to the shares of Stock with respect to which Awards may be
granted under the Plan so long as the participants to whom such
Awards had been previously granted received no benefits of
ownership of the underlying shares of Stock to which the Awards
related. Subject to such overall limitation, any type or types
of Award may be granted with respect to shares, including
Incentive Stock Options. Shares issued under the Plan may be
authorized but unissued shares or shares reacquired by the
Company.
(b) Limitation on Awards. In no
event may any Plan participant be granted Awards (including
Stock Appreciation Rights) with respect to more than
300,000 shares of Stock in any calendar year. The number of
shares of Stock relating to an Award granted to a Plan
participant in a calendar year that is subsequently forfeited,
cancelled or otherwise terminated shall continue to count toward
the foregoing limitation in such calendar year.
(c) Changes in Stock. Subject to
Section 3(d) hereof, if, as a result of any reorganization,
recapitalization, reclassification, stock dividend, stock split,
reverse stock split or other similar change in the
Companys capital stock, the outstanding shares of Stock
are increased or decreased or are exchanged for a different
number or kind of shares or other securities of the Company, or
additional shares or new or different shares or other securities
of the Company or other non-cash assets are distributed with
respect to such shares of Stock or other securities, or, if, as
a result of any merger or consolidation, sale of all or
substantially all of the assets of the Company, the outstanding
shares of Stock are converted into or exchanged for securities
of the Company or any successor entity (or a parent or
subsidiary thereof), the Administrator shall make an appropriate
or proportionate adjustment in (i) the maximum number of
shares reserved for issuance under the Plan, (ii) the
number of Awards that can be granted to any one individual
participant in any calendar year, (iii) the number and kind
of shares or other securities subject to any then outstanding
Awards under the Plan, (iv) the repurchase price, if any,
per share subject to each outstanding Conditioned Stock Award
and (v) the price for each share subject to any then
outstanding Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights under
the Plan, without changing the aggregate exercise price (i.e.,
the exercise price multiplied by the number of Stock Options and
Stock Appreciation Rights) as to which such Stock Options and
Stock Appreciation Rights remain exercisable. The Administrator
shall also make equitable or proportionate adjustments in the
number of shares subject to outstanding Awards and the exercise
price and the terms of outstanding Awards to take into
consideration cash dividends paid other than in the ordinary
course or any other extraordinary corporate event.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, no adjustment shall be made under
this Section 3(c) if the Administrator determines that such
action could cause any Award to fail to satisfy the conditions
of any applicable exception from the requirements of
Section 409A or otherwise could subject the participant to
the additional tax imposed under Section 409A in respect of
an outstanding Award or constitute a modification, extension or
renewal of an Incentive Stock Option within the meaning of
Section 424(h) of the Code. The adjustment by the
Administrator shall be final, binding and conclusive. No
fractional shares of Stock shall be issued under the Plan
resulting from any such adjustment, but the Administrator in its
discretion may make a cash payment in lieu of fractional shares.
(d) Sale Event. The Administrator
may in its discretion accelerate the exercisability or vesting
of all or any portion of outstanding Awards in the case of a
Sale Event. Upon the effective time of the Sale Event, the Plan
and all outstanding Awards granted hereunder shall terminate,
unless provision is made in connection with the Sale Event in
the sole discretion of the parties thereto for the assumption or
continuation of Awards theretofore granted by the successor
entity, or the substitution of such Awards with new Awards of
the successor entity or parent thereof, with appropriate
adjustment as to the number and kind of shares and, if
appropriate, the per share exercise prices, as such parties
shall agree (after taking into account any acceleration
hereunder). In the event of such termination, (i) the
Administrator shall have the option (in its sole discretion) to
make or provide for a cash payment to the participants
B-4
holding Options and Stock Appreciation Rights, in exchange for
the cancellation thereof, in an amount equal to the difference
between (A) the sale price multiplied by the number of
shares of Stock subject to outstanding Options and Stock
Appreciation Rights (to the extent then exercisable (after
taking into account any acceleration hereunder) at prices not in
excess of the sale price) and (B) the aggregate exercise
price of all such outstanding Options and Stock Appreciation
Rights; or (ii) each participant shall be permitted, within
a specified period of time prior to the consummation of the Sale
Event as determined by the Administrator, to exercise all
outstanding Options and Stock Appreciation Rights held by such
participant.
(e) Substitute Awards. The
Administrator may grant Awards under the Plan in substitution
for stock and stock based awards held by employees of another
corporation who concurrently become employees of the Company or
a Subsidiary as the result of a merger or consolidation of the
employing corporation with the Company or a Subsidiary or the
acquisition by the Company or a Subsidiary of property or stock
of the employing corporation. The Administrator may direct that
the substitute awards be granted on such terms and conditions as
the Administrator considers appropriate in the circumstances.
The shares which may be delivered under such substitute awards
shall be in addition to the maximum number of shares provided
for in Section 3(a) only to the extent that the substitute
Awards are granted in substitution for awards issued under a
plan approved by the shareholders of the entity which issued
such predecessor awards.
Awards may be granted to officers or other key employees of the
Company or its Subsidiaries, and to members of the Board and
consultants or other persons who render services to the Company,
regardless of whether they are also employees (Eligible
Persons).
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|
Section 5.
|
STOCK
OPTIONS.
|
Any Stock Option granted under the Plan shall be in such form as
the Administrator may from time to time approve.
Stock Options granted under the Plan may be either Incentive
Stock Options or Non-Qualified Stock Options. To the extent that
any option does not qualify as an Incentive Stock Option, it
shall constitute a Non-Qualified Stock Option.
No Incentive Stock Option shall be granted under the Plan after
March 16, 2016.
(a) Grant of Stock Options. The
Administrator in its discretion may grant Incentive Stock
Options only to employees of the Company or any Subsidiary. The
Administrator in its discretion may grant Non-Qualified Stock
Options to Eligible Persons. Stock Options granted pursuant to
this Section 5(a) shall be subject to the following terms
and conditions and the terms and conditions of Section 12
and shall contain such additional terms and conditions, not
inconsistent with the terms of the Plan, as the Administrator
shall deem desirable.
(i) Exercise Price. The exercise
price per share for the Stock covered by a Stock Option granted
pursuant to this Section 5(a) shall be determined by the
Administrator at the time of grant but shall be not less than
100% of Fair Market Value on the date of grant. If an employee
owns or is deemed to own (by reason of the attribution rules
applicable under Section 424(d) of the Code) more than 10%
of the combined voting power of all classes of stock of the
Company or any Subsidiary or parent corporation and an Incentive
Stock Option is granted to such employee, the option price shall
be not less than 110% of Fair Market Value on the grant date.
(ii) Option Term. The term of each
Stock Option shall be fixed by the Administrator, but no
Incentive Stock Option shall be exercisable more than ten years
after the date the option is granted. If an employee owns or is
deemed to own (by reason of the attribution rules of
Section 424(d) of the Code) more than 10% of the
B-5
combined voting power of all classes of stock of the Company or
any Subsidiary or parent corporation and an Incentive Stock
Option is granted to such employee, the term of such option
shall be no more than five years from the date of grant.
(iii) Exercisability; Rights of a
Shareholder. Stock Options shall become
vested and exercisable at such time or times, whether or not in
installments, as shall be determined by the Administrator at or
after the grant date. The Administrator may at any time
accelerate the exercisability of all or any portion of any Stock
Option. An optionee shall have the rights of a shareholder only
as to shares acquired upon the exercise of a Stock Option and
not as to unexercised Stock Options.
(iv) Method of Exercise. Stock
Options may be exercised in whole or in part, by delivering
written notice of exercise to the Company, specifying the number
of shares to be purchased. Payment of the purchase price may be
made by one or more of the following methods:
(A) In cash, by certified or bank check or other instrument
acceptable to the Administrator;
(B) Through the delivery (or attestation to the ownership)
of shares of Stock that have been purchased by the optionee on
the open market or that are beneficially owned by the optionee
and are not then subject to restrictions under any Company plan.
Such surrendered shares shall be valued at Fair Market Value on
the exercise date. To the extent required to avoid variable
accounting treatment under FAS 123R or other applicable
accounting rules, such surrendered shares shall have been owned
by the optionee for at least six months; or
(C) By the optionee delivering to the Company a properly
executed exercise notice together with irrevocable instructions
to a broker to promptly deliver to the Company cash or a check
payable and acceptable to the Company to pay the purchase price;
provided that in the event the optionee chooses to pay the
purchase price as so provided, the optionee and the broker shall
comply with such procedures and enter into such agreements of
indemnity and other agreements as the Administrator shall
prescribe as a condition of such payment procedure.
Payment instruments will be received subject to collection. The
transfer to the optionee on the records of the Company or of the
transfer agent of the shares of Stock to be purchased pursuant
to the exercise of a Stock Option will be contingent upon
receipt from the optionee (or a purchaser acting in his stead in
accordance with the provisions of the Stock Option) by the
Company of the full purchase price for such shares and the
fulfillment of any other requirements contained in the option
award agreement or applicable provisions of laws (including the
satisfaction of any withholding taxes that the Company is
obligated to withhold with respect to the optionee). In the
event an optionee chooses to pay the purchase price by
previously-owned shares of Stock through the attestation method,
the number of shares of Stock transferred to the optionee upon
the exercise of the Stock Option shall be net of the number of
attested shares. In the event that the Company establishes, for
itself or using the services of a third party, an automated
system for the exercise of Stock Options, such as a system using
an internet website or interactive voice response, then the
paperless exercise of Stock Options may be permitted through the
use of such an automated system.
(v) Transferability of Options. No
Stock Option shall be transferable by the optionee otherwise
than by will or by the laws of descent and distribution, and all
Stock Options shall be exercisable, during the optionees
lifetime, only by the optionee or his or her legal
representative; provided, however, that the Administrator may,
in the manner established by the Administrator, permit the
transfer, without payment of consideration, of a Non-Qualified
Stock Option by an optionee to a member of the optionees
immediate family or to a trust or partnership whose
beneficiaries are members of the optionees immediate
family; and such transferee shall remain subject to all the
terms and conditions applicable to the option prior to the
transfer. For purposes of this provision, an optionees
immediate family shall mean the holders
spouse, children and grandchildren.
B-6
(vi) Annual Limit on Incentive Stock
Options. To the extent required for
incentive stock option treatment under
Section 422 of the Code, the aggregate Fair Market Value
(determined as of the time of grant) of the Stock with respect
to which incentive stock options granted under this Plan and any
other plan of the Company or its Subsidiaries become exercisable
for the first time by an optionee during any calendar year shall
not exceed $100,000.
(vii) Repurchase Right. The
Administrator may in its discretion provide upon the grant of
any Stock Option hereunder that the Company shall have an option
to repurchase upon such terms and conditions as determined by
the Administrator all or any number of shares purchased upon
exercise of such Stock Option. The repurchase price per share
payable by the Company shall be such amount or be determined by
such formula as is fixed by the Administrator at the time the
Option for the shares subject to repurchase is granted. In the
event the Administrator shall grant Stock Options subject to the
Companys repurchase option, the certificates representing
the shares purchased pursuant to such Options shall carry a
legend satisfactory to counsel for the Company referring to the
Companys repurchase option.
(viii) Form of Settlement. Shares
of Stock issued upon exercise of a Stock Option shall be free of
all restrictions under the Plan, except as otherwise provided in
this Plan.
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|
Section 6.
|
CONDITIONED
STOCK
AWARDS.
|
(a) Nature of Conditioned Stock
Award. The Administrator in its discretion
may grant Conditioned Stock Awards to any Eligible Person. A
Conditioned Stock Award is an Award entitling the recipient to
acquire, at no cost or for a purchase price determined by the
Administrator, shares of Stock subject to such restrictions and
conditions as the Administrator may determine at the time of
grant (Conditioned Stock). Conditions may be based
on continuing employment
and/or
achievement of pre-established performance goals and objectives.
(b) Acceptance of Award. A
participant who is granted a Conditioned Stock Award shall have
no rights with respect to such Award unless the participant
shall have accepted the Award within 60 days (or such
shorter date as the Administrator may specify) following the
award date by making payment to the Company, if required, by
certified or bank check or other instrument or form of payment
acceptable to the Administrator in an amount equal to the
specified purchase price, if any, of the shares covered by the
Award and by executing and delivering to the Company a written
instrument that sets forth the terms and conditions of the
Conditioned Stock in such form as the Administrator shall
determine.
(c) Rights as a Shareholder. Upon
complying with Section 6(b) above, a participant shall have
all the rights of a shareholder with respect to the Conditioned
Stock, including voting and dividend rights, subject to
non-transferability restrictions and Company repurchase or
forfeiture rights described in this Section 6 and subject
to such other conditions contained in the written instrument
evidencing the Conditioned Award. Unless the Administrator shall
otherwise determine, (i) uncertificated Conditioned Stock
shall be accompanied by a notation on the records of the Company
or the transfer agent to the effect that they are subject to
forfeiture until such Conditioned Stock are vested as provided
in Section 6(d) below, and (ii) certificated
Conditioned Stock shall remain in the possession of the Company
until such Conditioned Stock is vested as provided in
Section 6(d) below, and the participant shall be required,
as a condition of the grant, to deliver to the Company such
instruments of transfer as the Administrator may prescribe.
(d) Restrictions. Conditioned
Stock may not be sold, assigned, transferred, pledged or
otherwise encumbered or disposed of except as specifically
provided herein or in the Conditioned Stock Award Agreement.
Except as may otherwise be provided by the Administrator either
in the Award Agreement or, subject to Section 15 below, in
writing after the Award Agreement is issued, if any, if a
participants employment (or other service relationship)
with the Company and its Subsidiaries terminates for any reason,
any Conditioned Stock that has not vested at the time of
termination shall automatically and without any requirement of
notice to such participant from or other
B-7
action by or on behalf of, the Company be deemed to have been
reacquired by the Company at its original purchase price (if
any) from such participant or such participants legal
representative simultaneously with such termination of
employment (or other service relationship), and thereafter shall
cease to represent any ownership of the Company by the
participant or rights of the participant as a shareholder.
Following such deemed reacquisition of unvested Conditioned
Stock that are represented by physical certificates, a
participant shall surrender such certificates to the Company
upon request without consideration.
(e) Vesting of Conditioned
Stock. The Administrator at the time of grant
shall specify the date or dates
and/or the
attainment of pre-established performance goals, objectives and
other conditions on which the non-transferability of the
Conditioned Stock and the Companys right of repurchase or
forfeiture shall lapse. Notwithstanding the foregoing, in the
event that any such Conditioned Stock granted to employees shall
have a performance-based goal, the restriction period with
respect to such shares shall not be less than one year, and in
the event any such Conditioned Stock granted to employees shall
have a time-based restriction, the total restriction period with
respect to such shares shall not be less than three years;
provided, however, that Conditioned Stock with a time-based
restriction may become vested incrementally over such three-year
period. Subsequent to such date or dates
and/or the
attainment of such preestablished performance goals, objectives
and other conditions, the shares on which all restrictions have
lapsed shall no longer be Conditioned Stock and shall be deemed
vested.
(f) Waiver, Deferral and Reinvestment of
Dividends. The written instrument evidencing
the Conditioned Stock Award may require or permit the immediate
payment, waiver, deferral or investment of dividends paid on the
Conditioned Stock.
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|
Section 7.
|
UNRESTRICTED
STOCK
AWARDS.
|
(a) Grant or Sale of Unrestricted
Stock. The Administrator in its discretion
may grant (or sell at a purchase price determined by the
Administrator which shall in no event be less than 100% of Fair
Market Value) to any Eligible Person shares of Stock free of any
restrictions under the Plan (Unrestricted Stock).
Shares of Unrestricted Stock may be granted or sold as described
in the preceding sentence in respect of past services or other
valid consideration.
(b) Elections to Receive Unrestricted Stock In Lieu
of Compensation. Upon the request of an
Eligible Person and with the consent of the Administrator, each
Eligible Person may, pursuant to an irrevocable written election
delivered to the Company no later than the date or dates
specified by the Administrator, receive a portion of the cash
compensation otherwise due to him in Unrestricted Stock (valued
at Fair Market Value on the date or dates the cash compensation
would otherwise be paid). Such Unrestricted Stock shall be paid
to the Eligible Person at the same time as the cash compensation
would otherwise be paid.
(c) Restrictions on Transfers. The
right to receive unrestricted Stock may not be sold, assigned,
transferred, pledged or otherwise encumbered, other than by will
or the laws of descent and distribution.
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|
Section 8.
|
DEFERRED
STOCK
AWARDS.
|
(a) Nature of Deferred Stock
Awards. The Administrator shall determine the
restrictions and conditions applicable to each Deferred Stock
Award at the time of grant. Conditions may be based on
continuing employment (or other service relationship)
and/or
achievement of pre-established performance goals and objectives.
The grant of a Deferred Stock Award is contingent on the
participant executing the Deferred Stock Award Agreement. The
terms and conditions of each such Award Agreement shall be
determined by the Administrator, and such terms and conditions
may differ among individual Awards and participants.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, in the event that any such
Deferred Stock Award granted to employees shall have a
performance-based goal, the restriction period with respect to
such Award shall not be less than one year, and in the event any
such Deferred Stock Award granted to employees shall have a
time-based restriction, the total restriction period with
respect to such Award shall not be
B-8
less than three years; provided, however, that any Deferred
Stock Award with a time-based restriction may become vested
incrementally over such three-year period. At the end of the
deferral period, the Deferred Stock Award, to the extent vested,
shall be settled in the form of shares of Stock.
(b) Election to Receive Deferred Stock Awards in Lieu
of Compensation. The Administrator may, in
its sole discretion, permit a participant to elect to receive a
portion of future cash compensation otherwise due to such
participant in the form of a Deferred Stock Award. Any such
election shall be made in writing and shall be delivered to the
Company no later than the date specified by the Administrator
and in accordance with Section 409A and such other rules
and procedures established by the Administrator. Any such future
cash compensation that the participant elects to defer shall be
converted to a fixed number of phantom stock units based on the
Fair Market Value of Stock on the date the compensation would
otherwise have been paid to the participant if such payment had
not been deferred as provided herein. The Administrator shall
have the sole right to determine whether and under what
circumstances to permit such elections and to impose such
limitations and other terms and conditions thereon as the
Administrator deems appropriate.
(c) Rights as a Shareholder. A
participant shall have the rights as a shareholder only as to
shares of Stock acquired by the participant upon settlement of a
Deferred Stock Award; provided, however, that the participant
may be credited with Dividend Equivalent Rights with respect to
the phantom stock units underlying his Deferred Stock Award,
subject to such terms and conditions as the Administrator may
determine.
(d) Termination. Except as may
otherwise be provided by the Administrator either in the Award
Agreement or, subject to Section 15 below, in writing after
the Award Agreement is issued, a participants right in all
Deferred Stock Awards that have not vested shall automatically
terminate upon the participants termination of employment
(or cessation of service relationship) with the Company and its
Subsidiaries for any reason.
(e) Restrictions on Transfer. No Deferred
Stock Award shall be transferable other than by will or by the
laws of descent and distribution.
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|
Section 9.
|
PERFORMANCE
SHARE
AWARDS.
|
(a) Nature of Performance
Shares. A Performance Share Award is an award
entitling the recipient to acquire shares of Stock upon the
attainment of specified performance goals. The Administrator may
make Performance Share Awards independent of or in connection
with the granting of any other Award under the Plan. Performance
Share Awards may be granted under the Plan to any Eligible
Person including those who qualify for awards under other
performance plans of the Company. The Administrator in its
discretion shall determine whether and to whom Performance Share
Awards shall be made, the performance goals applicable under
each such Award, the periods during which performance is to be
measured, and all other limitations and conditions applicable to
the awarded Performance Shares; provided, however, that the
Administrator may rely on the performance goals and other
standards applicable to other performance-based plans of the
Company in setting the standards for Performance Share Awards
under the Plan.
(b) Restrictions on
Transfer. Performance Share Awards and all
rights with respect to such Awards may not be sold, assigned,
transferred, pledged or otherwise encumbered.
(c) Rights as a Shareholder. A
participant receiving a Performance Share Award shall have the
rights of a shareholder only as to shares actually received by
the participant under the Plan and not with respect to shares
subject to the Award but not actually received by the
participant. A participant shall be entitled to receive a stock
certificate evidencing the acquisition of shares of Stock under
a Performance Share Award only upon satisfaction of all
conditions specified in the written instrument evidencing the
Performance Share Award (or in a performance plan adopted by the
Administrator).
B-9
(d) Termination. Except as may
otherwise be provided by the Administrator at any time prior to
termination of employment, a participants rights in all
Performance Share Awards shall automatically terminate upon the
participants termination of employment by the Company and
its Subsidiaries for any reason (including death, Disability,
Normal Retirement and for Cause).
(e) Acceleration, Waiver, Etc. At
any time prior to the participants termination of
employment by the Company and its Subsidiaries, the
Administrator may in its sole discretion accelerate, waive or,
subject to Section 15, amend any or all of the goals,
restrictions or conditions imposed under any Performance Share
Award.
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|
Section 10.
|
STOCK
APPRECIATION
RIGHTS.
|
(a) Grant of Stock Appreciation
Rights. The Administrator in its discretion
may grant Stock Appreciation Rights to any Eligible Person
(i) alone, (ii) simultaneously with the grant of a
Stock Option and in conjunction therewith or in the alternative
thereto or (iii) subsequent to the grant of a Non-Qualified
option and in conjunction therewith or in the alternative
thereto.
(b) Exercise Price of Stock Appreciation
Rights. The exercise price per share of a
Stock Appreciation Right granted alone shall be determined by
the Administrator, but shall not be less than 100% of Fair
Market Value on the date of grant of such Stock Appreciation
Right. A Stock Appreciation Right granted simultaneously with or
subsequent to the grant of a Stock Option and in conjunction
therewith or in the alternative thereto shall have the same
exercise price as the related Stock Option, shall be
transferable only upon the same terms and conditions as the
related Stock Option, and shall be exercisable only to the same
extent as the related Stock Option; provided, however, that a
Stock Appreciation Right, by its terms, shall be exercisable
only when the Fair Market Value per share of Stock exceeds the
exercise price per share thereof.
(c) Terms and Conditions. Upon any
exercise of a Stock Appreciation Right, the number of shares of
Stock for which any related Stock Option shall be exercisable
shall be reduced by the number of shares for which the Stock
Appreciation Right shall have been exercised. The number of
shares of Stock with respect to which a Stock Appreciation Right
shall be exercisable shall be reduced upon any exercise of any
related Stock Option by the number of shares for which such
Option shall have been exercised. Any Stock Appreciation Right
shall be exercisable upon such additional terms and conditions
as may from time to time be prescribed by the Administrator.
(d) Settlement in Shares. A Stock
Appreciation Right shall entitle the participant upon exercise
thereof to receive from the Company, upon written request to the
Company at its principal offices (the Request), a
number of shares of Stock (with or without restrictions as to
substantial risk of forfeiture and transferability, as
determined by the Administrator in its sole discretion), having
an aggregate Fair Market Value equal to the product of
(i) the excess of Fair Market Value, on the date of such
Request, over the exercise price per share of Stock specified in
such Stock Appreciation Right or its related Option, multiplied
by (ii) the number of shares of Stock for which such Stock
Appreciation Right shall be exercised.
(e) Deemed Exercise. A Stock
Appreciation Right shall be deemed exercised on the last day of
its term, if not otherwise exercised by the holder thereof,
provided that the fair market value of the Stock subject to the
Stock Appreciation Right exceeds the exercise price thereof on
such date.
(f) Restrictions on Transfer. No
Stock Appreciation Right shall be transferable other than by
will or by the laws of descent and distribution and all Stock
Appreciation Rights shall be exercisable, during the
holders lifetime, only by the holder.
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Section 11.
|
DIVIDEND
EQUIVALENT
RIGHTS.
|
(a) Dividend Equivalent Rights. A
Dividend Equivalent Right may be granted hereunder to any
participant as a component of another Award or as a freestanding
award. The terms and conditions of Dividend Equivalent
B-10
Rights shall be specified in the Award Agreement. Dividend
equivalents credited to the holder of a Dividend Equivalent
Right may be paid currently or may be deemed to be reinvested in
additional shares of Stock, which may thereafter accrue
additional equivalents. Any such reinvestment shall be at Fair
Market Value on the date of reinvestment or such other price as
may then apply under a dividend reinvestment plan sponsored by
the Company, if any. Dividend Equivalent Rights may be settled
in cash or shares of Stock or a combination thereof, in a single
installment or installments. A Dividend Equivalent Right granted
as a component of another Award may provide that such Dividend
Equivalent Right shall be settled upon exercise, settlement, or
payment of, or lapse of restrictions on, such other Award, and
that such Dividend Equivalent Right shall expire or be forfeited
or annulled under the same conditions as such other Award. A
Dividend Equivalent Right granted as a component of another
Award may also contain terms and conditions different from such
other Award.
(b) Termination. Except as may
otherwise be provided by the Administrator either in the Award
Agreement or, subject to Section 15 below, in writing after
the Award agreement is issued, a participants rights in
all Dividend Equivalent Rights or interest equivalents granted
as a component of another Award that has not vested shall
automatically terminate upon the participants termination
of employment (or cessation of service relationship) with the
Company and its Subsidiaries for any reason.
(c) Restrictions on Transfer. No
Dividend Equivalent Rights shall be transferable other than by
will or by the laws of descent and distribution.
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Section 12.
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TERMINATION
OF STOCK OPTIONS AND STOCK APPRECIATION
RIGHTS.
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(a) Termination by Death. If any
participants employment by or services to the Company and
its Subsidiaries terminates by reason of death, any Stock Option
or Stock Appreciation Right owned by such participant may
thereafter be exercised to the extent exercisable at the date of
death, by the legal representative or legatee of the
participant, for a period of two years (or such longer period as
the Administrator shall specify at any time) from the date of
death, or until the expiration of the stated term of the Option
or Stock Appreciation Right, if earlier.
(b) Termination by Reason of Disability or Normal
Retirement.
(i) Any Stock Option or Stock Appreciation Right held by a
participant whose employment by or services to the Company and
its Subsidiaries has terminated by reason of Disability may
thereafter be exercised, to the extent it was exercisable at the
time of such termination, for a period of one year (or such
longer period as the Administrator shall specify at any time)
from the date of such termination of employment or services, or
until the expiration of the stated term of the Option or Stock
Appreciation Right, if earlier.
(ii) Any Stock Option or Stock Appreciation Right held by a
participant whose employment by or services to the Company and
its Subsidiaries has terminated by reason of Normal Retirement
may thereafter be exercised, to the extent it was exercisable at
the time of such termination, for a period of 90 days (or
such longer period as the Administrator shall specify at any
time) from the date of such termination of employment or
services, or until the expiration of the stated term of the
Option or Stock Appreciation Right, if earlier.
(iii) The Administrator shall have sole authority and
discretion to determine whether a participants employment
or services has been terminated by reason of Disability or
Normal Retirement.
(iv) Except as otherwise provided by the Administrator at
the time of grant, the death of a participant during a period
provided in this Section 12(b) for the exercise of a Stock
Option or Stock Appreciation Right, shall extend such period for
two years from the date of death, subject to termination on the
expiration of the stated term of the Option or Stock
Appreciation Right, if earlier.
(c) Termination for Cause. If any
participants employment by or services to the Company and
its Subsidiaries has been terminated for Cause, any Stock Option
or Stock Appreciation Right held by such participant
B-11
shall immediately terminate and be of no further force and
effect; provided, however, that the Administrator may, in its
sole discretion, provide that such Option or Stock Appreciation
Right can be exercised for a period of up to 30 days from
the date of termination of employment or services or until the
expiration of the stated term of the Option or Stock
Appreciation Right, if earlier.
(d) Voluntary Termination. If any
participants employment by or services to the Company and
its Subsidiaries is voluntarily terminated, any Stock Option or
Stock Appreciation Right held by such participant shall
immediately terminate and be of no further force and effect;
provided, however, that the Administrator may, in its sole
discretion, provide that such Option or Stock Appreciation right
can be exercised for a period of up to 90 days from the
date of termination of employment or services or until the
expiration of the stated term of the Option or Stock
Appreciation Right, if earlier. The foregoing provisions shall
not apply to grants to directors and the Administrator shall
have sole discretion to determine the length of the
post-termination exercise period.
(e) Other Termination. Unless
otherwise determined by the Administrator, if a
participants employment by or services to the Company and
its Subsidiaries terminates for any reason other than death,
Disability, Normal Retirement, voluntary termination or for
Cause, any Stock Option or Stock Appreciation Right held by such
participant may thereafter be exercised, to the extent it was
exercisable on the date of termination of employment, for
90 days (or such longer period as the Administrator shall
specify at any time) from the date of termination of employment
or services or until the expiration of the stated term of the
Option or Stock Appreciation Right, if earlier.
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Section 13.
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TAX
WITHHOLDING.
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(a) Payment by Participant. Each
participant shall, no later than the date as of which the value
of an Award or of any Stock or other amounts received thereunder
first becomes includable in the gross income of the participant
for Federal income tax purposes, pay to the Company, or make
arrangements satisfactory to the Administrator regarding payment
of any Federal, state or local taxes of any kind required by law
to be withheld with respect to such income. The Company and its
Subsidiaries shall, to the extent permitted by law, have the
right to deduct any such taxes from any payment of any kind
otherwise due to the participant.
(b) Payment in Shares. Subject to
approval by the Administrator, a participant may elect to have
the Companys minimum tax withholding obligation satisfied,
in whole or in part, by authorizing the Company to withhold from
shares of Stock to be issued pursuant to an Award a number of
shares with an aggregate Fair Market Value (as of the date the
withholding is effected) that would satisfy the minimum
withholding amount due with respect to such Award.
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Section 14.
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TRANSFER,
LEAVE OF ABSENCE,
ETC.
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For purposes of the Plan, the following events shall not be
deemed a termination of employment:
(a) a transfer to the employment of the Company from a
Subsidiary or from the Company to a Subsidiary, or from one
Subsidiary to another;
(b) an approved leave of absence for military service or
sickness, or for any other purpose approved by the Company, if
the employees right to re-employment is guaranteed either
by a statute or by contract or under the policy pursuant to
which the leave of absence was granted or if the Administrator
otherwise so provides in writing.
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Section 15.
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AMENDMENTS
AND
TERMINATION.
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The Board may at any time amend or discontinue the Plan and the
Committee may at any time amend or cancel any outstanding Award
(or provide substitute Awards at the same exercise or purchase
price) for the purpose of
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satisfying changes in law or for any other lawful purpose, but
no such action shall adversely affect rights under any
outstanding Award without the holders consent. However, no
such amendment, unless approved by the shareholders of the
Company, shall be effective if it would (i) cause the Plan
to fail to satisfy the incentive stock option requirements of
the Code, (ii) permit the Board or the Committee to reprice
Options or Stock Appreciation Rights granted to officers and
directors of the Company under the Plan without shareholder
approval, (iii) permit the Board or the Committee to grant
Non-Qualified Stock Options or Stock Appreciation Rights under
the Plan at less than 100% of the Fair Market Value on the date
of grant of such Non-Qualified Stock Options or Stock
Appreciation Rights, as the case may be, (iv) cause a
material increase in the number of shares authorized under the
Plan, (v) cause a material increase in benefits accruing to
participants under the Plan, or (vi) cause a material
increase in the eligible class of recipients under the Plan.
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Section 16.
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STATUS
OF
PLAN.
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With respect to the portion of any Award which has not been
exercised and any payments in cash, Stock or other consideration
not received by a participant, a participant shall have no
rights greater than those of a general creditor of the Company
unless the Administrator shall otherwise expressly determine in
connection with any Award or Awards. In its sole discretion, the
Administrator may authorize the creation of trusts or other
arrangements to meet the Companys obligations to deliver
Stock or make payments with respect to Awards hereunder,
provided that the existence of such trusts or other arrangements
is consistent with the provision of the foregoing sentence.
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Section 17.
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ADDITIONAL
CONDITIONS APPLICABLE TO NONQUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION
UNDER
SECTION 409A.
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In the event any Stock Option or Stock Appreciation Right under
the Plan is materially modified and deemed a new grant at a time
when the Fair Market Value exceeds the exercise price, or any
other Award is otherwise determined to constitute
nonqualified deferred compensation within the
meaning of Section 409A (a 409A Award), the
following additional conditions shall apply and shall supersede
any contrary provisions of this Plan or the terms of any
agreement relating to such 409A Award.
(a) Exercise and
Distribution. Except as provided in
Section 17(b) hereof, no 409A Award shall be exercisable or
distributable earlier than upon one of the following:
(i) Specified Time. A specified
time or a fixed schedule set forth in the written instrument
evidencing the 409A Award.
(ii) Separation from
Service. Separation from service (within the
meaning of Section 409A) by the 409A Award participant;
provided, however, that if the 409A Award participant is a
key employee (as defined in Section 416(i) of
the Code without regard to paragraph (5) thereof) and
any of the Companys Stock is publicly traded on an
established securities market or otherwise, exercise or
distribution under this Section 17(a)(ii) may not be made
before the date that is six months after the date of separation
from service.
(iii) Death. The date of death of
the 409A Award participant.
(iv) Disability. The date the 409A
Award participant becomes disabled (within the meaning of
Section 17(c)(ii) hereof).
(v) Unforeseeable Emergency. The
occurrence of an unforeseeable emergency (within the meaning of
Section 17(c)(iii) hereof), but only if the net value
(after payment of the exercise price) of the number of shares of
Stock that become issuable does not exceed the amounts necessary
to satisfy such emergency plus amounts necessary to pay taxes
reasonably anticipated as a result of the exercise, after taking
into account the extent to which the emergency is or may be
relieved through reimbursement or compensation by insurance or
otherwise
B-13
or by liquidation of the participants other assets (to the
extent such liquidation would not itself cause severe financial
hardship).
(vi) Change in Control Event. The
occurrence of a Change in Control Event (within the meaning of
Section 17(c)(i) hereof), including the Companys
discretionary exercise of the right to accelerate vesting of
such grant upon a Change in Control Event or to terminate the
Plan or any 409A Award granted hereunder within 12 months
of the Change in Control Event.
(b) No Acceleration. A 409A Award
may not be accelerated or exercised prior to the time specified
in Section 17(a) hereof, except in the case of one of the
following events:
(i) Domestic Relations Order. The
409A Award may permit the acceleration of the exercise or
distribution time or schedule to an individual other than the
participant as may be necessary to comply with the terms of a
domestic relations order (as defined in
Section 414(p)(1)(B) of the Code).
(ii) Conflicts of Interest. The
409A Award may permit the acceleration of the exercise or
distribution time or schedule as may be necessary to comply with
the terms of a certificate of divestiture (as defined in
Section 1043(b)(2) of the Code).
(iii) Change in Control Event. The
Administrator may exercise the discretionary right to accelerate
the vesting of such 409A Award upon a Change in Control Event or
to terminate the Plan or any 409A Award granted thereunder
within 12 months of the Change in Control Event and cancel
the 409A Award for compensation.
(c) Definitions. Solely for
purposes of this Section 17 and not for other purposes of
the Plan, the following terms shall be defined as set forth
below:
(i) Change in Control Event means the
occurrence of a change in the ownership of the Company, a change
in effective control of the Company, or a change in the
ownership of a substantial portion of the assets of the Company
(as defined in
Section 1.409A-3(g)
of the proposed regulations promulgated under Section 409A
by the Department of the Treasury on September 29, 2005 or
any subsequent guidance).
(ii) Disabled means a participant who
(i) is unable to engage in any substantial gainful activity
by reason of any medically determinable physical or mental
impairment that can be expected to result in death or can be
expected to last for a continuous period of not less than
12 months, or (ii) is, by reason of any medically
determinable physical or mental impairment that can be expected
to result in death or can be expected to last for a continuous
period of not less than 12 months, receiving income
replacement benefits for a period of not less than three months
under an accident and health plan covering employees of the
Company or its Subsidiaries.
(iii) Unforeseeable Emergency means a
severe financial hardship to the participant resulting from an
illness or accident of the participant, the participants
spouse, or a dependent (as defined in Section 152(a) of the
Code) of the participant, loss of the participants
property due to casualty, or similar extraordinary and
unforeseeable circumstances arising as a result of events beyond
the control of the participant.
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Section 18.
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CHANGE
OF CONTROL
PROVISIONS.
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(a) Upon the occurrence of a Change of Control as defined
in this Section 18:
(i) subject to the provisions of clause (iii) below,
after the effective date of such Change of Control, each holder
of an outstanding Stock Option, Conditioned Stock Award,
Performance Share Award or Stock Appreciation Right shall be
entitled, upon exercise of such Award, to receive, in lieu of
shares of Stock (or consideration based upon the Fair Market
Value of Stock), shares of such stock or other securities, cash
or
B-14
property (or consideration based upon shares of such stock or
other securities, cash or property) as the holders of shares of
Stock received in connection with the Change of Control;
(ii) the Administrator may accelerate the time for exercise
of, and waive all conditions and restrictions on, each
unexercised and unexpired Stock Option, Conditioned Stock Award,
Performance Share Award and Stock Appreciation Right, effective
upon a date prior or subsequent to the effective date of such
Change of Control, specified by the Administrator; or
(iii) each outstanding Stock Option, Conditioned Stock
Award, Performance Share Award and Stock Appreciation Right may
be cancelled by the Administrator as of the effective date of
any such Change of Control provided that (x) notice of such
cancellation shall be given to each holder of such an Award and
(y) each holder of such an Award shall have the right to
exercise such Award to the extent that the same is then
exercisable or, if the Administrator shall have accelerated the
time for exercise of all such unexercised and unexpired Awards,
in full during the
30-day
period preceding the effective date of such Change of Control.
(b) Change of Control shall mean the
occurrence of any one of the following events:
(i) any person (as such term is used in
Sections 13(d) and 14(d)(2) of the Act) becomes a
beneficial owner (as such term is defined in
Rule 13d-3
promulgated under the Act) (other than the Company, any trustee
or other fiduciary holding securities under an employee benefit
plan of the Company, or any corporation owned, directly or
indirectly, by the shareholders of the Company in substantially
the same proportions as their ownership of stock of the
Company), directly or indirectly, of securities of the Company
representing thirty-five percent (35%) or more of the combined
voting power of the Companys then outstanding
securities; or
(ii) persons who, as of January 1, 1997, constituted
the Companys Board (the Incumbent Board) cease
for any reason, including without limitation as a result of a
tender offer, proxy contest, merger or similar transaction, to
constitute at least a majority of the Board, provided that any
person becoming a director of the Company subsequent to
January 1, 1997 whose election was approved by, or who was
nominated with the approval of, at least a majority of the
directors then comprising the Incumbent Board shall, for
purposes of this Plan, be considered a member of the Incumbent
Board; or
(iii) the shareholders of the Company approve a merger or
consolidation of the Company with any other corporation or other
entity, other than (a) a merger or consolidation which
would result in the voting securities of the Company outstanding
immediately prior thereto continuing to represent (either by
remaining outstanding or by being converted into voting
securities of the surviving entity) more than 65% of the
combined voting power of the voting securities of the Company or
such surviving entity outstanding immediately after such merger
or consolidation or (b) a merger or consolidation effected
to implement a recapitalization of the Company (or similar
transaction) in which no person (as hereinabove
defined) acquires more than 50% of the combined voting power of
the Companys then outstanding securities; or
(iv) the shareholders of the Company approve a plan of
complete liquidation of the Company or an agreement for the sale
or disposition by the Company of all or substantially all of the
Companys assets.
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Section 19.
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GENERAL
PROVISIONS.
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(a) No Distribution; Compliance with Legal
Requirements. The Administrator may require
each person acquiring shares pursuant to an Award to represent
to and agree with the Company in writing that such person is
acquiring the shares without a view to distribution thereof.
No shares of Stock shall be issued pursuant to an Award until
all applicable securities law and other legal and stock exchange
requirements have been satisfied. The Administrator may require
the placing of such stop orders and restrictive legends on
certificates for Stock and Awards as it deems appropriate.
B-15
(b) Delivery of Stock
Certificates. Stock certificates to
participants under this Plan shall be deemed delivered for all
purposes when the Company or a stock transfer agent of the
Company shall have mailed such certificates in the United States
mail, addressed to the participant, at the participants
last known address on file with the Company. Uncertificated
Stock shall be deemed delivered for all purposes when the
Company or a Stock transfer agent of the Company shall have
given to the participant by electronic mail (with proof of
receipt) or by United States mail, addressed to the participant,
at the participants last known address on file with the
Company, notice of issuance and recorded the issuance in its
records (which may include electronic book entry
records). Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary, the
Company shall not be required to issue or deliver any
certificates evidencing shares of Stock pursuant to the exercise
of any Award, unless and until the Administrator has determined,
with advice of counsel (to the extent the Administrator deems
such advice necessary or advisable), that the issuance and
delivery of such certificates is in compliance with all
applicable laws, regulations of governmental authorities and, if
applicable, the requirements of any exchange on which the shares
of Stock are listed, quoted or traded. All Stock certificates
delivered pursuant to the Plan shall be subject to any
stop-transfer orders and other restrictions as the Administrator
deems necessary or advisable to comply with federal, state or
foreign jurisdiction, securities or other laws, rules and
quotation system on which the Stock is listed, quoted or traded.
The Administrator may place legends on any Stock certificate to
reference restrictions applicable to the Stock. In addition to
the terms and conditions provided herein, the Administrator may
require that an individual make such reasonable covenants,
agreements, and representations as the Administrator, in its
discretion, deems necessary or advisable in order to comply with
any such laws, regulations, or requirements. The Administrator
shall have the right to require any individual to comply with
any timing or other restrictions with respect to the settlement
or exercise of any Award, including a window-period limitation,
as may be imposed in the discretion of the Administrator.
(c) Other Compensation Arrangements; No Employment
Rights. Nothing contained in this Plan shall
prevent the Board from adopting other or additional compensation
arrangements, including trusts, subject to shareholder approval
if such approval is required; and such arrangements may be
either generally applicable or applicable only in specific
cases. The adoption of the Plan or any Award under the Plan does
not confer upon any employee any right to continued employment
with the Company or any Subsidiary.
(d) Trading Policy
Restrictions. Option exercises and other
Awards under the Plan shall be subject to such Companys
insider trading policy and procedures, as in effect from time to
time.
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Section 20.
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EFFECTIVE
DATE OF
PLAN.
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This amended and restated Plan shall become effective upon
approval by the holders of a majority of the shares of capital
stock of the Company present or represented and entitled to vote
at a meeting of shareholders.
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Section 21.
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GOVERNING
LAW.
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This Plan shall be governed by, and construed and enforced in
accordance with, the substantive laws of The Commonwealth of
Massachusetts without regard to its principles of conflicts of
laws.
B-16
ANNUAL MEETING OF
SHAREHOLDERS OF
PROGRESS SOFTWARE CORPORATION
April 26, 2007
Please date, sign
and mail
your proxy card in the
envelope provided as soon
as possible.
ê Please detach along perforated line and mail
in the envelope provided. ê
n
20633003300000000000 4
042607
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THE SHARES REPRESENTED BY THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED AS DIRECTED OR, IF NO DIRECTION IS GIVEN,
THE SHARES WILL BE VOTED FOR THE PROPOSALS 1, 2, 3, AND 4, AND AGAINST PROPOSAL 5 AS SET FORTH ON THE REVERSE.
PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND RETURN PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. PLEASE MARK YOUR VOTE IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS SHOWN HERE
x
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FOR |
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AGAINST |
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ABSTAIN |
2. Election of
Directors. |
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1. |
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To fix the number of directors constituting
the full Board of Directors of the Company at
six. |
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NOMINEES: |
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FOR
ALL NOMINEES WITHHOLD AUTHORITY FOR ALL NOMINEES
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¡ ¡ ¡ ¡ ¡ ¡ |
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Joseph W.
Alsop Barry N.
Bycoff Roger J.
Heinen, Jr. Charles
F. Kane Michael L.
Mark Scott A.
McGregor |
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3. |
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To approve an amendment to the Companys 1991
Employee Stock Purchase Plan, as amended, to
increase the maximum number of shares that may
be issued under such plan from 3,200,000 to
4,000,000 shares. |
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FOR ALL EXCEPT (See Instructions below) |
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To approve the amendment and restatement of
the Companys 1997 Stock Incentive Plan. |
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To consider and act upon the shareholder
proposal described in the accompanying Proxy
Statement if properly presented at the
meeting. |
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The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR Proposals 1, 2, 3
and 4 and AGAINST Proposal 5.
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INSTRUCTION:
To withhold authority to vote for any individual nominee(s), mark FOR ALL
EXCEPT and fill in the circle next to each nominee
you wish to
withhold, as shown here: = |
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PLEASE COMPLETE, DATE AND SIGN THIS PROXY ON THE OTHER SIDE AND
MAIL IT IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE TO ENSURE REPRESENTATION OF
YOUR SHARES. NO POSTAGE NEED BE AFFIXED IF MAILED IN THE UNITED
STATES. PLEASE SIGN EXACTLY AS NAME(S) APPEAR(S) ON STOCK
CERTIFICATE(S). IF SHAREHOLDER IS A CORPORATION OR PARTNERSHIP,
PLEASE HAVE AN AUTHORIZED OFFICER SIGN ON BEHALF OF THE
CORPORATION OR PARTNERSHIP. |
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To change the address on your account, please check
the box at right and indicate your new address in the address space above.
Please note that changes to the registered name(s) on the account may not
be submitted via this method. |
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Signature of
Shareholder |
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Date: |
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Signature of Shareholder
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Date: |
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Note: |
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Please sign exactly as your name or names appear on this Proxy. When
shares are held jointly, each holder should sign. When signing as
executor, administrator, attorney, trustee or guardian, please give full
title as such. If the signer is a corporation, please sign full corporate
name by duly authorized officer, giving full title as such. If signer is a
partnership, please sign in partnership name by authorized
person. |
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Dear Shareholder:
Please take note of the important information enclosed with this proxy card. There are a number of
issues related to the management and operation of Progress Software that require your immediate
attention and approval. These are discussed in detail in the enclosed proxy materials.
Your vote counts, and you are strongly encouraged to exercise your right to vote your shares.
Please mark the boxes on this proxy card to indicate how your shares will be voted. Then sign the
card, detach it and return your proxy vote in the enclosed postage paid envelope.
Your vote must be
received prior to the Annual Meeting of Shareholders, April 26, 2007.
Thank you in advance for your
prompt consideration of these matters.
Sincerely,
Progress Software Corporation
1
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PROGRESS SOFTWARE CORPORATION
14 OAK PARK, BEDFORD, MASSACHUSETTS 01730
PROXY
FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS -- APRIL 26, 2007
The undersigned shareholder of Progress Software Corporation the Company, revoking all prior
proxies, hereby appoints Joseph W. Alsop, Norman R. Robertson and James D. Freedman, or any of them
acting singly, proxies, with full power of substitution, to vote all shares of Common Stock of
Progress Software Corporation which the undersigned is entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting of
Shareholders of the Company to be held at the Companys office at 14 Oak Park, Bedford,
Massachusetts on April 26, 2007, at 10:00 A.M., local time, and at any adjournments or
postponements thereof, upon matters set forth in the Notice of Annual Meeting and Proxy Statement
dated March 27, 2007, a copy of which has been received by the undersigned, and in their
discretion, upon any other business that may properly come before the meeting or any adjournments
or postponements thereof. THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE
COMPANY. A SHAREHOLDER WISHING TO VOTE IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE BOARD OF
DIRECTORS NEED ONLY SIGN AND DATE THIS PROXY AND RETURN IT IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE. Attendance of
the undersigned at the meeting or any adjourned session thereof will not be deemed to revoke the
proxy unless the undersigned shall affirmatively indicate the intention of the undersigned to vote
the shares represented hereby in person.
(Continued
and to be signed on the reverse side)
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