Textron 2023 Proxy Statement

ROLE OF INDEPENDENT COMPENSATION CONSULTANT Under its charter, the Committee has the authority to retain outside consultants or advisors as it deems necessary to provide desired expertise and counsel. In 2022, the Committee engaged the services of Pearl Meyer as its independent compensation consultant. Pearl Meyer reports directly and exclusively to the Committee and was retained to provide advice regarding current and emerging best practices with regard to executive compensation. In addition, as described above, Pearl Meyer annually conducts a risk review of our executive compensation program. Representatives from Pearl Meyer attended each of the Committee’s meetings in 2022. Pearl Meyer does not provide any other services to the Committee or the Company. The Committee has determined that Pearl Meyer is independent and that the work of Pearl Meyer with the Committee for 2022 has not raised any conflict of interest. SHARE OWNERSHIP REQUIREMENTS One objective of our executive compensation program is to align the financial interests of our NEOs with the interests of our shareholders. As a result, we require that senior executives accumulate and maintain a minimum level of share ownership in the Company which may be achieved through direct ownership of shares, Textron Savings Plan shares, unvested RSUs and vested/ unvested share equivalents in Textron compensation and benefit plans. Stock options are not included for purposes of calculating share ownership. Minimum ownership levels are expressed as a multiple of base salary as follows: five times for the CEO and three times for other NEOs. New executive officers are given five years to reach their required ownership level. All NEOs currently meet their respective share ownership requirements. ANTI-HEDGING AND PLEDGING POLICY Our executives, including our NEOs, and their designees are prohibited from engaging in short sales of Textron securities and from engaging in transactions in publicly traded options, such as puts, calls and other derivative securities based on Textron’s securities including any hedging, monetization or similar transactions designed to decrease the risks associated with holding Textron securities, and financial instruments such as equity swaps, collars, exchange funds and forward sales contracts (the “anti-hedging policy”). The anti-hedging policy does not apply to employees generally but applies to officers at the Company and its subsidiaries who are subject to the Company’s insider trading policy. In addition, our NEOs are prohibited from pledging Textron securities as collateral for any loan or holding Textron securities in a margin account. CLAWBACK POLICY Our 2015 Long-Term Incentive Plan, as well as our Short-Term Incentive Plan which governs our annual incentive compensation program, include a clawback provision which provides that the Committee shall require reimbursement of any annual incentive payment or long-term incentive payment under any award to an executive officer where (i) the payment was predicated upon achieving certain financial results that were subsequently the subject of a substantial restatement of Company financial statements, (ii) the Committee determines the executive engaged in intentional misconduct that caused or substantially caused the need for the restatement and (iii) a lower payment would have been made to the executive based upon the restated financial results. In addition, the Company’s long-term incentive award agreements provide that an executive who violates the noncompetition provisions of the award during employment or within two years after termination of employment with the Company forfeits future rights under the award and must repay to the Company value received during the period beginning 180 days prior to the earlier of termination or the date the violation occurred. The Company also is subject to the “clawback” provision of Section 304 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 which generally requires public company chief executive officers and chief financial officers to disgorge bonuses, other incentive- or equity- based compensation, and profits on sales of company stock that they receive within the 12-month period following the public release of financial information if there is a restatement because of material noncompliance, due to misconduct, with financial reporting requirements under the federal securities laws. We also will implement the pending NYSE listing standards that effect recently adopted SEC rules on this topic. 36 TEXTRON 2023 PROXY STATEMENT

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