Some professors direct large research programs. What is the typical practice for compensating them?
For example, it is not unusual for a top professor to be directing $30 million in research grants every year. If the professor got only 1% of this, it would be a salary of $300,000 per year. I would assume they are paid more than that.
Please do not answer vaguely (impossible to know, it differs from place to place). Obviously, it differs from place to place. I want to know the general and typical practices. What is a common method of compensation.
I am just interested here in compensation for grant-making ability. So, if that is a factor in salary, I would like to know the effect on salary.
to add:( I ran out of chars last comment) ...more accurately, all products submitted to the marketplace undergo an auction process and labor is a product just like any other. Your 'salary'/'wage' is simply a price arrived at through the clearing process and there is a myriad of factors that make prices subjective. Buyers want to pay 0 because that's most advantageous to them. Sellers want you to give ∞, because that's most advantageous to them. Both of these positions are untenable, so both the seller and buyer fallback from their "theoretical best" to something that clears. – K. Alan Bates Apr 07 '16 at 15:35