SONOS INC (SONO)
Sector: Consumer Discretionary
2026 Annual Meeting Analysis
SONOS INC · Meeting: March 5, 2026
Directors FOR
1
Directors AGAINST
2
Say on Pay
FOR
Auditor
FOR
Director Elections
Election of Class II Directors
Against Analysis
Tom Conrad has served on the board since March 2017, meaning his tenure fully covers the 3-year period during which Sonos stock fell roughly 30% while the technology sector ETF (XLK) gained about 98% — a gap of 128 percentage points, far exceeding the 30-point trigger threshold; the 5-year record is even worse (-66.6% vs XLK), so the 5-year mitigant does not apply, and a vote against him as a director is warranted independent of his role as CEO.
Julius Genachowski has been a director since 2013 and has served as Board Chair since May 2023, meaning his tenure fully covers the 3-year underperformance period; Sonos stock fell roughly 30% over three years while XLK gained 98% (a 128-point gap far exceeding the 30-point trigger), and the 5-year record provides no mitigant (stock down 67% over five years), so a vote against is warranted.
For Analysis
Carmine Arabia joined the board in January 2026, which is within the 24-month new-director exemption window, so the TSR underperformance trigger does not apply; he brings relevant hardware and supply chain expertise appropriate to Sonos's business.
Of the three Class II nominees, two long-tenured directors (Tom Conrad since 2017, Julius Genachowski since 2013) are subject to a vote against under the TSR trigger because Sonos stock declined roughly 30% over the past three years while the technology sector ETF (XLK) gained 98% — a 128-point gap that far exceeds the 30-point threshold applicable to companies with negative absolute 3-year returns, and the 5-year record provides no mitigant. Carmine Arabia, who joined in January 2026, is exempt from the TSR trigger as a new director and receives a FOR vote.
Say on Pay
✓ FORCEO
Tom Conrad
Total Comp
$8,275,354
Prior Support
56%%
The 2025 say-on-pay vote received only about 56% support — below the 70% threshold that would normally require demonstrated follow-through — but the company has made visible and meaningful changes: it adopted formal executive severance guidelines, restructured the CEO compensation package to be 90% variable, added a multi-year relative stock performance goal covering 40% of the CEO's performance stock awards, differentiated annual and long-term incentive metrics in response to shareholder feedback, and conducted extensive engagement with shareholders representing 58% of shares outstanding. Pay mix is strong (90% variable for the CEO), the annual incentive plan uses objective financial metrics with a quality gate, and the overall compensation structure reflects genuine responsiveness to the prior-year shareholder concern, which itself was driven largely by a one-time severance payment to the departing CEO rather than a structural flaw in the ongoing program.
Auditor Ratification
✓ FORAuditor
KPMG LLP
Tenure
1 yrs
Audit Fees
$1,528,790
Non-Audit Fees
$134,265
KPMG LLP was newly appointed in December 2024 (replacing PricewaterhouseCoopers), so its tenure is roughly one year — well below the 25-year concern threshold; non-audit fees (tax services of $134,265) represent about 8.8% of audit fees ($1,528,790), comfortably below the 50% independence threshold; no restatements or other concerns are present, and KPMG is a Big 4 firm appropriate for a $1.6 billion company.
Stockholder Proposals
2 proposals submitted by shareholders
Proposal 4
Management Proposal to Approve an Amendment to the Restated Certificate of Incorporation to Phase in Declassification of the Board
This is a board-proposed charter amendment that moves Sonos from a classified board — where directors serve staggered three-year terms and only one-third face election each year — to a fully annual election structure by 2029; this is a clear pro-shareholder governance improvement because it gives ordinary shareholders a meaningful annual check on every director rather than having to wait up to three years to remove an underperformer. The phased approach is a reasonable transition mechanism and should be supported.
Proposal 5
Management Proposal to Approve an Amendment to the Restated Certificate of Incorporation to Eliminate Certain Supermajority Voting Requirements
This board-proposed charter amendment replaces a requirement that two-thirds of all shares must agree before the company's governing documents can be changed, lowering that bar to a simple majority — a clear improvement for ordinary shareholders because supermajority thresholds make it extremely difficult for shareholders to enact changes even when a majority want them. Eliminating this entrenching provision gives shareholders a more meaningful voice over the company's governance and is straightforwardly pro-shareholder.
Overall Assessment
The 2026 Sonos annual meeting ballot contains five proposals; votes against are warranted for two long-tenured Class II directors (Tom Conrad and Julius Genachowski) due to severe stock underperformance — Sonos shares fell roughly 30% over three years while the technology ETF (XLK) gained 98%, a 128-point gap with no 5-year mitigant — while the three remaining proposals (auditor ratification, say-on-pay, and two pro-shareholder charter amendments on board declassification and elimination of supermajority voting requirements) all receive FOR votes. The say-on-pay vote narrowly passes the prior-year low-support test because the company made genuine and specific structural changes to its compensation program in direct response to the 56% support received in 2025.