Full-Time

Human Capital Management Senior Product Manager

Human Capital Management, Strategy, Vice President

Goldman Sachs

Goldman Sachs

10,001+ employees

Global investment banking, securities, asset management

Compensation Overview

$100k - $250k/yr

+ Carried Interest Programs

Company Historically Provides H1B Sponsorship

New York, NY, USA

In Person

Category
Product (1)
Required Skills
Machine Learning
Human Resources Information System (HRIS)
Requirements
  • Bachelor's degree in Business Administration, Human Resources, Computer Science, Finance, or a closely related field. Advanced degree (MBA, MS) strongly preferred.
  • Minimum of 10+ years of progressive, senior-level experience in product management, with a demonstrated focus on compensation, rewards, or HCM technology within financial services or a similarly complex, regulated environment.
  • Deep subject matter expertise in compensation, including experience with: Annual and off-cycle compensation planning cycles, pay component design, equity compensation, deferred compensation, carried interest programs, and administration workflows.
  • Proven track record of leading full-lifecycle compensation platform implementations, including requirements definition, vendor selection, configuration, UAT, and go-live.
  • Demonstrated expertise in compensation benchmarking automation, including experience with survey data vendors and automated data ingestion and job-matching workflows.
  • Proven experience leading digital transformation programs that retired legacy compensation processes and delivered measurable efficiency, accuracy, and scalability improvements.
  • Demonstrated ability to build products from 0 to 1, including greenfield platform launches and net-new capability development in compensation or rewards technology.
  • Proven people management experience, including direct management, mentorship, and upskilling of product managers at varying levels of seniority.
  • Exceptional executive-level written and verbal communication skills, with the ability to influence senior stakeholders and present complex compensation and technology concepts with clarity and authority.
Responsibilities
  • Define and own the multi-year product roadmap for the Rewards pillar, including compensation planning, pay delivery, equity lifecycle, deferred compensation, and carry program administration.
  • Serve as the executive product authority on compensation technology, translating complex rewards frameworks into scalable platform capabilities.
  • Continuously scan the competitive landscape and emerging HCM technology trends to drive innovation into the rewards product strategy.
  • Develop and present leadership-ready business cases, including ROI modeling, total cost of ownership analysis, and strategic KPIs for all major compensation platform investments.
  • Lead end-to-end digital transformation initiatives across the Rewards technology landscape, retiring legacy tools and processes in favor of modern, integrated, and intelligent platform solutions.
  • Drive digitization of processes – converting manual workflows into automated digital processes
  • Demonstrate a proven track record of building compensation products and capabilities from 0 to 1 — including greenfield platform builds and net-new feature development.
  • Establish target-state architecture for the Rewards technology ecosystem.
  • Champion the adoption of AI and machine learning capabilities within compensation workflows.
  • Lead, manage, and mentor a team of product managers across the Rewards pillar, providing hands-on coaching, structured career development frameworks, and ongoing performance guidance.
  • Drive an upskilling agenda for product management talent, designing and delivering training programs, playbooks, and communities of practice that elevate product management capability.
  • Act as a leader and internal advocate for product management best practices, establishing standards for roadmap governance, backlog management, stakeholder communication, and product metrics.
  • Lead end-to-end compensation platform implementations, from vendor evaluation and selection through configuration, testing, change management, and hypercare.
  • Champion the automation of compensation data workflows, including market benchmarking data ingestion, job architecture mapping, salary range modeling, and pay equity analytics.
  • Drive integration strategy between compensation platforms and adjacent systems including payroll, HRIS, finance, and equity administration tools.
  • Establish and govern benchmarking data pipelines.
  • Partner with HCM, Finance, Legal, Tax, and Technology leadership to align compensation product capabilities with firm-wide rewards philosophy and regulatory requirements.
  • Lead executive-level stakeholder engagement, including presenting roadmap updates, investment proposals, and delivery outcomes to senior leadership and governance committees.
  • Uphold standards for data privacy, compliance, and governance across compensation platforms and data flows, including adherence to applicable SEC, ERISA, and international regulations.
  • Strategically manage vendor relationships across the compensation technology ecosystem, including contract negotiation, SLA oversight, and long-term partnership governance.
Desired Qualifications
  • Experience with enterprise HCM and compensation platforms such as Oracle HCM Cloud.
  • Familiarity with equity administration platforms.
  • Experience with deferred compensation administration platforms and carry/partnership tracking tools used in asset management or private equity contexts.
  • Agile Product Owner, Scrum Master, or equivalent product management certification.
  • Demonstrated experience building and scaling product management centers of excellence or capability uplift programs within large organizations.

Goldman Sachs delivers financial services across investment banking, securities, and asset management to corporations, governments, financial institutions, and high-net-worth individuals. Its offerings include advising on mergers and acquisitions, underwriting and distributing new securities, and managing client assets, with revenue from advisory and underwriting fees, trading commissions, and asset-management fees. The firm differentiates itself through a global reach, an integrated capital-markets platform, and deep client relationships that enable end-to-end financial solutions. Its goal is to help clients raise capital, grow their businesses, manage risk, and generate returns, while pursuing social responsibility initiatives that support small businesses and promote racial equity.

Company Size

10,001+

Company Stage

IPO

Headquarters

New York City, New York

Founded

1869

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Q1 2026 net earnings surged 19% year-over-year to $5.6 billion.
  • Raised price targets on Broadcom, Fluence Energy, Nvidia amid AI infrastructure boom.
  • Record backlog and hyperscaler partnerships drive data center and semiconductor advisory fees.

What critics are saying

  • Operating expenses grew 14% matching revenue growth, compressing margins unsustainably.
  • Operating cash flow collapsed to negative $31.9 billion in Q1 2026.
  • Total liabilities exploded 18.1% year-over-year to $1.94 trillion, amplifying systemic risk.

What makes Goldman Sachs unique

  • Manages $3 trillion in assets under supervision with top-tier alternatives business.
  • Underwrites major medtech IPOs like Mobia Medical's $150M stroke recovery device offering.
  • Expanded management committee to 47 members with AI and risk strategy leaders.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

Life Insurance

Disability Insurance

Health Savings Account/Flexible Spending Account

Paid Vacation

Paid Sick Leave

Paid Holidays

Professional Development Budget

Company News

Yahoo Finance
Apr 14th, 2026
Big banks profit from AI data center borrowing and Iran war volatility

Wall Street's major banks are reporting strong earnings, with JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs benefitting from AI infrastructure buildout and geopolitical volatility. JPMorgan posted net income of $16.5 billion, up 13% year over year, whilst Goldman saw investment banking fees jump 48%. The AI boom is driving unprecedented corporate borrowing, with banks profiting from debt underwriting, bond trading and advisory services. Goldman led Oracle's $25 billion bond offering in February, one of the largest corporate sales recently. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon cited "AI-driven capital investment" as a key macroeconomic driver. Meanwhile, war-related volatility is boosting trading desks. JPMorgan's fixed income trading rose 21%, driven by activity in commodities, credit and currencies. Goldman's equities division surged 27%, reflecting increased client hedging activity amid geopolitical uncertainty.

Yahoo Finance
Apr 14th, 2026
Goldman Sachs cuts Amazon price target to $275 amid $200B AI spending concerns

Goldman Sachs has lowered its price target on Amazon to $275 from $280 whilst maintaining a Buy rating ahead of the company's earnings report on 30 April 2026. The revised target still implies upside from the current share price of around $240. Analyst Eric Sheridan highlighted four key areas shaping Amazon's trajectory: AWS cloud revenue growth and AI investment returns, rising energy prices affecting margins, the commercialisation timeline for Amazon Leo, and the fast-growing advertising platform. Amazon's AI push through AWS has reached an annualised revenue run rate exceeding $15 billion, whilst its chip business surpassed $20 billion in revenue with triple-digit growth. However, capital expenditures could approach $200 billion in fiscal 2026, pressuring free cash flow despite strong overall performance showing net sales of $716.9 billion and operating income of $80 billion for the full year.

Tech in Asia
Apr 14th, 2026
Goldman Sachs deploys Anthropic's Claude Mythos AI to find cyber vulnerabilities after US urging

Goldman Sachs is strengthening its cyber defences using Anthropic's Claude Mythos Preview AI model, according to CEO David Solomon. The bank is collaborating with Anthropic and security vendors to accelerate investment in its security infrastructure. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell convened an urgent meeting with Wall Street leaders in Washington, urging banks to test the model against their systems. Mythos is designed to identify complex exploit chains—linked software vulnerabilities used in sophisticated cyberattacks that security researchers often miss. The model has discovered thousands of bugs, including one in OpenBSD that remained undetected for 27 years. US officials are pushing critical industries towards machine-scale cyber defence, though the approach has sparked international friction with European regulators and internal US government disagreements.

American Banker
Apr 14th, 2026
Goldman Sachs raises $6.5B in bond sale amid market volatility

Goldman Sachs raised $6.5 billion from a US investment-grade bond sale, continuing a borrowing spree that included a record $16 billion offering earlier this year. The deal tested investor appetite after the bank reported weaker-than-expected bond-trading revenue in its first quarter. Pricing tightened by approximately 0.25 percentage points across two fixed-rate tranches, with the longest maturity due in 2034 priced at a one percentage point spread. The offering also included a floating-rate note, with proceeds earmarked for general corporate purposes. Goldman led first-quarter debt issuance among Wall Street banks. However, analysts note that increased market volatility from AI disruption concerns and Middle East tensions has made borrowing conditions more challenging, with banks potentially front-loading 2026 issuance before costs rose.

Yahoo Finance
Apr 13th, 2026
Goldman Sachs falls 4.7% despite earnings beat on rising credit provisions and declining backlog

Goldman Sachs shares fell as much as 4.7% on Monday before recovering to close down 1.9%, despite reporting earnings that beat expectations. The investment bank posted revenue growth of 14.4% to $17.23 billion and earnings per share up 24.3% to $17.55, beating forecasts by $1.16. However, several factors concerned investors. Goldman's investment banking fee backlog declined slightly, potentially signalling future deceleration. Provisions for credit losses exceeded expectations due to macroeconomic uncertainty and portfolio growth, compressing net interest margins. CEO David Solomon also indicated the bank would continue investing in private credit despite recent market volatility in that sector. The pullback appears to reflect profit-taking after an 80% share price gain over the past year, rather than fundamental concerns.