FAIR ISAAC & COMPANY INC
PRE 14A, 1995-12-22
BUSINESS SERVICES, NEC
Previous: PRINCOR HIGH YIELD FUND INC, NSAR-B, 1995-12-22
Next: PRINCOR EMERGING GROWTH FUND INC, NSAR-B, 1995-12-22




                                PRELIMINARY COPY

                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
                PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(A) OF THE
                         SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
                         (Amendment No. ______________)


Filed by the Registrant    /X/
Filed by a party other than the Registrant   / /

Check the appropriate box:
/x/  Preliminary proxy statement
/ /  Confidential, for use of the Commission only (as permitted by
     Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
/ /  Definitive proxy statement
/ /  Definitive additional materials
/ /  Soliciting material pursuant to Sec. 240.14a-11(c) or Sec. 240.14a-12

                 FAIR, ISAAC AND COMPANY, INCORPORATED
            ------------------------------------------------
            (Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)

                 
                 FAIR, ISAAC AND COMPANY, INCORPORATED
  ------------------------------------------------------------------------
  (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)


Payment of filing fee (Check the appropriate box):

/X/  $125 per Exchange Act Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii), 14a-6(i)(1), 14a-6(i)(2)
     or Item 22(a)(2) or Schedule 14A

/ /  $500 per each party to the controversy pursuant to Exchange Act Rule
     14a-6(i)(3).

/ /  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 transactions applies:

- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------

(2)  Aggregate number of securities to which transactions applies:

- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------

(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:

- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------

/ /  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
/ /  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:

- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


<PAGE>

                                PRELIMINARY COPY

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                                February 6, 1996


To the Stockholders:

     NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN  that the Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders  of Fair,
Isaac and Company, Incorporated (the "Company") will be held at 10 A.M., P.S.T.,
on Tuesday,  February 6, 1996, at Fair,  Isaac's  Conference  Center,  111 Smith
Ranch Road,  San Rafael,  California,  for the following  purposes:  

1.       To  elect   directors  to  serve  until  the  1997  Annual  Meeting  of
         Stockholders  and  thereafter  until their  successors  are elected and
         qualified.

2.       To  amend  the  Company's  Restated  Certificate  of  Incorporation  to
         increase the number of  authorized  shares of Common  Stock,  par value
         $.01 per share, from 15,000,000 to 35,000,000.

3.       To approve amendments to the Company's 1992 Long-term Incentive Plan as
         described in the accompanying proxy statement.

4.       To ratify the appointment of the independent auditors of the Company.

5.       To transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting
         or any adjournment thereof.

     All of the above matters are more fully described in the accompanying Proxy
Statement.  Only  stockholders  of record at the close of  business  on  Friday,
December  8, 1995,  are  entitled to notice of and to vote at the meeting or any
postponement or adjournment thereof. A list of stockholders  entitled to vote at
the Annual  Meeting will be available for  inspection at the Company's  offices,
111 Smith  Ranch  Road,  San  Rafael,  California,  at least 10 days  before the
meeting.

     All  stockholders  are  cordially  invited to attend the meeting in person.
However,  to assure your  representation at the meeting,  you are urged to mark,
sign,  date and return the enclosed proxy as promptly as possible in the postage
prepaid  envelope  enclosed for that  purpose.  Any  stockholder  attending  the
meeting may vote in person even if he or she returned a proxy.

                                       Sincerely,


                                       Peter L. McCorkell
                                       Senior Vice President and Secretary

San Rafael, California
January 2, 1996

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT.  In order to assure your  representation at the meeting,
you are requested to complete,  sign and date the enclosed  proxy as promptly as
possible  and return it in the  enclosed  envelope  (to which no postage need be
affixed if mailed in the United States).

<PAGE>

                                PRELIMINARY COPY

PROXY STATEMENT

     This Proxy  Statement is furnished in connection  with the  solicitation by
and on behalf of the Board of Directors of Fair, Isaac and Company, Incorporated
(the  "Company") of proxies to be used at the Annual Meeting of  Stockholders of
the Company (the "Annual Meeting") to be held on Tuesday,  February 6, 1996, and
any postponement or adjournment  thereof.  A copy of the Company's Annual Report
to Stockholders for the fiscal year ended September 30, 1995, which includes the
Company's financial statements as of September 30, 1995,  accompanies this Proxy
Statement. Stockholders may obtain a copy of the Company's Annual Report on Form
10-K and a list of the exhibits  thereto  without  charge by written  request to
Peter L. McCorkell, Corporate Secretary, 120 North Redwood Drive, San Rafael, CA
94903.  This Proxy Statement and the accompanying form of proxy are being mailed
to stockholders on or about January 2, 1996.

PROXY SOLICITATION

     The  shares   represented  by  the  proxies   received   pursuant  to  this
solicitation and not revoked will be voted at the Annual Meeting.  A stockholder
who has given a proxy may revoke it by giving  written  notice of  revocation to
the Secretary of the Company or by giving a duly executed  proxy bearing a later
date.  Attendance  in person at the Annual  Meeting does not of itself  revoke a
proxy;  however, any stockholder who does attend the Annual Meeting may revoke a
proxy previously submitted by voting in person.  Subject to any such revocation,
all shares  represented by properly executed proxies will be voted in accordance
with  specifications on the enclosed proxy. If no such  specifications are made,
proxies will be voted FOR the election of the nine nominees for director  listed
in this Proxy  Statement,  FOR the  approval of the  proposal  to  increase  the
authorized  number of shares of the  Company's  Common  Stock,  FOR the proposed
amendments  to  the  Company's  1992  Long-term  Incentive  Plan,  and  FOR  the
ratification  of the  appointment  of KPMG  Peat  Marwick  LLP as the  Company's
auditors for the current fiscal year.

     The Company will bear the expense of  preparing,  printing and mailing this
Proxy Statement and proxies solicited hereby and will reimburse banks, brokerage
firms and  nominees for their  reasonable  expenses in  forwarding  solicitation
materials to beneficial owners of shares held of record by such banks, brokerage
firms and nominees. In addition to the solicitation of proxies by mail, officers
and regular employees of the Company may communicate with stockholders either in
person or by telephone for the purpose of soliciting such proxies; no additional
compensation  will be paid for  such  solicitation.  The  Company  has  retained
Skinner & Co. to assist in the  solicitation of proxies at a cost of $3,500 plus
normal out-of-pocket expenses.

OUTSTANDING SHARES AND VOTING RIGHTS

     Only  stockholders  of record at the close of  business on December 8, 1995
(the "record date") are entitled to notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting.
At the close of business on the record date, there were 12,311,406 shares of the
Company's  Common  Stock,  $0.01 par value  (the  "Common  Stock"),  issued  and
outstanding,  excluding  52,765 shares of Common Stock held as treasury stock by
the  Company. 

                                       1
<PAGE>
The shares held as treasury  stock are not  entitled to be voted.  Each share of
Common  Stock is entitled to one vote with respect to each matter to be voted on
at the meeting  subject to the  provisions  regarding  cumulative  voting in the
election of  directors  as  described  below.  A plurality  of the votes cast is
required for the election of the nine nominees for director listed in this Proxy
Statement,  and a majority of the votes cast is required to approve the proposed
increase in the authorized  number of shares of the Company's  Common Stock, the
proposed amendments to the Company's 1992 Long-term Incentive Plan and to ratify
the  appointment  of KPMG Peat  Marwick LLP as the  company's  auditors  for the
current  fiscal  year.  Abstentions  with  respect to any matter are  treated as
shares  present or  represented by proxy and entitled to vote on that matter and
thus  have the same  effect  as  negative  votes.  Broker  non-votes  and  other
circumstances  in which proxy  authority  has been  withheld  do not  constitute
abstentions.

     In the election of the directors,  each stockholder is entitled to one vote
per  share  multiplied  by the  number  of  directors  to be  elected,  and  the
stockholder may cast all of such votes for a single  candidate or may distribute
them among the number of  directors  to be voted for,  or for any two or more of
them as the  stockholder  may see fit;  provided,  however,  that no stockholder
shall be entitled so to cumulate  votes unless such  candidate's  or candidates'
names have been placed in nomination prior to the voting and the stockholder has
given notice at the meeting prior to the voting of the  stockholder's  intention
to  cumulate  votes.  If  any  one  stockholder  has  given  such  notice,   all
stockholders may cumulate their votes for candidates in nomination.  The persons
authorized to vote shares  represented by executed  proxies in the enclosed form
(if authority to vote for the election of directors is not  withheld)  will have
full discretion and authority to vote  cumulatively  and to allocate votes among
any or all of the Board of  Directors'  nominees  as they may  determine  or, if
authority to vote for a specified  candidate or  candidates  has been  withheld,
among those candidates for whom authority to vote has not been withheld.

ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
NOMINEES

     There are currently  nine  directors.  The Board of Directors has nominated
the following  persons,  all of whom  currently  are serving as  directors,  for
election as directors to serve until the 1997 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and
thereafter until their respective successors are duly elected and qualified.

     BRYANT J.  BROOKS,  JR.,  DIRECTOR.  Mr.  Brooks was  elected a director in
February  1989.  Since  1975  Mr.  Brooks  has  been  an  independent  financial
consultant in San Francisco,  California,  specializing  in the valuation of the
securities  of  privately  held  companies.  He provided  such  services for the
Company's  Employee Stock  Ownership Plan prior to the Company's  initial public
offering  in July  1987.  From  1968 to 1974,  he was the  president  of  Boothe
Computer Investment Corporation and

                                       2
<PAGE>
its  successor,  Bay Equities,  Inc. Prior to that he held a number of financial
and  management  positions  in other  companies.  He is  currently a director of
McGrath  RentCorp of San  Lorenzo,  California.  Mr.  Brooks  received a B.S. in
Economics from Yale  University in 1950 and an M.B.A.  from Harvard in 1955. Mr.
Brooks is 68 years old.

     WILLIAM R. FAIR, CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS. Mr. Fair was a founder
of the Company and was its  President  from 1960 until his  retirement  in March
1991. He is currently acting as a consultant to the Company. Mr. Fair has been a
director since November 1960. He was named Chief  Executive  Officer in December
1985 and was elected  Chairman of the Board of Directors in May 1987.  From 1951
to 1956 Mr. Fair  conducted  a variety of  operations  research  projects at the
Stanford Research  Institute.  Mr. Fair received a B.S.E.E.  from the California
Institute of  Technology  and an M.S. in Electrical  Engineering  Administration
from Stanford  University,  and the graduate degree of Electrical  Engineer from
the University of California, Berkeley. Mr. Fair is 73 years old.

     H. ROBERT HELLER,  DIRECTOR.  Dr. Heller was elected a director in February
1994.  He has been the  President  of  International  Payments  Institute  since
December 1994. He was President and Chief Executive Officer of Visa U.S.A., Inc.
from 1991 to 1993, and an Executive Vice  President of Visa  International  from
1989 to 1991.  He served as a member of the Board of  Governors  of the  Federal
Reserve System from 1986 to 1989.  Prior to that, Dr. Heller held positions with
the Bank of America and the International  Monetary Fund and taught economics at
the University of  California,  Los Angeles,  and the  University of Hawaii.  He
holds an M.A. in  Economics  from the  University  of Minnesota  and a Ph.D.  in
Economics from the University of  California,  Berkeley.  Dr. Heller is 55 years
old.

     GUY R. HENSHAW,  DIRECTOR.  Mr.  Henshaw was elected a director in February
1994. He has been Chief Executive Officer of Payday, The Payroll Company,  since
March 1993. He served as a Director of Payday from 1989 through 1995 and was its
Chairman  from 1992  through  1995.  From 1984 to 1992 he was  President,  Chief
Financial  Officer and a Director of Civic  BanCorp and Treasurer and a Director
of the CivicBank of Commerce. Prior to that, Mr. Henshaw held positions with the
Bank of America and Security  National  Bank. He holds a B.A. in Economics  from
Ripon  College  and an  M.B.A.  from  the  Wharton  School  of  Business  at the
University of Pennsylvania. Mr. Henshaw is 49 years old.

     DAVID S. P. HOPKINS, DIRECTOR. Dr. Hopkins was elected a director in August
1994. Since January 1995, he has been an independent  consultant in health care.
Prior to that, he was Vice President,  Client Services and Corporate Development
of International Severity Information Systems, Inc., a medical severity indexing
software  and  consulting  firm.  From  1971 to 1994 he held a number  of senior
management positions at Stanford University and its University Hospital, Medical
Center and Medical School. A graduate of Harvard University,  he earned both his
Ph.D. in operations research and his M.S. in statistics at Stanford  University.
Dr. Hopkins is 52 years old.

                                       3
<PAGE>

     ROBERT M. OLIVER,  DIRECTOR.  Dr. Oliver was elected a director in December
1986. He was a Professor of Engineering  Science in the College of  Engineering,
University of  California,  Berkeley,  from 1960 until his retirement in January
1993. He is also a director and Trustee of the AnSer  Corporation  of Arlington,
Virginia,  and is a member of the Board of Directors  of the Berkeley  Repertory
Theater.  He received  his Ph.D.  in Physics and  Operations  Research  from the
Massachusetts  Institute of Technology in 1957, following a year as a Fullbright
Scholar at the  University  of London.  He has  served as the  President  of the
Operations  Research  Society of America and was the recipient of the Lanchester
Prize,  the senior award in the field of Operations  Research.  Dr. Oliver is 64
years old.

     LARRY E. ROSENBERGER,  DIRECTOR, PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER. Mr.
Rosenberger  has been  employed  by the  Company  since  1974 and was  elected a
director in December  1983.  In December 1977 Mr.  Rosenberger  was named a Vice
President,  in June 1983 he was named a Senior  Vice  President,  and in January
1985 he became an Executive Vice President. In March 1991 he was named President
and  Chief  Executive   Officer.   He  received  a  B.S.  in  Physics  from  the
Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology,  and an M.S.  in  Physics,  an M.S. in
Operations Research and an M. Eng. in Operations Research from the University of
California, Berkeley. Mr. Rosenberger is 49 years old.

     ROBERT D. SANDERSON, DIRECTOR. Dr. Sanderson joined the Company in 1969 and
was  elected a director  in March  1977.  He was named a Vice  President  of the
Company in May 1974,  a Senior Vice  President in June 1983,  an Executive  Vice
President  in January 1985 and Chief  Operating  Officer in February  1989.  Dr.
Sanderson retired as an executive officer of the Company effective September 30,
1995. On November 1, 1995 he was appointed a director of TF International,  LLC,
a joint venture between the Company and Trans Union  Corporation.  He received a
B.S.  degree in  Mathematics  at Cornell  University  and an M.S. and a Ph.D. in
Industrial   Engineering   and  Operations   Research  from  the  University  of
California, Berkeley. Dr. Sanderson is 52 years old.

     JOHN D. WOLDRICH,  DIRECTOR,  EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT AND CHIEF  OPERATING
OFFICER.  Mr.  Woldrich joined the Company in 1972 and was elected a director in
December  1983.  Mr.  Woldrich was named a Vice  President  in December  1977, a
Senior Vice  President in June 1983, an Executive Vice President in January 1985
and Chief Operating  Officer  effective August 1, 1995. Prior to August 1, 1995,
Mr. Woldrich was in charge of the Company's Marketing Division. Mr. Woldrich has
a B.S.  in  Electrical  Engineering  from the  University  of Santa Clara and an
M.B.A.  from the Wharton School of Business at the  University of  Pennsylvania.
Mr. Woldrich is 52 years old.

     If any  nominee  is  unable  or  declines  to  serve,  the  proxies  in the
accompanying  form will be voted for any  nominee  who may be  nominated  by the
present  Board of Directors to fill such vacancy or the size of the Board may be
reduced  accordingly.  It is foreseeable  that Mr. Fair might be unable to serve
because of health reasons.

                                       4

<PAGE>
     Officers  are  elected  at the  first  meeting  of the  Board of  Directors
following the Annual Meeting of  Stockholders at which the directors are elected
and serve until their successors are elected and qualified.  There are no family
relationships  between  any of the  directors,  nominees  for  director  and any
executive officer.

BOARD AND COMMITTEE MEETINGS

     The Company has standing audit and compensation  committees of the Board of
Directors.

     The audit committee consists of Bryant J. Brooks, Guy R. Henshaw,  David S.
P. Hopkins and Robert M. Oliver.  The audit committee monitors the effectiveness
of  the  audit  conducted  by  the  Company's  independent  auditors  and of the
Company's internal financial and accounting  controls,  and reports its findings
to the  Board  of  Directors.  The  committee  meets  with  management  and  the
independent auditors as may be required.  The independent auditors have full and
free access to the audit committee without the presence of management. The audit
committee held three meetings during fiscal 1995.

     The compensation committee consists of Bryant J. Brooks, Guy R. Henshaw and
H. Robert Heller.  This committee  determines all aspects of the compensation of
the Company's  president,  executive vice  presidents and the heads of strategic
business  units.  This Committee also  administers  the Company's 1992 Long-term
Incentive Plan. The compensation committee held five meetings in fiscal 1995.

     During the past fiscal year,  there were four regular meetings of the Board
of  Directors.  Each  incumbent  director  attended  more than 75 percent of the
aggregate  number of all board  meetings and meetings of  committees on which he
served during fiscal 1995.

STOCK OWNERSHIP

     The following table sets forth certain information regarding the beneficial
ownership of the  Company's  Common Stock as of December 8, 1995, by (i) each of
the Company's  directors  and nominees for director,  (ii) each of the executive
officers  named in the Summary  Compensation  Table below,  (iii) all  executive
officers and directors of the Company as a group,  and (iv) each person known to
the Company who beneficially owns more than 5% of the outstanding  shares of its
Common Stock.

                                       5

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
STOCK OWNERSHIP TABLE
<CAPTION>
                                                                            Beneficial Ownership(1)
                                                                       --------------------------------
Directors, Nominees, Officers and 5% Stockholders                        Number                  Percent
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                      <C>                       <C>  
William R. Fair(2)                                                       1,939,816                 15.7%
     120 North Redwood Drive
     San Rafael, CA 94903

Judith W. Isaac(3)                                                       1,891,010                 15.4%
     5 Capilano Drive
     Novato, CA 94947

Michael C. Gordon, Peter L. McCorkell                                    1,112,527                  9.0%
and John Waller,
     Trustees for Fair Isaac Employee Stock
     Ownership Trust
     120 North Redwood Drive
     San Rafael, CA 94903

Pilgrim Baxter Greig & Associates, Ltd(4)                                  879,600                  7.1%
     1255 Drummers Lane, Suite 200
     Wayne, PA 19087

Robert D. Sanderson(5)                                                     449,354                  3.6%
Larry E. Rosenberger(5)                                                    306,090                  2.5%
John D. Woldrich(5)                                                        164,559                  1.3%
Patrick G. Culhane(5, 6)                                                    33,819                  0.3%
Kenneth M. Rapp                                                                  0                    0%
Bryant J. Brooks(7)                                                         17,000                  0.1%
H. Robert Heller(7)                                                         16,000                  0.1%
Guy R. Henshaw(7)                                                           16,000                  0.1%
David S. P. Hopkins(7)                                                      16,000                  0.1%
Robert M. Oliver(8)                                                         52,000                  0.4%
All executive officers and directors as
     a group (16 persons)(5, 9)                                          3,354,870                 26.7%
<FN>
1        To the  Company's  knowledge  the persons  named in the table have sole
         voting  and  investment  power  with  respect  to all  shares  shown as
         beneficially  owned by them,  subject to community  property laws where
         applicable  and the  information  contained  in the  footnotes  to this
         table.

2        Does not include 505,698 shares held by Mr. Fair's adult children.  Mr.
         Fair disclaims beneficial ownership of such shares.  Includes 1,854,986
         shares  held by Mr.  Fair  and his  wife,  Inger  J.  Fair of the  same
         address,  as co-trustees and as beneficiaries  under a trust.  Includes
         options for 16,000 shares.

3        Does not include  358,673  shares held  directly by Mrs.  Isaac's adult
         children or 119,880  shares held by Mrs. Isaac as trustee for her adult
         children.  Mrs. Isaac  disclaims  beneficial  ownership of such shares.
         Includes  247,500  shares held as co-trustee  (with F. L. Adams) and as
         beneficiary under a trust.

4        The  number  of  shares  shown in the  table  is  based on  information
         supplied by the holder.

                                       6
<PAGE>

5        Includes the shares  allocated to such  individual's  account under the
         Company's  Employee Stock  Ownership Plan (amounts have been rounded to
         the  nearest  share).  Shares  allocated  to  the  accounts  of  listed
         individuals  are also  included in the total shown for the  Trustees of
         the Employee Stock Ownership Trust.

6        Includes  28,356  restricted  shares  issued  pursuant to an  incentive
         compensation agreement.

7        Includes options for 16,000 shares.

8        Includes 2,000 shares held in an Individual  Retirement Account ("IRA")
         for Dr.  Oliver,  4,000  shares  held in an IRA for his  spouse,  6,000
         shares held jointly by Dr.  Oliver and his wife,  24,000 shares held as
         trustee  and as  beneficiary  under a trust,  and  options  for  16,000
         shares.

9        Excludes  shares  excluded in notes (2) and (3) above.  Includes shares
         included in notes (2),  (3) (5),  (6),  (7) and (8) above,  including a
         total of 235,560 shares subject to exercisable options.
</FN>
</TABLE>

COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
DIRECTORS' COMPENSATION

     Non-employee directors other than the Chairman are currently compensated at
the rate of $12,000 per year plus $1,000 for each Board  meeting  attended.  The
Chairman is  currently  compensated  at the rate of $24,000 per year plus $2,000
for each  Board  meeting  attended.  All  directors  are paid  $125 per hour for
committee meetings and other special assignments. See also below under "Director
Consulting Arrangements."

     Under the Company's 1992 Long-term  Incentive Plan, members of the Board of
Directors  who are not  employees  of the Company  currently  receive a grant of
16,000  nonqualified  stock options  ("NSOs")  upon  completion of the first six
months' service as an outside director.  The exercise price of the NSOs is equal
to the fair market value of Common  Stock on the date of grant.  The NSOs become
exercisable  six  months  after the date of grant or  earlier  in the event of a
change in control of the Company or the  termination of the  director's  service
because of death,  disability or  retirement  from the Board at or after age 65.
The NSOs  expire  ten  years  after  the date of  grant,  12  months  after  the
termination  of the director's  service  because of death or disability or three
months after the termination of the director's  service for any other reason. If
the proposed amendments to the 1992 Long-term  Incentive Plan are approved,  the
grants of options to non-employee directors will be modified accordingly.

COMPENSATION OF EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

     The following table sets forth the cash and non-cash  compensation  awarded
to, earned by or paid to the Chief Executive  Officer and each of the other four
most highly compensated  executive officers of the Company for services rendered
in all  capacities  to the Company and its  subsidiaries  during the last fiscal
year.

                                       7

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
<CAPTION>
                                                                                Long-Term Compensation
                                 Annual Compensation                    -----------------------------------
                           -----------------------------                Awards                   Payouts
                                                             ----------------------------        -------
                                                                               Securities       Long-term
                                                             Restricted        Underlying    Incentive Plan   All Other
Name                       Year      Salary      Bonus(1)       Stock           Options         Payouts(2)  Compensation(3)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
<S>                        <C>      <C>         <C>           <C>              <C>               <C>             <C>   
Larry E. Rosenberger       1995     $193,750    $133,760           $0               0            $315,008        $18,527
President and Chief        1994      190,000     125,163            0               0             178,387         14,705
Executive Officer          1993      185,000     111,054            0               0              83,538         18,920

Robert D. Sanderson        1995     $183,750    $105,792           $0               0            $277,359        $20,248
Executive Vice             1994      180,000      98,813            0               0             161,755         17,055
President and              1993      175,000      86,030            0               0              83,083         17,847
Chief Operating
Officer

John D. Woldrich           1995     $158,750     $94,240           $0               0            $233,773        $18,852
Executive Vice             1994      155,000      92,225            0               0             136,521         15,540
President                  1993      143,500      84,038            0               0              65,620         15,311

Patrick G. Culhane(4)      1995     $134,375    $199,366           $0          20,000             $65,532        $15,658
Executive Vice             1994      125,000     197,863            0          20,000              35,180         11,721
President                  1993       91,800     221,016      172,464               0              16,302          9,915

Kenneth M. Rapp(5)         1995     $124,423    $160,237           $0          15,850                  $0         $3,648
Senior Vice                1994      120,507     103,576            0               0                   0          3,461
President and              1993       81,962      14,216            0               0                   0              0
President,
DynaMark, Inc.
<FN>
1        Represents the portion of amounts accrued under the Company's Officers'
         Incentive  Plan  which  is paid in cash  shortly  after  the end of the
         fiscal year in which earned,  and amounts paid shortly  after  year-end
         under  other  incentive  plans.  See  description  under  "Compensation
         Committee  Report on  Executive  Compensation;  Incentive  Compensation
         Plans" below.

2        Payments under the Company's  Officers' Incentive Plan for units earned
         in prior years. See description under "Compensation Committee Report on
         Executive Compensation; Incentive Compensation Plans" below.

3        Represents the value of employer  contributions to the Company's 401(k)
         Plans, employer contributions to the Company's Supplemental  Retirement
         and Savings Plan, and employer  contributions  and other allocations to
         the Company's Employee Stock Ownership Plan. For fiscal 1995,  employer
         401(k) contributions were $1,805, $1,960, $2,246, $1,836 and $3,648 for
         Messrs.   Rosenberger,   Sanderson,   Woldrich,   Culhane   and   Rapp,
         respectively;  the value of ESOP  contributions  and  allocations  were
         $9,222, $10,788, $9,106 and $6,322 for Messrs. Rosenberger,  Sanderson,
         Woldrich   and  Culhane,   respectively;   and  the  value  of  Company
         contributions to the Supplemental  Retirement and Savings Plan for each
         of Messrs. Rosenberger, Sanderson, Woldrich and Culhane was $7,500.

4        Mr.  Culhane  became an  executive  officer of the Company on August 1,
         1995. His bonus  payments and  restricted  stock awards for the periods
         shown include  amounts paid or awarded under a personal  incentive plan
         which was terminated effective August 1, 1995.

5        Mr.  Rapp  joined the Company in January  1993.  The figures  shown for
         fiscal 1993 reflect nine months' compensation.
</FN>
</TABLE>
                                       8
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
OPTION/SAR GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
<CAPTION>
                                                                                           Potential Realizable Value
                                                                                           at Assumed Annual Rates of
                                                                                            Stock Price Appreciation
                                                                                                 for Option Term
                                                                                           ---------------------------
                                                  Individual Grants
                          ---------------------------------------------------------------
                           Number of        % of Total
                          Securities          Options
                          Underlying        Granted to
                            Options          Employees     Exercise Price      Expiration
Name                        Granted       in Fiscal Year      per share           Date          5%           10%
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                           <C>               <C>           <C>               <C>         <C>           <C>          
Larry E. Rosenberger               0            N/A                N/A              N/A          N/A          N/A
Robert D. Sanderson                0            N/A                N/A              N/A          N/A          N/A
John D. Woldrich                   0            N/A                N/A              N/A          N/A          N/A
Patrick G. Culhane            20,000(1)          12%          $19.3125          3/15/05     $243,338(2)   $614,138(2)
Kenneth M. Rapp               15,850(3)          10%           $28.375          9/30/05     $283,339(4)   $715,093(4)
<FN>
                                                       
1        Granted at fair market value and exercisable in full on March 31, 1998.

2        Assuming 5% and 10% compounded  annual  appreciation of the stock price
         over the terms of the  option,  the  price of a share of  Common  Stock
         would be $31.48 and $50, respectively, on March 15, 2005.

3        Granted at fair  market  value and  exercisable  as to 3,170  shares on
         September 30 of each year beginning in 1996 through 2000.

4        Assuming 5% and 10% compounded  annual  appreciation of the stock price
         over the terms of the  option,  the  price of a share of  Common  Stock
         would be $46.25 and $73.50, respectively, on September 30, 2005.
</FN>
</TABLE>
<TABLE>
AGGREGATED  OPTION/SAR  EXERCISES  IN  LAST  FISCAL  YEAR  AND  FISCAL  YEAR-END
OPTION/SAR VALUES
<CAPTION>
                                                             Number of Securities
                                                            Underlying Unexercised         Value of Unexercised In-the-
                            Shares                            Options at FY-End             Money Options at FY End(2)
                           Acquired           Value        -----------------------          ---------------------------
Name                      on Exercise       Realized(1)     Exercisable   Unexercisable     Exercisable   Unexercisable
- ----------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                         <C>          <C>                 <C>          <C>               <C>            <C>     
Larry E. Rosenberger        45,000       $1,215,675          45,000(3)         0            $1,186,165     $      0
Robert D. Sanderson         45,000          758,700               0            0                     0            0
John D. Woldrich            90,000        1,507,500               0            0                     0            0
Patrick G. Culhane               0                0               0       40,000                     0      478,750
Kenneth M. Rapp                  0                0               0       15,850                     0            0
<FN>
1        Equal to the market value of the Company's Common Stock on the date the
         options were exercised, less the exercise price.

2        Based on the mean of the  closing  bid and ask prices of the  Company's
         Common Stock as reported by the Nasdaq Stock Market for  September  30,
         1995 ($28.25), less the exercise price.

3        Mr. Rosenberger exercised these options on December 3, 1995.
</FN>
</TABLE>
                                       9
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLANS--AWARDS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
<CAPTION>
                                                  Number of                                Period Until
Name                                              Units(1)                                   Payout(2)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
<S>                                                <C>                                        <C>    
Larry E. Rosenberger                               133,760                                    4 Years
Robert D. Sanderson                                105,792                                    4 Years
John D. Woldrich                                    94,240                                    4 Years
Patrick G. Culhane                                  29,091                                    4 Years
Kenneth M. Rapp                                          0                                        N/A
<FN>
1        Units  accrued for fiscal  1995  pursuant  to the  Company's  Officers'
         Incentive  Plan.  The number of units is equal to half of the officer's
         total  incentive  award for  fiscal  1995.  See the  description  under
         "Compensation  Committee  Report on Executive  Compensation;  Incentive
         Compensation  Plans" below. Units are converted into cash at the payout
         dates by multiplying  the number of units to be paid out by the mean of
         the closing bid and ask prices for the  Company's  Common  Stock on the
         payout  date,  divided by the mean of the closing bid and ask prices of
         the stock on the award date ($28.25 at September 30, 1995).

2        The units will be paid out in 25 percent  increments as of September 30
         in each of the four years following the fiscal year for which they were
         accrued provided the recipient is still employed by the Company.
</FN>
</TABLE>

PENSION PLAN

     Employees of the Company (not including those of its subsidiary,  DynaMark,
Inc.),  including  officers and directors who are employees,  participate in the
Fair Isaac  Pension  Plan (the  "Pension  Plan")  after  completing  one year of
service.  Subject to certain age and service  requirements,  participants in the
Pension Plan accrue a right to a retirement income payable monthly for life. The
annual benefit is equal to 0.60% of "Final Average  Compensation"  up to $15,000
plus 1.20% of Final  Average  Compensation  in excess of $15,000,  multiplied by
years of service up to a maximum of 35 years. "Final Average Compensation" means
the highest average  compensation for five consecutive years during the last ten
years of  employment.  Compensation  includes all amounts paid for services.  If
benefit payments commence between age 55 (the earliest  permissible age) and age
65, the amount is actuarially discounted; if benefits commence after age 65, the
amount is actuarially increased. The Pension Plan also provides various forms of
survivor  benefits for a  participant's  beneficiary  and for optional  forms of
payment with equal actuarial value, including a lump sum.

                                       10

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
     The following table  illustrates the estimated annual benefits payable upon
retirement  to an employee in the specified  compensation  and years of credited
service classifications shown, assuming that the benefits commence at age 65 and
are payable in the normal form.  These  calculations are  straight-life  annuity
amounts  based on  current  plan  formulae  and are not  reduced  by any  Social
Security offsets.
<CAPTION>
                                                                    Years of Credited Service
                                    --------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Final Average
        Compensation                   15           20           25            30           35           40
                                    --------     ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------
<C>                                  <C>           <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>           <C>   
$150,000                             $25,650       $34,200      $42,750      $51,300      $59,850      $64,350
        -------------------
$175,000                              30,150        40,200       50,250       60,300       70,350       75,600
        -------------------
$200,000                              34,650        46,200       57,750       69,300       80,850       86,850
        -------------------
$225,000                              39,150        52,200       65,250       78,300       91,350       98,100
        -------------------
$250,000                              43,650        58,200       72,750       87,300      101,850      109,350
        -------------------
$275,000                              48,150        64,200       80,250       96,300      112,350      120,600
        -------------------
$300,000                              52,650        70,200       87,750      105,300      122,850      131,850
        -------------------
<FN>
Notes:        Above  benefits  are  based  on  current  formula  applied  to all
              credited  service.   "Grandfather"  provisions  related  to  prior
              formula  may  result in larger  benefits  attributable  to service
              credited prior to 1995.

              The Internal Revenue Code limits the amount of compensation  which
              may be taken into  account for  purposes of  determining  benefits
              from a  tax-qualified  plan (such as the Fair Isaac Pension Plan).
              The current  limit is  $150,000.  Current law  provides  that this
              limit will increase with increases in the Consumer Price Index.
</FN>
</TABLE>

DIRECTOR CONSULTING ARRANGEMENTS

     Since April 10,  1991,  the Company has had an  agreement  with  William R.
Fair, its retired  President and Chief Executive  Officer,  under which Mr. Fair
has agreed to perform  approximately  1,000 hours of consulting services for the
Company  each year  between  April 1 and March 31 and for which the  Company has
agreed to pay Mr. Fair $75,000. The current contract with Mr. Fair expires March
31, 1996.

     Effective  August 1, 1992,  the Company  entered into an agreement with Dr.
Robert M. Oliver, a Director of the Company,  under which Dr. Oliver may perform
consulting  services  on  technical  matters  at the  request  of the  Company's
president.  Dr.  Oliver  is  compensated  at the  rate of $100 per hour for such
services.  He was paid $101,600 for services rendered pursuant to this agreement
in fiscal 1995.

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

     Bryant J. Brooks, Guy R. Henshaw and H. Robert Heller served as the members
of the Company's  Compensation Committee for the fiscal year ended September 30,
1995.  Messrs.  Brooks,  Henshaw and Heller are  non-employee  Directors  of the
Company and had no other  relationship  with the Company.  None of the Executive
Officers of the Company had any "interlock"  relationships  to report during the
fiscal year ended September 30, 1995.

                                       11

<PAGE>

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

     The Compensation  Committee of the Board of Directors is composed  entirely
of directors who are not employees of the Company.  The Committee determines all
aspects of the compensation of the Company's Chief Executive Officer,  Executive
Vice Presidents and heads of the Company's  strategic  business units,  and also
administers  the Company's 1992  Long-term  Incentive Plan under which grants of
stock options or restricted stock may be awarded to any employee.

     Through  December 31, 1995, the compensation of Kenneth Rapp, a Senior Vice
President of the Company and the President of the Company's DynaMark subsidiary,
was determined in accordance with the terms of an employment  agreement  entered
into with Mr. Rapp in connection  with the Company's  acquisition of DynaMark in
December 1992 and thus has not been reviewed by the Compensation Committee.  For
purposes of the  following  discussion,  Mr.  Rapp is not  included in the group
referred to as "executive officers."

     The primary objectives of the Company's executive  compensation program are
to provide a level of  compensation  that will attract and retain well qualified
executives,  to  structure  their  compensation  packages so that a  significant
portion is tied to achieving  targets for revenue  growth and operating  margin,
and to align their  interests with those of the Company's  stockholders  through
the use of stock-based compensation.

     The  Company's  executive  compensation  program  consists  of  three  main
components:  annual  base  salary,  participation  in  the  Company's  Officers'
Incentive  Plan,  and the  opportunity  to  receive  awards of stock  options or
restricted  stock.  The  executive  officers are eligible for the same  benefits
available generally to the Company's employees,  including group health and life
insurance and participation in the Company's  pension,  employee stock ownership
and 401(k)  plans.  The Company also  maintains a  Supplemental  Retirement  and
Savings Plan for the benefit of certain highly compensated employees,  including
most executive officers.

ANNUAL BASE SALARY

     The Compensation Committee determines the annual base salary of each of the
Company's  executive officers,  including the Chief Executive Officer.  The same
principles  are applied in setting the  salaries of all  officers to ensure that
salaries  are  equitably  established.   Salaries  are  determined  annually  by
considering  the officer's  duties and  responsibilities  within the Company and
business unit, the officer's  ability to impact the operations and profitability
of the Company, and the officer's experience and past performance.

INCENTIVE COMPENSATION PLAN

     Substantially all of the Company's employees participate in incentive plans
based on the Company's  performance with respect to goals for revenue growth and
operating  margin  set by the  Board of  Directors  for  each  fiscal  year.  An
incentive 

                                       12

<PAGE>

compensation  target amount is determined for each  participant at the beginning
of the fiscal year. The ratio of incentive plan target to base salary  increases
with the level of the  employee's  responsibilities  and ranges from one percent
for  non-exempt  employees  to more  than 50  percent  for the  Chief  Executive
Officer. The Compensation  Committee sets the incentive compensation targets for
each of the executive officers. Compensation increases for executive officers in
recent years have  primarily  resulted from increases in incentive plan targets,
reflecting  the  Committee's  emphasis  on  performance-based   pay.  After  the
conclusion  of the fiscal  year,  the  target  amount  for each  participant  is
multiplied by a factor based on the Company's actual performance with respect to
the revenue  growth and operating  margin goals  (equally  weighted)  previously
established  by the Board to establish his or her incentive  award for the year.
Awards can range from zero to three times the target amount.

     All officers  receive 50 percent of their incentive  awards in cash shortly
after the end of the fiscal year.  The  remaining 50 percent is paid in the form
of  "participating  units"  whose  value  is based  on the  market  price of the
Company's  Common  Stock.  Those units are  converted  to cash  payments,  in 25
percent  increments,  at the end of each of the  succeeding  four  fiscal  years
(assuming  the officer  remains  employed by the  Company),  based on the market
price of the Company's stock at the end of each of those years.

OPTIONS AND RESTRICTED STOCK

     The Committee  may award options to purchase the Company's  Common Stock or
shares of restricted  stock to any employee,  including the executive  officers,
under the Company's  1992 Long-term  Incentive  Plan. The exercise price for all
options  granted under this Plan must be at least equal to the fair market value
of the shares on the date of grant.  In addition to the level of  responsibility
and performance of the recipient, the Committee takes previous grants of options
and restricted stock into consideration in making such awards. Awards of options
were made to Mr.  Culhane and Mr. Rapp in fiscal 1995 and are  reflected  in the
tables on pages ___ and ___. The Committee did not make any awards of options or
restricted  stock to other named  executive  officers  during the year primarily
because of awards to such officers in prior years.

LIMITS ON TAX-DEDUCTIBLE COMPENSATION

     The Committee  believes that it is highly  unlikely that the combination of
base salary,  officer incentive plan cash awards, and payments for participating
units  for any  executive  officer  would  exceed  $1  million  in any  year and
currently  has no  plans  to  amend  the  officers'  incentive  plan  to  ensure
deductibility  for federal tax purposes of any "excess"  amounts.  The Committee
believes  that the 1992  Long-term  Incentive  Plan meets the  transition  rules
available  through  the earlier of end of 1996 or the  adoption of any  material
amendments,  including an increase in the number of shares reserved, so that any
compensation  arising out of the exercise of options  previously  granted  under
that plan will be deductible.  The Committee  further believes that, if Proposal
number 4 (limiting  the number of options that can be awarded under the Plan) is
adopted,  the Plan will meet the rules currently in effect 

                                       13
<PAGE>
so that  compensation  arising from the exercise of options  granted  under that
plan in the  future  will  also be  deductible  by the  Company.  The  Committee
believes it is highly  unlikely  that any  combination  of grants of  restricted
stock that will be awarded under that plan and other compensation will exceed $1
million for a single individual in any given year.

CEO COMPENSATION

     The amounts of Mr.  Rosenberger's base salary and incentive plan target are
established by the  Compensation  Committee using the criteria  discussed above.
Mr. Rosenberger's base salary for fiscal 1995 was $193,750, compared with a base
of  $190,000  for fiscal  1994.  His  incentive  plan target for fiscal 1995 was
$106,250  which  represented  an  increase  of $11,250  over 1994.  Because  the
Company's  revenue  growth of 26 percent and  operating  margin of 17.4  percent
substantially  exceeded the goals set by the Board for 1995,  Mr.  Rosenberger's
total incentive award for the year was $267,520.  Of that amount, 50 percent was
paid in cash  shortly  after  the end of the year  and is  shown in the  Summary
Compensation Table on page ___ under the caption "Annual  Compensation;  Bonus."
The  remainder  was  converted to the form of  participating  units as explained
above which will become payable in 25 percent  increments after each of the four
years ending  September 30, 1996 through 1999, based on the stock price on those
dates.  Amounts  shown  under the caption  "Long-term  Incentive  Plan  Payouts"
reflect participating units earned in prior years.

                                Bryant J. Brooks
                                 Guy R. Henshaw
                                H. Robert Heller

PERFORMANCE GRAPH

     In  accordance  with SEC rules,  the  following  table  shows a  line-graph
presentation  comparing cumulative  five-year  stockholder returns on an indexed
basis  with a broad  equity  market  index and  either a  nationally  recognized
industry  standard or an index of peer  companies  selected by the Company.  The
Company has selected the CRSP Index of the Nasdaq Stock Market (U.S.  Companies)
for the broad equity index, and a self-determined group of peer companies.

     The peer group consists of Acxiom Corporation; American Management Systems,
Inc.;  Barra,  Inc.;  Broderbund  Software,  Inc.; and Hogan  Systems,  Inc. The
Company does not believe there are any publicly  traded  companies which compete
with the Company across the full spectrum of its product and service  offerings.
The companies in the peer group  represent a variety of information and decision
service providers and software  developers traded on the Nasdaq Stock Market and
which are in the same order of  magnitude  as the  Company in revenue and market
capitalization.  In addition,  Barra and Broderbund are  headquartered  near the
Company's  headquarters  and compete  with the Company for  available  technical
staff.

                                       14

<PAGE>

COMPARISON OF FIVE YEAR CUMULATIVE RETURN

                                     [Graph]
<TABLE>
Among Fair,  Isaac and  Company,  Incorporated,  the CRSP index for NASDAQ stock
market (US Companies) and the self-determined peer group index:
<CAPTION>
                                                                    CRSP Index For NASDAQ         Self-determined
 Measurement Period               Fair, Isaac and Company,              Stock Market                 Peer Group
(Fiscal year covered)                 Incorporated                    (US Companies)                   Index
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      <S>                                <C>                               <C>                         <C>
      9/90                                  100                              100                         100
      9/91                                181.3                            157.3                       151.1
      9/92                                264.2                            176.3                       205.5
      9/93                                448.7                            231.0                       269.2
      9/94                                773.3                            232.9                       328.0
      9/95                               1270.8                            320.7                       714.4
</TABLE>
     The  returns  shown  assume  $100  invested  on  September  30, 1990 in the
Company's stock, the CRSP Index for the NASDAQ Stock Market (U.S. Companies) and
the peer group index, with reinvestment of dividends. The reported dates are the
last trading dates of the Company's fiscal year which ends on September 30.

PROPOSAL TO INCREASE THE NUMBER OF AUTHORIZED SHARES OF COMMON STOCK

     The Board of Directors has approved the amendment of Section (a) of Article
4 of the Company's Restated  Certificate of Incorporation to increase the number
of authorized shares of Common Stock from 15,000,000 to 35,000,000. The Board of
Directors recommends that the Company's stockholders approve this amendment.

     The Board of Directors  believes that it is in the Company's best interests
to increase  the number of  authorized  shares of Common  Stock in order to have
additional  authorized  but  unissued  shares  available  for  issuance  to meet
business  needs  as they  arise.  The  Board  of  Directors  believes  that  the
availability of such additional  shares will help the Company attract and retain
talented  employees  through the grant of stock  options  and other  stock-based
incentives.  The Board of Directors also believes that the  availability of such
shares will provide the Company with the  flexibility  to issue Common Stock for
other  proper  corporate  purposes  which  may be  identified  by the  Board  of
Directors in the future, such as stock dividends, financing or acquisitions. The
issuance  of  additional  shares of Common  Stock may have a dilutive  effect on
earnings per share and, for a person who does not purchase  additional shares to
maintain his or her pro rata  interest,  on a  stockholder's  percentage  voting
power.

     The Board of Directors does not recommend this proposed  amendment with the
intent to use the ability to issue additional  Common Stock to discourage tender
offers or takeover  attempts.  However,  the  availability of authorized  Common
Stock for issuance  could render more  difficult or discourage a merger,  tender
offer, proxy contest or other attempt to obtain control of the Company.  Neither
the  management  of the  Company  nor the  Board  of  Directors  is aware of any
existing  or  planned  effort  on the part of any party to  accumulate  material
amounts of Common Stock or to acquire control of the Company by means of merger,
tender offer, proxy contest or

                                       15
<PAGE>
otherwise,  or to change the Company's  management,  nor is the Company aware of
any offer by any person to acquire any material amount of Common Stock or assets
of the Company.

     Of the 15,000,000 shares of Common Stock currently authorized for issuance,
1,750,748 shares are unissued and unreserved for issuance. The authorized shares
of Common Stock in excess of those issued will be available for issuance at such
times  and for  such  corporate  purposes  as the  Board of  Directors  may deem
advisable without further action by the Company's stockholders, except as may be
required  by  applicable  laws or the rules of any stock  exchange  or  national
securities  association  trading system on which the securities may be listed or
traded.  Except for awards under the Company's  1992  Long-term  Incentive  Plan
described  below,  the Company's  management  has no  arrangements,  agreements,
understandings  or plans at the  present  time  for the  issuance  or use of the
additional shares of Common Stock proposed to be authorized. Upon issuance, such
shares  will have the same  rights as the  outstanding  shares of Common  Stock.
Holders of Common Stock do not have  preemptive  rights.  The Board of Directors
does not intend to issue any Common  Stock except on terms which the Board deems
to be in the best interests of the Company and its then-existing stockholders.

     The full text of Section  (a) of Article 4, as such  Section is proposed to
be amended pursuant to this proposal, is as follows:

4.     (a) The  total  number  of  shares  of all  classes  of stock  which  the
       corporation   shall  have  authority  to  issue  is  thirty-six   million
       (36,000,000),  of which one million (1,000,000) shares shall be Preferred
       Stock  of the par  value  of $.01  per  share,  and  thirty-five  million
       (35,000,000)  shares  shall be Common  Stock of the par value of $.01 per
       share. The number of authorized shares of Common Stock or Preferred Stock
       may be increased or decreased (but not below the number of shares thereof
       then  outstanding) if the increase or decrease is approved by the holders
       of a majority  of the  shares of Common  Stock,  without  the vote of the
       holders of the shares of Preferred  Stock or any series  thereof,  unless
       any such Preferred Stock holders are entitled to vote thereon pursuant to
       the provisions established by the Board of Directors in the resolution or
       resolutions  providing for the issue of such Preferred Stock, and if such
       holders of such  Preferred  Stock are so entitled to vote thereon,  then,
       except  as  may   otherwise   be  set  forth  in  this   Certificate   of
       Incorporation,  the only stockholder approval required shall be that of a
       majority of the combined  voting power of the Common and Preferred  Stock
       so entitled to vote.

VOTE REQUIRED AND EFFECTIVE DATE

     The  affirmative  vote  of the  holders  of a  majority  of  the  Company's
outstanding  Common Stock is required to approve this  proposal.  If approved by
the stockholders, the proposed amendment to Section (a) of Article 4 will become
effective  upon the filing of a Certificate  of Amendment  with the Secretary of
State of Delaware amending the Company's Restated  Certificate of Incorporation,
which will occur as soon as reasonably practicable.

                                       16
<PAGE>
     The Board of Directors  recommends a vote FOR the proposal to amend Section
(a) of Article 4 of the Company's  Restated  Certificate of Incorporation as set
forth above.

          PROPOSALS TO AMEND THE FAIR, ISAAC AND COMPANY, INCORPORATED
                          1992 LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN

     The 1992 Long-term  Incentive Plan ("Plan") was unanimously  adopted by the
Company's  Board of Directors on November 23, 1992 and approved by the Company's
stockholders  at the annual  meeting  held on February 2, 1993.  On November 21,
1995, the Board of Directors unanimously adopted four amendments to the Plan:

(a)    to  increase  the number of  restricted  shares,  stock units and options
       available for grant under the plan by 1,000,000 shares;
(b)    to limit the number of options which may be awarded under the plan to any
       individual to 50,000 shares in any fiscal year;
(c)    to  provide  for a grant  of  options  for  10,000  shares  to  each  new
       non-employee   director,   and  for  grants  of  1,000   shares  to  each
       non-employee  director in each year after such  director's  first year of
       service;  and
(d)    to extend the date until  which  Incentive  Stock  Options may be granted
       under the Plan to November 20, 2005.

     The Board of Directors recommends approval of these amendments to the Plan.
The affirmative vote of a majority of the shares present and entitled to vote is
required for approval.  These  amendments will be effective upon approval by the
stockholders.  The  following  description  of the Plan is a summary  only.  Any
stockholder  who  wishes  to  review  the text of the Plan can  obtain a copy by
writing to the Company, Attention: Investor Relations.

OVERVIEW OF THE 1992 INCENTIVE PLAN

     The purpose of the Plan is to promote the long-term  success of the Company
and the creation of  stockholder  value by  attracting  and  retaining  eligible
individuals with exceptional qualifications,  by encouraging such individuals to
focus  on  long-range  objectives,  and  by  linking  participants  directly  to
stockholder interests through increased stock ownership.  While all awards since
February  2, 1993 have been made under the Plan,  awards  made under prior plans
will continue to be administered in accordance with those plans.

     The Plan provides for awards in the form of restricted shares,  stock units
or  options  (which may be granted  in tandem  with  stock  appreciation  rights
("SARs")), or any combination thereof. No payment is required upon receipt of an
award,  except that a recipient  of newly issued  restricted  shares must pay at
least the par value of such restricted shares to the Company.  The Plan requires
that the exercise  price of any option  granted under the Plan be at least equal
to the fair market value of the Company's  Common Stock on the date of grant. As
of December 15, 1995,  the fair market value of the Company's  stock (defined by
the Plan as the mean of the

                                       17

<PAGE>
closing  bid and ask prices of the  Company's  Common  Stock as  reported by the
Nasdaq Stock Market) was $27.625 per share.

ADMINISTRATION AND ELIGIBILITY

     The Plan is  administered  by the  Compensation  Committee  of the Board of
Directors (the  "Committee").  The Committee  selects the  individuals  who will
receive awards,  determines the size of any award and establishes any vesting or
other  conditions.  Employees and non-employee  directors of the Company (or any
subsidiary  of the Company) are eligible to  participate  in the Plan,  although
incentive  stock  options  ("ISOs")  may  be  granted  only  to  employees.  The
participation  of non-employee  Directors of the Company is limited to grants of
non-qualified  stock  options,  as  described  below.  There are  currently  six
non-employee  directors  and  approximately  850  employees  who are eligible to
participate in the Plan.

SHARES SUBJECT TO THE INCENTIVE PLAN

     The total number of restricted  shares,  stock units and options (which may
be granted in  combination  with SARs)  currently  available for grant under the
Plan is only  146,971  shares.  There are options for a total of 738,110  shares
outstanding,  of which 376,260 are currently exercisable and 361,850 are not yet
exercisable.  Of those  currently  exercisable,  options for 323,260 shares were
granted  under prior plans.  However,  those  options,  as well as those granted
under the Plan, would become available for new awards under the Plan if they are
forfeited or otherwise terminate prior to exercise.  In addition,  63,391 shares
of restricted stock,  issued under the Plan, have not yet vested. If such shares
are forfeited  prior to vesting,  these shares would also become again available
for grant under the Plan. If all options currently  outstanding are forfeited or
otherwise terminate prior to exercise,  and all shares of outstanding restricted
stock are  forfeited  prior to vesting,  801,501  shares would be available  for
grant under the Plan.

     The proposed  amendments  would increase the number of shares available for
grant   by   1,000,000    shares.    The   Board   believes   that   stock-based
compensation--particularly   stock  options--is  a  valuable  component  of  the
compensation for executives and outside directors in that it serves to align the
interests of directors and management  with those of the  stockholders.  Several
members of senior  management  currently hold no options,  restricted  shares or
stock  units,  and the number of shares now  available  for grant is  relatively
small.

                                       18

<PAGE>

TERMS OF AWARDS

     Restricted shares are shares of Common Stock that are subject to forfeiture
in  the  event  that  the  applicable  vesting  conditions  are  not  satisfied.
Restricted  shares are  nontransferable  prior to vesting  (except  for  certain
transfers  to a trustee).  Restricted  shares have the same voting and  dividend
rights as other shares of Common Stock.

     A stock unit  represents the equivalent of one share of Common Stock and is
nontransferable  prior to the holder's death (except for certain  transfers to a
trustee).  Vested  stock  units will be settled  at the time  determined  by the
Committee in the form of cash, Common Stock or a combination  thereof.  A holder
of stock units has no voting rights or other  privileges as a stockholder but is
entitled to receive dividend equivalents on his or her units equal to the amount
of  dividends  paid on the same  number  of shares  of  Common  Stock.  Dividend
equivalents may be converted into additional  stock units or settled in the form
of cash,  Common Stock or a  combination  thereof.  If the time of settlement is
deferred,  interest or additional  dividend  equivalents  may be credited on the
deferred payment.

     Options  may  include  non-qualified  stock  options  ("NSOs")  as  well as
incentive stock options ("ISOs")  intended to qualify for special tax treatment.
The exercise  price of any option under the 1992 Incentive Plan must be equal to
or greater  than the fair market value of the Common Stock on the date of grant.
Both NSOs and ISOs may be granted in combination with SARs, or SARs may be added
to outstanding  NSOs at any time after the grant. A SAR permits the  participant
to elect to receive any appreciation in the value of the optioned stock directly
from the Company, in shares of Common Stock or cash or a combination thereof, in
lieu of exercising the option. The Committee has the discretion to determine the
form in which such payment will be made.  The amount  payable upon exercise of a
SAR is measured by the difference between the market value of the optioned stock
at exercise and the option exercise price.  Generally,  SARs may be exercised at
any time after the  underlying  NSO or ISO vests.  Upon  exercise of a SAR,  the
corresponding  portion of the  related  option  must be  surrendered  and cannot
thereafter be exercised.  Conversely,  upon exercise of an option to which a SAR
is  attached,  the SAR  may no  longer  be  exercised  to the  extent  that  the
corresponding  option has been  exercised.  The term of an ISO cannot exceed ten
years,  and all options  and SARs are  nontransferable  prior to the  optionee's
death.

     The exercise price of an option may be paid in any lawful form permitted by
the Committee,  including (without limitation) the surrender of shares of Common
Stock or restricted  shares  already owned by the optionee.  The 1992  Incentive
Plan also allows the optionee to pay the  exercise  price of an option by giving
"exercise/sale" or "exercise/pledge" directions. If exercise/sale directions are
given,  a number of option shares  sufficient to pay the exercise  price and any
withholding  taxes is issued  directly to a  securities  broker  approved by the
Company who, in turn,  sells these shares in the open market.  The broker remits
to the Company the  proceeds  from the sale of these  shares,  and the  optionee
receives the remaining option shares. If  exercise/pledge  directions are given,
the option  shares are issued  directly to a  securities  broker or other lender
approved  by the  Company.  The broker or other  lender  will hold the shares as
security and will extend  credit for up to 50% of their market  value.  The loan
proceeds will be paid to the Company to the extent

                                       19

<PAGE>
necessary to pay the exercise price and any withholding  taxes.  Any excess loan
proceeds may be paid to the optionee.  If the loan proceeds are  insufficient to
cover the exercise price and withholding taxes, the optionee will be required to
pay the  deficiency  to the Company at the time of exercise.  The  Committee may
also permit optionees to satisfy their  withholding tax obligation upon exercise
of a NSO by  surrendering  a portion of their option shares to the Company.  The
recipient of restricted shares or stock units may pay all projected  withholding
taxes relating to the award with Common Stock rather than cash.

     As noted above, the Committee  determines the number of restricted  shares,
stock  units or options to be  included  in the award as well as the vesting and
other  conditions.  The  vesting  conditions  may be  based  on the  recipient's
service, his or her individual  performance,  the Company's performance or other
appropriate  criteria.  In general,  the vesting conditions will be based on the
recipient's service.  Vesting may be accelerated in the event of the recipient's
death,  disability  or  retirement or in the event of a change in control of the
Company.  Moreover, the Committee may determine that outstanding options and any
related  SARs will  become  fully  vested if it has  concluded  that  there is a
reasonable possibility of a change in control within six months thereafter.

     For purposes of the 1992 Incentive Plan, the term "change in control" means
(1) that any person is or becomes the beneficial owner,  directly or indirectly,
of at  least  50% of the  combined  voting  power of the  Company's  outstanding
securities,  except  by  reason  of a  repurchase  by the  Company  of  its  own
securities,  or (2) that a change in the  composition  of the Board of Directors
occurs as a result of which fewer than one-half of the  incumbent  directors are
directors  who either had been  directors of the Company 24 months prior to such
change or were elected or nominated for election to the Board of Directors  with
the approval of at least a majority of the directors who have been  directors of
the  Company 24 months  prior to such change and who were still in office at the
time of the election or nomination.

LIMIT ON INDIVIDUAL AWARDS

     The Plan  currently  contains no limit on the number of restricted  shares,
stock units or options that may be granted to any particular  individual.  Under
Section  162(m)  of the  Internal  Revenue  Code,  the  Company  may not claim a
deduction for tax purposes for compensation  paid to the Chief Executive Officer
and the four other most highly  compensated  executive  officers in excess of $1
million per person per fiscal  year.  However,  compensation  arising out of the
exercise  of  NSOs  is  deductible  by the  Company  without  limit  if  certain
conditions are met including approval by stockholders of the material provisions
of the plan (including the number of shares available for grant), administration
by a committee composed entirely of outside  directors,  and a limit on the size
of grants to any  individual.  The Board believes that options granted under the
Company's 1992 Long-term Incentive Plan meet all of these conditions except that
there  has  been no  absolute  limit on the size of  grants  to any  individual.
Accordingly,  the Board  recommends  approval of the proposed  amendments to the
Plan which include a limit on the number of options granted to any individual in
any fiscal year to 50,000 shares.

                                       20

<PAGE>

NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS

     Members of the Board of Directors  who are not employees of the Company are
not currently eligible for any awards under the 1992 Incentive Plan other than a
one-time grant of 16,000 NSOs upon  completion of the first six months'  service
as an outside Director.  The exercise price is equal to the fair market value of
Common Stock on the date of grant. The NSOs become  exercisable six months after
the date of grant or, if  earlier,  in the event of a change in  control  of the
Company  or  the  termination  of  the  director's  service  because  of  death,
disability or retirement  after age 65. The NSOs expire ten years after the date
of grant, 12 months after the  termination of the director's  service because of
death or  disability  or three months after the  termination  of the  director's
service for any other reason.

     The proposed  amendments include an amendment to the provisions of the Plan
governing  grants of options to non-employee  directors.  The Board believes the
current practice of a single large grant with a relatively short vesting period,
with no  subsequent  grants  regardless  of length of  service,  not only  could
provide a windfall to a director  whose  service is relatively  brief,  but also
fails to reward  directors  for longer  service  and fails to provide an ongoing
incentive  tending to align the  interests  of the  directors  with those of the
stockholders.  In addition, the shortcomings of the existing practice may hamper
future efforts to recruit highly qualified outside directors.

     The proposed amendments seek to correct these shortcomings by providing for
(a) a grant of options for 10,000  shares to each person who becomes an "Outside
Director" on or after February 6, 1996 (the "Initial  Grant") and (b) a grant of
options for 1,000  shares to each  "Outside  Director" on the date of the annual
meeting  provided  such  person has been an "Outside  Director"  since the prior
annual  meeting  (the  "Annual  Grants").  An  Initial  Grant  would vest in 20%
increments on each of the first through fifth  anniversary  dates of such person
becoming an Outside  Director  and would  expire ten years after  grant.  Annual
Grants  would vest one year after grant and expire five years  after  grant.  An
"Outside Director" is defined by the Plan as "a member of the Board who is not a
common-law  employee of the Company or of a Subsidiary  [of the  Company]."  The
Plan  further  provides  that the  exercise  price of all  options so granted to
Outside  Directors  shall  be  equal  to 100% of the  fair  market  value of the
Company's  Common Stock on the date of grant. If the proposed  amendments to the
Plan are not approved,  the existing  provisions of the Plan regarding grants of
options to non-employee directors will remain in effect.

FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES OF OPTIONS

     Neither  the   optionee   nor  the  Company  will  incur  any  federal  tax
consequences  as a result of the grant of an option.  The optionee  will have no
taxable income upon exercising an ISO (except that the  alternative  minimum tax
may apply),  and the Company will receive no deduction when an ISO is exercised.
Upon  exercising a NSO, the optionee  generally must recognize  ordinary  income
equal to the "spread"  between the  exercise  price and the fair market value of
Common  Stock  on the  date of  exercise;  the  Company  will be  entitled  to a
deduction for the same amount. In the case of an employee,  the option spread at
the time a NSO is  exercised  is  subject  to income  tax  withholding,  but the
optionee generally may elect to satisfy the

                                       21

<PAGE>

withholding  tax obligation by having shares of Common Stock withheld from those
purchased  under the NSO. The tax  treatment of a  disposition  of option shares
depends on how long the shares  have been held and on whether  such  shares were
acquired by  exercising  an ISO or by  exercising a NSO. The Company will not be
entitled to a deduction  in  connection  with a  disposition  of option  shares,
except in the case of a disposition  of shares  acquired under an ISO before the
applicable  ISO  holding  period  has  been  satisfied.  Awards  under  the 1992
Incentive Plan may provide that if any payment (or transfer) by the Company to a
recipient would be nondeductible by the Company for federal income tax purposes,
then the aggregate  present value of all such  payments (or  transfers)  will be
reduced to an amount which maximizes such value without causing any such payment
(or transfer) to be nondeductible.

AMENDMENT AND ADJUSTMENT OF GRANTS

     The Committee is  authorized,  within the  provisions of the 1992 Incentive
Plan, to amend the terms of  outstanding  restricted  shares or stock units,  to
modify or extend outstanding  options or to exchange new options for outstanding
options, including outstanding options with a higher exercise price than the new
options.  The 1992  Incentive Plan provides for  appropriate  adjustments in the
number of shares  available for future  awards as well as the exercise  price of
and the  number of  shares  covered  by  outstanding  options  in the event of a
reclassification,   stock  split,   combination  of  shares,   stock   dividend,
extraordinary  cash dividend or other  recapitalization  of the Company.  In the
event of a  merger,  awards  will be  subject  to the  agreement  of  merger  or
reorganization.

AMENDMENT AND TERMINATION OF PLAN

     The Board of Directors may amend the 1992 Incentive Plan at any time and in
any  respect,  subject to  stockholder  approval if  required  by law.  The 1992
Incentive Plan will remain in effect until terminated by the Board of Directors,
except that under the Plan as  originally  adopted,  no ISO may be granted after
November 22, 2002.

     Under applicable federal regulations, ISOs may not be granted more than ten
years  after  the  adoption  of a plan  which is  subsequently  approved  by the
stockholders. The latest date for the grant of ISOs may be changed by subsequent
Board  and  stockholder  action to a date not more  than ten  years  after  such
action. The amendments  proposed by the Board of Directors would extend the date
for grants of ISOs under the Plan to November 20, 2005.

                                       22

<PAGE>

     The Board of Directors  recommends a vote FOR approval of the amendments to
the Company's 1992 Long-term Incentive Plan to:

     (a)   to increase the number of restricted shares,  stock units and options
           available for grant under the Plan by 1,000,000 shares;

     (b)   to limit the number of options which may be awarded under the Plan to
           any individual to 50,000 shares in any fiscal year;

     (c)   to  provide  for a grant of  options  for  10,000  shares to each new
           non-employee  director,  and  for  grants  of  1,000  shares  to each
           non-employee  director in each year after such director's  first year
           of service; and

     (d)   to extend the date until which Incentive Stock Options may be granted
           under the Plan to November 21, 2005.

     The  affirmative  vote of a majority of the shares  present and entitled to
vote is required for approval.  The amendments to the Plan will become effective
upon approval by the stockholders.

RATIFICATION OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

     Upon the recommendation of the Audit Committee,  the Board of Directors has
appointed  the  firm of  KPMG  Peat  Marwick  LLP as the  Company's  independent
auditors for the Company's  current fiscal year ending  September 30, 1996. KPMG
Peat  Marwick LLP has served as the  Company's  independent  auditors  since May
1991. Representatives of KPMG Peat Marwick LLP are expected to be present at the
Company's Annual Meeting with the opportunity to make statements  and/or respond
to appropriate questions from stockholders present at the meeting.

     The Board of Directors  recommends a vote FOR the ratification of KPMG Peat
Marwick LLP as the Company's  independent  auditors. A majority vote is required
for ratification.

OTHER BUSINESS

     The Board of Directors does not know of any business to be presented at the
Annual  Meeting  other than the matters set forth  above,  but if other  matters
properly come before the meeting it is the intention of the persons named in the
proxies to vote in accordance with their best judgment on such matters.

SECTION 16(A) REPORTING

     Section 16(a) of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934 (the "Exchange  Act")
and the rules of the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  (the  "Commission")
thereunder require the Company's  directors,  executive officers and persons who
own more than ten percent of the Company's Common Stock to file reports of their
ownership  and  changes  in  ownership  of  Common  Stock  with the  Commission.
Personnel  of the  Company  generally  prepare  these  reports  on the  basis of
information  obtained from each  director,  officer and greater than ten percent
owner. Based on such

                                       23
<PAGE>
information,  the Company believes that all reports required by Section 16(a) of
the Exchange Act to be filed by its  directors,  executive  officers and greater
than ten  percent  owners  during the last fiscal year were filed on time except
that two reports, one covering a gift of 2,000 shares and the other covering two
sale  transactions  totaling  4,000  shares,  were filed late by Mrs.  Judith W.
Isaac.

SUBMISSION OF PROPOSALS OF STOCKHOLDERS

     Proposals of  stockholders  intended to be presented at the Company's  1997
Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders  must be received at the Corporate  Secretary's
Office,  120 North Redwood Drive,  San Rafael,  California  94903, no later than
September 3, 1996,  to be considered  for  inclusion in the proxy  statement and
form of proxy for that meeting.

                                    By Order of the Board of Directors




                                    Peter L. McCorkell
                                    Senior Vice President and Secretary

Dated: January 2, 1996

                                       24
<PAGE>

                                                                      APPENDIX A
PROXY

                      FAIR, ISAAC AND COMPANY, INCORPORATED
                      PROXY SOLICITED BY BOARD OF DIRECTORS
                       FOR ANNUAL MEETING FEBRUARY 6, 1996

         The undersigned  hereby appoints  William R. Fair, Larry E. Rosenberger
and Robert D.  Sanderson,  or any of them,  as  Proxies,  each with the power to
appoint his substitute,  and hereby authorizes them to represent and to vote, as
designated  on the reverse,  all the shares of Common  Stock of Fair,  Isaac and
Company,  Incorporated  that the  undersigned  is entitled to vote at the Annual
Meeting of Stockholders  to be held on February 6, 1996, or any  postponement or
adjournment thereof.
                         (To be signed on reverse side)
/ x /    Please mark your votes as this
                                    I PLAN TO  ATTEND  THE  MEETING  / / 
COMMON
The  Board  of  Directors recommends a vote "FOR" Items 1, 2, 3 and 4.

1.       Election of Directors:

If you wish to withhold authority to vote for any individual  nominee,  strike a
line through that nominee's name in the list below:

Bryant J. Brooks, Jr., William R. Fair, H. Robert Heller, Buy R. Henshaw,  David
S. P. Hopkins,  Robert M. Oliver, Larry E. Rosenberger,  Robert D. Sanderson and
John D. Woldrich.

                  FOR                                WITHHELD
                                                     FOR ALL

                /    /                               /    /

2.  To  approve  the  amendment  of  the  Company's   Restated   Certificate  of
Incorporation  to increase the number of authorized  shares of Common Stock from
15,000,000 to 35,000,000.

                  FOR             AGAINST           ABSTAIN
                /    /            /    /            /    /

3. To approve the amendments to the Company's  1992 Long-term  Incentive Plan as
described in the accompanying proxy statement.

                 FOR             AGAINST           ABSTAIN  
               /    /            /    /            /    /   
               
4.  To  ratify  the  appointment  of  KPMG  Peat  Marwick  LLP as the  Company's
independent auditors for the current fiscal year.
<PAGE>

                 FOR             AGAINST           ABSTAIN  
               /    /            /    /            /    /   
               
5. In their  discretion upon such other business as may properly come before the
meeting.

THIS PROXY WHEN PROPERLY  EXECUTED WILL BE VOTED AS DIRECTED BY THE  UNDERSIGNED
STOCKHOLDER.  IF NO SUCH DIRECTIONS ARE MADE, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED "FOR" THE
ELECTION OF DIRECTORS AND "FOR" ITEMS 2, 3 AND 4.

- -------------------------
(Stockholder's Signature)

- -------------------------
(Stockholder's Signature)

Dated:            , 1996
      ------------

(Note:  Sign exactly as your name appears on this proxy card. If shares are held
jointly  each  holder   should  sign.   When  signing  as  attorney,   executor,
administrator,  trustee,  or  guardian,  please  give  full  title as  such.  If
corporation or partnership, please sign in firm name by authorized person.)

Please  mark,  sign,  date and return this proxy card  promptly  using  enclosed
envelope.



                                       2

<PAGE>


                                                                      APPENDIX B

                      FAIR, ISAAC AND COMPANY, INCORPORATED

                          1992 LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN

               As amended and restated effective November 21, 1995











                                      -1-

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              TABLE OF CONTENTS
                                                                                                          Page
<S>             <C>      <C>                                                                               <C>  
                                                                                                          
ARTICLE            1.    INTRODUCTION............................................................          5

ARTICLE            2.    ADMINISTRATION..........................................................          5

                 2.1       Committee Composition.................................................          5
                 2.2       Committee Responsibilities............................................          5

ARTICLE            3.    SHARES AVAILABLE FOR GRANTS.............................................          6

                 3.1       Basic Limitation......................................................          6
                 3.2       Additional Shares.....................................................          6
                 3.3       Dividend Equivalents..................................................          6

ARTICLE            4.    ELIGIBILITY.............................................................          6

                 4.1       General Rules.........................................................          6
                 4.2       Outside Directors.....................................................          6
                 4.3       Ten-Percent Stockholders..............................................          7
                 4.4       Limitation on Option Grants...........................................          7

ARTICLE            5.    OPTIONS.................................................................          8

                 5.2       Stock Option Agreement................................................          8
                 5.2       Awards Nontransferable................................................          8
                 5.3       Number of Shares......................................................          8
                 5.4       Exercise Price........................................................          8
                 5.5       Exercisability and Term...............................................          8
                 5.6       Effect of Change in Control...........................................          8
                 5.7       Modification or Assumption of Options.................................          9

ARTICLE            6.    PAYMENT FOR OPTION SHARES...............................................          9

                 6.1       General Rule..........................................................          9
                 6.2       Surrender of Stock....................................................          9
                 6.3       Exercise/Sale.........................................................          9
                 6.4       Exercise/Pledge.......................................................          9
                 6.5       Promissory Note.......................................................          9
                 6.6       Other Forms of Payment................................................         10

                                      -2-
<PAGE>

ARTICLE            7.    STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS...............................................         10

                 7.1       Grant of SARs.........................................................         10
                 7.2       Exercise of SARs......................................................         10

ARTICLE            8.    RESTRICTED SHARES AND STOCK UNITS.......................................         10

                 8.1       Time, Amount and Form of Awards.......................................         10
                 8.2       Payment for Awards....................................................         11
                 8.3       Vesting Conditions....................................................         11
                 8.4       Form and Time of Settlement of Stock Units............................         11
                 8.5       Death of Recipient....................................................         11
                 8.6       Creditors' Rights.....................................................         11

ARTICLE            9.    VOTING AND DIVIDEND RIGHTS..............................................         11

                 9.1       Restricted Shares.....................................................         11
                 9.2       Stock Units...........................................................         12

ARTICLE           10.    PROTECTION AGAINST DILUTION.............................................         12

                10.1       Adjustments...........................................................         12
                10.2       Reorganizations.......................................................         12

ARTICLE           11.    LONG-TERM PERFORMANCE AWARDS............................................         12

ARTICLE           12.    LIMITATION ON RIGHTS....................................................         13

                12.1       Retention Rights......................................................         13
                12.2       Stockholders' Rights..................................................         13
                12.3       Regulatory Requirements...............................................         13

ARTICLE           13.    LIMITATION ON PAYMENTS..................................................         13

                13.1       Basic Rule............................................................         13
                13.2       Reduction of Payments.................................................         14
                13.3       Overpayments and Underpayments........................................         14
                13.4       Related Corporations..................................................         15


ARTICLE           14.    WITHHOLDING TAXES.......................................................         15

                                      -3-
<PAGE>
   
                14.1       General...............................................................         15
                14.2       Share Withholding.....................................................         15

ARTICLE           15.    ASSIGNMENT OR TRANSFER OF AWARDS........................................         15

ARTICLE           16.    FUTURE OF PLAN..........................................................         16

                16.1       Term of the Plan......................................................         16
                16.2       Amendment or Termination..............................................         16

ARTICLE           17.    DEFINITIONS.............................................................         16

ARTICLE           18.    EXECUTION...............................................................         19

</TABLE>

                                      -4-

<PAGE>

FAIR, ISAAC AND COMPANY, INCORPORATED
1992 LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN
AS AMENDED AND RESTATED EFFECTIVE NOVEMBER 21, 1995

ARTICLE 1.     INTRODUCTION.

The Plan was adopted by the Board on November 23,  1992,  subject to approval by
the  Company's  stockholders.  The Plan was amended and restated by the Board on
November 21, 1995, subject to approval by the Company's stockholders.  All share
amounts  in this  restatement  have been  adjusted  to  reflect  the 100%  stock
dividend  paid by the  Company on June 26,  1995.  The purpose of the Plan is to
promote the  long-term  success of the Company and the  creation of  stockholder
value  by  (a)  encouraging  Key  Employees  to  focus  on  critical  long-range
objectives,  (b)  encouraging the attraction and retention of Key Employees with
exceptional qualifications and (c) linking Key Employees directly to stockholder
interests  through  increased  stock  ownership.  The Plan seeks to achieve this
purpose by providing for Awards in the form of Restricted  Shares,  Stock Units,
Options  (which may constitute  incentive  stock options or  nonstatutory  stock
options) or stock appreciation rights.


The Plan shall be governed by, and construed in accordance with, the laws of the
State of California.

ARTICLE 2.     ADMINISTRATION.

               2.1 Committee Composition.  The Plan shall be administered by the
Committee. The Committee shall consist of two or more disinterested directors of
the Company, who shall be appointed by the Board. A member of the Board shall be
deemed to be  "disinterested"  only if he or she satisfies such  requirements as
the  Securities  and  Exchange   Commission  may  establish  for   disinterested
administrators  acting under plans intended to qualify for exemption  under Rule
16b-3 (or its successor)  under the Exchange Act. An Outside  Director shall not
fail to be  "disinterested"  solely  because  he or she  receives  the NSO grant
described in Section 4.2.

               2.2 Committee  Responsibilities.  The Committee  shall (a) select
the Key  Employees who are to receive  Awards under the Plan,  (b) determine the
type,  number,  vesting  requirements and other  conditions of such Awards,  (c)
interpret the Plan and (d) make all other decisions relating to the operation of
the  Plan.  The  Committee  may  adopt  such  rules  or  guidelines  as it deems
appropriate to implement the Plan. The Committee's determinations under the Plan
shall be final and binding on all persons.

                                      -5-
<PAGE>

ARTICLE 3.     SHARES AVAILABLE FOR GRANTS.

               3.1 Basic  Limitation.  Any Common Shares issued  pursuant to the
Plan may be authorized  but unissued  shares or treasury  shares.  The aggregate
number of  Restricted  Shares,  Stock Units and Options  awarded  under the Plan
shall not exceed 1,400,000 plus the number of Common Shares remaining  available
for awards under the Company's  1987 Stock Option Plan and Stock Option Plan for
Non-employee  Directors  (the  "Prior  Plans")  at the time  this  Plan is first
approved by the  stockholders.  (No  additional  grants  shall be made under the
Prior Plans after this Plan has been  approved by the  stockholders.)  The limi-
tation of this  Section 3.1 shall be subject to  adjustment  pursuant to Article
10.

               3.2  Additional  Shares.  If  any  Stock  Units  or  Options  are
forfeited  or if any  Options  terminate  for  any  other  reason  before  being
exercised,  then such Stock Units or Options  shall again become  available  for
Awards  under the Plan.  If any options  under the Prior Plans are  forfeited or
terminate for any other reason before being  exercised,  then such options shall
become available for additional Awards under this Plan.  However, if Options are
surrendered  upon the exercise of related  SARs,  then such Options shall not be
restored to the pool available for Awards.

               3.3 Dividend  Equivalents.  Any dividend equivalents  distributed
under the Plan shall not be applied  against  the number of  Restricted  Shares,
Stock  Units or Options  available  for  Awards,  whether  or not such  dividend
equivalents are converted into Stock Units.

ARTICLE 4.     ELIGIBILITY.

               4.1 General  Rules.  Only Key  Employees  shall be  eligible  for
designation  as  Participants  by the  Committee.  Key Employees who are Outside
Directors  shall only be eligible for the grant of the NSOs described in Section
4.2.

               4.2  Outside   Directors.   Any  other   provision  of  the  Plan
notwithstanding,  the  participation  of Outside  Directors in the Plan shall be
subject to the following restrictions:

                    (a) Outside Directors shall receive no Awards other than the
               NSOs described in this Section 4.2.

                    (b)(i) Each person who first becomes an Outside  Director on
               or after  February  6,  1996,  shall,  upon  becoming  an Outside
               Director,  receive an NSO covering  10,000 Common Shares (subject
               to adjustment  under Article 10),  hereinafter  referred to as an
               "Initial  Grant." Such Initial Grant shall become  exercisable in
               increments of 2,000 shares  (subject to adjustment  under Article
               10) on each of the first through fifth  anniversaries of the date
               of grant.

                                      -6-
<PAGE>

                         (ii) On the date of each annual meeting of stockholders
               of the Company  held on or after  February 6, 1996,  each Outside
               Director  who has been an  Outside  Director  at least  since the
               prior annual  meeting shall receive an NSO covering  1,000 Common
               Shares  (subject to  adjustment  under  Article 10),  hereinafter
               referred to as an "Annual Grant." Such Annual Grants shall become
               exercisable in full 12 months after the date of grant.

                    (c) All NSOs  granted  to an  Outside  Director  under  this
               Section 4.2 shall also become exercisable in full in the event of
               (i) the termination of such Outside Director's service because of
               death, total and permanent  disability or voluntary retirement at
               or after age 65 or (ii) a Change in Control  with  respect to the
               Company.

                    (d) The Exercise  Price under all NSOs granted to an Outside
               Director  under  this  Section  4.2 shall be equal to 100% of the
               Fair Market Value of a Common Share on the date of grant, payable
               in one of the forms described in Sections 6.1, 6.2, 6.3 and 6.4.

                    (e) All Initial Grants granted to an Outside  Director under
               this Section 4.2 shall  terminate on the earliest of (i) the 10th
               anniversary  of the date of  grant,  (ii) the date  three  months
               after the termination of such Outside  Director's service for any
               reason  other than  death or total and  permanent  disability  or
               (iii) the date 12 months  after the  termination  of such Outside
               Director's  service  because  of  death or  total  and  permanent
               disability.  All Annual  Grants  granted  to an Outside  Director
               under this Section 4.2 shall terminate on the earliest of (i) the
               fifth  anniversary  of the date of  grant,  (ii)  the date  three
               months after the termination of such Outside  Director's  service
               for any reason other than death or total and permanent disability
               or (iii) the date 12 months after the termination of such Outside
               Director's  service  because  of  death or  total  and  permanent
               disability.


               4.3 Ten-Percent  Stockholders.  A Key Employee who owns more than
10% of the total combined  voting power of all classes of  outstanding  stock of
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries shall not be eligible for the grant of an
ISO  unless the  requirements  set forth in  section  422(c)(6)  of the Code are
satisfied.

               4.4 Limitation on Option Grants.  No person shall receive Options
for more than 50,000 Common Shares  (subject to adjustment  under Article 10) in
any single fiscal year of the Company.

                                      -7-
<PAGE>

ARTICLE 5.     OPTIONS.

               5.1 Stock  Option  Agreement.  Each grant of an Option  under the
Plan shall be evidenced by a Stock Option Agreement between the Optionee and the
Company.  Such Option shall be subject to all  applicable  terms of the Plan and
may be subject to any other terms that are not  inconsistent  with the Plan. The
Stock Option Agreement shall specify whether the Option is an ISO or an NSO. The
provisions  of the various Stock Option  Agreements  entered into under the Plan
need not be identical.

               5.2  Awards  Nontransferable.  No Option  granted  under the Plan
shall be  transferable  by the  Optionee  other than by will,  by a  beneficiary
designation executed by the Optionee and delivered to the Company or by the laws
of descent and  distribution.  An Option may be exercised during the lifetime of
the  Optionee  only  by  him  or  her  or  by  his  or  her  guardian  or  legal
representative.  No Option or  interest  therein may be  transferred,  assigned,
pledged or hypothecated  by the Optionee during his or her lifetime,  whether by
operation of law or otherwise,  or be made subject to  execution,  attachment or
similar process.

               5.3 Number of Shares.  Each Stock Option  Agreement shall specify
the number of Shares  subject to the Option and shall provide for the adjustment
of such number in accordance with Article 10.

               5.4 Exercise Price. Each Stock Option Agreement shall specify the
Exercise  Price.  The  Exercise  Price  shall  not be less than 100% of the Fair
Market Value of a Common Share on the date of grant.

               5.5  Exercisability  and Term. Each Stock Option  Agreement shall
specify  the  date  when  all or any  installment  of the  Option  is to  become
exercisable.  The Stock  Option  Agreement  shall also  specify  the term of the
Option;  provided that the term of an ISO shall in no event exceed 10 years from
the  date of  grant.  A Stock  Option  Agreement  may  provide  for  accelerated
exercisability in the event of the Optionee's death, disability or retirement or
other events and may provide for expiration  prior to the end of its term in the
event of the termination of the Optionee's service.  NSOs may also be awarded in
combination with Restricted Shares or Stock Units, and such an Award may provide
that the NSOs will not be exercisable  unless the related  Restricted  Shares or
Stock Units are forfeited.

               5.6 Effect of Change in Control. The Committee may determine,  at
the time of  granting  an Option or  thereafter,  that such Option (and any SARs
included therein) shall become fully exercisable as to all Common Shares subject
to such Option in the event that a Change in Control  occurs with respect to the
Company.  If the Committee  finds that there is a reasonable  possibility  that,
within the succeeding six months, a Change in Control will occur with respect to
the  Company,  then the  Committee  may  determine  that any or all  outstanding
Options (and any SARs included therein) shall become fully exercisable as to all
Common Shares subject to such Options.

                                      -8-

<PAGE>

               5.7 Modification or Assumption of Options. Within the limitations
of the Plan, the Committee may modify,  extend or assume outstanding  options or
may accept the  cancellation  of  outstanding  options  (whether  granted by the
Company or by another  issuer)  in return for the grant of new  options  for the
same or a  different  number of shares and at the same or a  different  exercise
price.  The  foregoing  notwithstanding,  no  modification  of an Option  shall,
without  the  consent  of the  Optionee,  alter or impair  his or her  rights or
obligations under such Option.

ARTICLE 6.     PAYMENT FOR OPTION SHARES.

               6.1 General  Rule.  The entire  Exercise  Price of Common  Shares
issued upon  exercise of Options  shall be payable in cash at the time when such
Common Shares are purchased, except as follows:

                    (a) In the case of an ISO  granted  under the Plan,  payment
               shall be made only  pursuant  to the  express  provisions  of the
               applicable Stock Option Agreement. The Stock Option Agreement may
               specify that payment may be made in any form(s) described in this
               Article 6.

                    (b) In the  case of an NSO,  the  Committee  may at any time
               accept payment in any form(s) described in this Article 6.

               6.2  Surrender  of Stock.  To the extent that this Section 6.2 is
applicable,  payment for all or any part of the Exercise  Price may be made with
Common Shares which have already been owned by the Optionee for more than twelve
months.  Such Common  Shares  shall be valued at their Fair Market  Value on the
date when the new Common Shares are purchased under the Plan.

               6.3  Exercise/Sale.  To  the  extent  that  this  Section  6.3 is
applicable,  payment may be made by the  delivery (on a form  prescribed  by the
Company)  of an  irrevocable  direction  to a  securities  broker or other party
approved by the Company to sell Common  Shares and to deliver all or part of the
sales  proceeds to the Company in payment of all or part of the  Exercise  Price
and any withholding taxes.

               6.4  Exercise/Pledge.  To the  extent  that this  Section  6.4 is
applicable,  payment may be made by the  delivery (on a form  prescribed  by the
Company) of an  irrevocable  direction to pledge  Common  Shares to a securities
broker or lender approved by the Company, as security for a loan, and to deliver
all or part of the loan proceeds to the Company in payment of all or part of the
Exercise Price and any withholding taxes.

               6.5  Promissory  Note.  To the extent  that this  Section  6.5 is
applicable, payment for all or any part of the Exercise Price may be made with a
full-recourse  promissory  note;  provided  that the par  value of newly  issued
Common  Shares  must be paid in lawful  money of the U.S.  at the time when such
Common Shares are purchased.

                                      -9-

<PAGE>

               6.6 Other Forms of Payment.  To the extent that this  Section 6.6
is  applicable,  payment may be made in any other form that is  consistent  with
applicable laws, regulations and rules.

ARTICLE 7.      STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS.

               7.1 Grant of SARs. At the discretion of the Committee, an SAR may
be included in each Option  granted under the Plan,  other than the NSOs granted
to Outside  Directors under Section 4.2. Such SAR shall entitle the Optionee (or
any person  having the right to exercise  the Option  after his or her death) to
surrender  to the Company,  unexercised,  all or any part of that portion of the
Option which then is  exercisable  and to receive from the Company Common Shares
or cash,  or a combination  of Common  Shares and cash,  as the Committee  shall
determine. If an SAR is exercised, the number of Common Shares remaining subject
to the related Option shall be reduced  accordingly,  and vice versa. The amount
of cash and/or the Fair Market Value of Common Shares  received upon exercise of
an SAR shall, in the aggregate,  be equal to the amount by which the Fair Market
value (on the date of surrender) of the Common Shares subject to the surrendered
portion of the Option exceeds the Exercise  Price.  In no event shall any SAR be
exercised if such Fair Market Value does not exceed the Exercise  Price.  An SAR
may be  included  in an ISO only at the time of grant but may be  included in an
NSO at the time of grant  or at any  subsequent  time,  but not  later  than six
months before the expiration of such NSO.

               7.2 Exercise of SARs.  An SAR may be exercised to the extent that
the Option in which it is included is exercisable,  subject to the  restrictions
imposed by Rule 16b-3 (or its successor)  under the Exchange Act, if applicable.
If, on the date when an Option expires,  the Exercise Price under such Option is
less than the Fair Market  Value on such date but any portion of such Option has
not been  exercised or  surrendered,  then any SAR included in such Option shall
automatically  be deemed to be  exercised  as of such date with  respect to such
portion.  An  Option  granted  under  the  Plan  may  provide  that  it  will be
exercisable as an SAR only in the event of a Change in Control.

ARTICLE 8.     RESTRICTED SHARES AND STOCK UNITS.

               8.1 Time,  Amount and Form of Awards.  Restricted Shares or Stock
Units with respect to an Award Year may be granted  during such Award Year or at
any  time  thereafter.  Awards  under  the Plan  may be  granted  in the form of
Restricted  Shares,  in the form of Stock Units,  or in any combination of both.
Restricted  Shares or Stock Units may also be awarded in combination  with NSOs,
and such an Award may provide that the Restricted  Shares or Stock Units will be
forfeited in the event that the related NSOs are exercised.

                                      -10-
<PAGE>

               8.2 Payment for Awards. To the extent that an Award is granted in
the form of  newly  issued  Restricted  Shares,  the  Award  recipient  shall be
required to pay the Company in lawful  money of the U.S. an amount  equal to the
par value of such Restricted  Shares.  To the extent that an Award is granted in
the form of Stock  Units or  treasury  shares,  no cash  consideration  shall be
required of Award recipients.

               8.3 Vesting Conditions.  Each Award of Restricted Shares or Stock
Units shall become vested, in full or in installments,  upon satisfaction of the
conditions  specified in the Stock Award Agreement.  A Stock Award Agreement may
provide  for  accelerated  vesting  in the  event  of the  Participant's  death,
disability or retirement or other events.  The Committee may  determine,  at the
time of making an Award or thereafter, that such Award shall become fully vested
in the event that a Change in Control occurs with respect to the Company.

               8.4 Form and Time of  Settlement  of Stock Units.  Settlement  of
vested  Stock  Units  may be made in the  form of cash,  in the  form of  Common
Shares,  or in any combination of both.  Methods of converting  Stock Units into
cash may include (without  limitation) a method based on the average Fair Market
Value of Common Shares over a series of trading days.  Vested Stock Units may be
settled in a lump sum or in installments. The distribution may occur or commence
when all vesting conditions applicable to the Stock Units have been satisfied or
have lapsed,  or it may be deferred to any later date.  The amount of a deferred
distribution may be increased by an interest factor or by dividend  equivalents.
Until an Award of Stock Units is  settled,  the number of such Stock Units shall
be subject to adjustment pursuant to Article 10.

               8.5  Death of  Recipient.  Any Stock  Units  Award  that  becomes
payable after the  recipient's  death shall be  distributed  to the  recipient's
beneficiary  or  beneficiaries.  Each recipient of a Stock Units Award under the
Plan shall  designate one or more  beneficiaries  for this purpose by filing the
prescribed  form with the Company.  A beneficiary  designation may be changed by
filing  the  prescribed  form  with the  Company  at any time  before  the Award
recipient's  death.  If no  beneficiary  was  designated  or  if  no  designated
beneficiary  survives  the Award  recipient,  then any Stock  Units  Award  that
becomes  payable  after  the  recipient's  death  shall  be  distributed  to the
recipient's estate.

               8.6  Creditors'  Rights.  A holder of Stock  Units  shall have no
rights  other than  those of a general  creditor  of the  Company.  Stock  Units
represent an unfunded and unsecured  obligation  of the Company,  subject to the
terms and conditions of the applicable Stock Award Agreement.

ARTICLE 9.     VOTING AND DIVIDEND RIGHTS.

               9.1 Restricted  Shares.  The holders of Restricted Shares awarded
under the Plan  shall have the same  voting,  dividend  and other  rights as the
Company's other stockholders. A Stock Award Agreement, however, may require that
the  holders  of  Restricted  Shares  invest  any  cash  dividends  received  in
additional 

                                      -11-

<PAGE>

Restricted  Shares.  Such additional  Restricted  Shares shall be subject to the
same  conditions  and  restrictions  as the  Award  with  respect  to which  the
dividends  were paid.  Such  additional  Restricted  Shares shall not reduce the
number of Common Shares available under Article 3.

               9.2 Stock Units.  The holders of Stock Units shall have no voting
rights. Prior to settlement or forfeiture, any Stock Unit awarded under the Plan
shall carry with it a right to dividend  equivalents.  Such right  entitles  the
holder to be credited  with an amount  equal to all cash  dividends  paid on one
Common Share while the Stock Unit is  outstanding.  Dividend  equivalents may be
converted into additional Stock Units. Settlement of dividend equivalents may be
made in the form of cash, in the form of Common  Shares,  or in a combination of
both. Prior to distribution,  any dividend  equivalents which are not paid shall
be subject to the same  conditions and  restrictions as the Stock Units to which
they attach.

ARTICLE 10.    PROTECTION AGAINST DILUTION.

               10.1   Adjustments.   In  the  event  of  a  subdivision  of  the
outstanding Common Shares, a declaration of a dividend payable in Common Shares,
a  declaration  of a dividend  payable in a form other than Common  Shares in an
amount that has a material  effect on the price of Common Shares,  a combination
or  consolidation  of the  outstanding  Common  Shares (by  reclassification  or
otherwise) into a lesser number of Common Shares, a recapitalization,  a spinoff
or a similar occurrence, the Committee shall make appropriate adjustments in one
or more of (a)  the  number  of  Options,  Restricted  Shares  and  Stock  Units
available  for  future  Awards  under  Article  3, (b) the  number of NSOs to be
granted to Outside  Directors  under  Section 4.2, (c) the number of Stock Units
included in any prior Award  which has not yet been  settled,  (d) the number of
Common Shares covered by each outstanding Option or (e) the Exercise Price under
each  outstanding  Option.  Except as provided in this Article 10, a Participant
shall have no rights by reason of any issue by the Company of stock of any class
or  securities   convertible  into  stock  of  any  class,  any  subdivision  or
consolidation of shares of stock of any class, the payment of any stock dividend
or any other increase or decrease in the number of shares of stock of any class.

               10.2 Reorganizations. In the event that the Company is a party to
a merger or other  reorganization,  outstanding  Options,  Restricted Shares and
Stock Units shall be subject to the agreement of merger or reorganization.  Such
agreement may provide,  without  limitation,  for the  assumption of outstanding
Awards by the surviving corporation or its parent, for their continuation by the
Company (if the Company is a surviving corporation),  for accelerated vesting or
for settlement in cash.

                                      -12-
<PAGE>

ARTICLE 11.    LONG-TERM PERFORMANCE AWARDS.

The  Company  may  grant  long-term  performance  awards  under  other  plans or
programs.  Such awards may be settled in the form of Common  Shares issued under
this Plan.  Such Common Shares shall be treated for all purposes  under the Plan
like Common  Shares  issued in  settlement  of Stock Units and shall  reduce the
number of Common Shares available under Article 3.

ARTICLE 12.    LIMITATION ON RIGHTS.

               12.1  Retention  Rights.  Neither the Plan nor any award  granted
under  the Plan  shall be  deemed  to give any  individual  a right to remain an
employee  or  director  of the  Company or a  Subsidiary.  The  Company  and its
Subsidiaries  reserve  the right to  terminate  the  service of any  employee or
director at any time,  with or without  cause,  subject to applicable  laws, the
Company's  certificate  of  incorporation  and by-laws and a written  employment
agreement (if any).

               12.2  Stockholders'  Rights. A Participant shall have no dividend
rights,  voting  rights or other  rights as a  stockholder  with  respect to any
Common  Shares  covered  by his or her Award  prior to the  issuance  of a stock
certificate  for  such  Common  Shares.  No  adjustment  shall  be made for cash
dividends  or other  rights for which the record  date is prior to the date when
such  certificate is issued,  except as expressly  provided in Articles 8, 9 and
10.

               12.3  Regulatory  Requirements.  Any other  provision of the Plan
notwithstanding,  the obligation of the Company to issue Common Shares under the
Plan shall be subject to all applicable  laws,  rules and  regulations  and such
approval by any  regulatory  body as may be required.  The Company  reserves the
right to restrict,  in whole or in part, the delivery of Common Shares  pursuant
to any Award prior to the satisfaction of all legal requirements relating to the
issuance of such Common Shares, to their registration,  qualification or listing
or to an exemption from registration, qualification or listing.

ARTICLE 13.    LIMITATION ON PAYMENTS.

               13.1  Basic  Rule.  Any  provision  of the  Plan to the  contrary
notwithstanding,  in the  event  that the  independent  auditors  most  recently
selected by the Board (the "Auditors") determine that any payment or transfer by
the Company to or for the benefit of a Key Employee, whether paid or payable (or
transferred or transferable)  pursuant to the terms of this Plan or otherwise (a
"Payment"),  would be  non-deductible  by the  Company  for  federal  income tax
purposes because of the provisions  concerning  "excess  parachute  payments" in
section 280G of the Code, then the aggregate present value of all Payments shall
be  reduced  (but not  below  zero) to the  Reduced  Amount;  provided  that the
Committee,  at the  time of  making  an  Award  under  this  Plan or at any time
thereafter,  may specify in writing  that such Award shall not be so reduced and
shall not be subject to this Article 13.

                                      -13-
<PAGE>

For  purposes of this  Article  13, the  "Reduced  Amount"  shall be the amount,
expressed as a present value, which maximizes the aggregate present value of the
Payments  without causing any Payment to be nondeductible by the Company because
of section 280G of the Code.

               13.2  Reduction of Payments.  If the Auditors  determine that any
Payment  would be  nondeductible  by the Company  because of section 280G of the
Code,  then the Company  shall  promptly  give the Key  Employee  notice to that
effect and a copy of the detailed calculation thereof and of the Reduced Amount,
and the Key Employee may then elect,  in his or her sole  discretion,  which and
how much of the Payments  shall be  eliminated or reduced (as long as after such
election the aggregate  present value of the Payments equals the Reduced Amount)
and shall advise the Company in writing of his or her election within 10 days of
receipt of notice.  If no such election is made by the Key Employee  within such
10-day  period,  then the Company  may elect which and how much of the  Payments
shall be  eliminated  or reduced (as long as after such  election the  aggregate
present  value of the Payments  equals the Reduced  Amount) and shall notify the
Key Employee promptly of such election. For purposes of this Article 13, present
value shall be determined in accordance with section 280G(d)(4) of the Code. All
determinations  made by the Auditors under this Article 13 shall be binding upon
the  Company and the Key  Employee  and shall be made within 60 days of the date
when a payment  becomes  payable or  transferable.  As promptly  as  practicable
following such determination and the elections hereunder,  the Company shall pay
or transfer to or for the benefit of the Key  Employee  such amounts as are then
due to him or her under the Plan and shall  promptly  pay or  transfer to or for
the benefit of the Key  Employee in the future such amounts as become due to him
or her under the Plan.

               13.3 Overpayments and  Underpayments.  As a result of uncertainty
in the  application  of  section  280G  of the  Code at the  time of an  initial
determination by the Auditors hereunder,  it is possible that Payments will have
been made by the Company which should not have been made (an  "Overpayment")  or
that additional Payments which will not have been made by the Company could have
been made (an  "Underpayment"),  consistent in each case with the calculation of
the Reduced  Amount  hereunder.  In the event that the Auditors,  based upon the
assertion of a deficiency by the Internal Revenue Service against the Company or
the Key Employee which the Auditors  believe has a high  probability of success,
determine that an Overpayment has been made, such  Overpayment  shall be treated
for all  purposes as a loan to the Key  Employee  which he or she shall repay to
the Company,  together with interest at the applicable  federal rate provided in
section  7872(f)(2)  of the Code;  provided,  however,  that no amount  shall be
payable  by the Key  Employee  to the  Company  if and to the  extent  that such
payment  would not reduce the amount which is subject to taxation  under section
4999 of the Code. In the event that the Auditors  determine that an Underpayment
has occurred,  such  Underpayment  shall  promptly be paid or transferred by the
Company to or for the benefit of the Key Employee, together with interest at the
applicable federal rate provided in section 7872(f)(2) of the Code.

                                      -14-

<PAGE>

               13.4 Related  Corporations.  For purposes of this Article 13, the
term "Company" shall include affiliated corporations to the extent determined by
the Auditors in accordance with section 280G(d)(5) of the Code.

ARTICLE 14.    WITHHOLDING TAXES.

               14.1  General.  To the extent  required  by  applicable  federal,
state,  local or foreign law, the recipient of any payment or distribution under
the  Plan  shall  make   arrangements   satisfactory  to  the  Company  for  the
satisfaction  of any  withholding  tax  obligations  that arise by reason of the
receipt or vesting of such  payment or  distribution.  The Company  shall not be
required  to issue any  Common  Shares or make any cash  payment  under the Plan
until such obligations are satisfied.

               14.2 Share Withholding. The Committee may permit a Participant to
satisfy  all or part of his or her  withholding  or income  tax  obligations  by
having the Company  withhold a portion of any Common Shares that otherwise would
be issued to him or her or by  surrendering  a portion of any Common Shares that
previously  were  issued to him or her.  Such Common  Shares  shall be valued at
their Fair Market  Value on the date when taxes  otherwise  would be withheld in
cash.  Any  payment of taxes by  assigning  Common  Shares to the Company may be
subject to  restrictions,  including any  restrictions  required by rules of the
Securities and Exchange Commission.

ARTICLE 15.    ASSIGNMENT OR TRANSFER OF AWARDS.

Except as provided in Article 14, any Award  granted under the Plan shall not be
anticipated,  assigned,  attached,  garnished,  optioned,  transferred  or  made
subject to any creditor's  process,  whether  voluntarily,  involuntarily  or by
operation  of law.  Any act in  violation  of this  Article  15  shall  be void.
However,  this Article 15 shall not preclude a  Participant  from  designating a
beneficiary  who will  receive  any  undistributed  Awards  in the  event of the
Participant's  death, nor shall it preclude a transfer by will or by the laws of
descent and  distribution.  In  addition,  neither this Article 15 nor any other
provision  of the  Plan  shall  preclude  a  Participant  from  transferring  or
assigning Restricted Shares or Stock Units to (a) the trustee of a trust that is
revocable  by such  Participant  alone,  both at the  time  of the  transfer  or
assignment and at all times thereafter prior to such Participant's death, or (b)
the  trustee  of any  other  trust to the  extent  approved  in  advance  by the
Committee in writing.  A transfer or assignment  of  Restricted  Shares or Stock
Units  from such  trustee to any person  other  than such  Participant  shall be
permitted  only to the extent  approved in advance by the  Committee in writing,
and  Restricted  Shares or Stock Units held by such trustee  shall be subject to
all of the  conditions  and  restrictions  set  forth  in  the  Plan  and in the
applicable  Stock  Award  Agreement,  as if such  trustee  were a party  to such
Agreement.

                                      -15-
<PAGE>

ARTICLE 16.    FUTURE OF THE PLAN.

               16.1 Term of the  Plan.  The Plan,  as set  forth  herein,  shall
become  effective  upon approval by the  Stockholders  of the Company.  The Plan
shall remain in effect until it is terminated under Section 16.2, except that no
ISOs shall be granted after November 20, 2005.

               16.2 Amendment or Termination. The Board may, at any time and for
any reason,  amend or terminate the Plan,  except that the provisions of Section
4.2  relating to Outside  Directors  shall not be amended  more than once in any
six-month  period.  An amendment of the Plan shall be subject to the approval of
the  Company's  stockholders  only to the extent  required by  applicable  laws,
regulations  or  rules.  No Awards  shall be  granted  under the Plan  after the
termination  thereof.  The  termination  of the Plan, or any amendment  thereof,
shall not affect any Option previously granted under the Plan.

ARTICLE 17.    DEFINITIONS.

               17.1  "Award"  means any award of an  Option  (with or  without a
related SAR), a Restricted Share or a Stock Unit under the Plan.

               17.2 "Award  Year"  means a fiscal year with  respect to which an
Award may be granted.

               17.3  "Board"  means  the  Company's   Board  of  Directors,   as
constituted from time to time.

               17.4  "Change in Control"  means the occurrence of either  of the
following events:

                      (a) A change in the  composition of the Board, as a result
               of which  fewer than  one-half  of the  incumbent  directors  are
               directors who either:

                             (i) Had been  directors  of the  Company  24 months
                      prior to such change; or

                             (ii) Were elected,  or nominated  for election,  to
                      the  Board  with  the  affirmative  votes  of at  least  a
                      majority of the  directors  who had been  directors of the
                      Company 24 months  prior to such change and who were still
                      in office at the time of the election or nomination; or

                      (b) Any "person"  (as such term is used in sections  13(d)
               and 14(d) of the Exchange Act) by the  acquisition or aggregation
               of securities  is or becomes the  beneficial  owner,  directly or
               indirectly, of securities of the Company representing 50% or more
               of the combined  voting power of the Company's  then  outstanding
               securities  ordinarily  (and 

                                      -16-
<PAGE>
               apart from rights  accruing under special  circumstances)  having
               the right to vote at elections of  directors  (the "Base  Capital
               Stock");  except  that  any  change  in the  relative  beneficial
               ownership of the  Company's  securities  by any person  resulting
               solely from a reduction in the  aggregate  number of  outstanding
               shares of Base Capital Stock, and any decrease thereafter in such
               person's ownership of securities, shall be disregarded until such
               person  increases  in any manner,  directly or  indirectly,  such
               person's beneficial ownership of any securities of the Company.

               17.5 "Code" means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

               17.6 "Committee"  means a committee of the Board, as described in
Article 2.

               17.7  "Common  Share"  means one share of the Common Stock of the
Company.

               17.8 "Company"  means Fair,  Isaac and Company,  Incorporated,  a
Delaware corporation.

               17.9 "Exchange Act" means the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended.

               17.10  "Exercise  Price"  means the  amount  for which one Common
Share  may  be  purchased  upon  exercise  of an  Option,  as  specified  in the
applicable Stock Option Agreement.

               17.11  "Fair  Market  Value"  means  the  market  price of Common
Shares, determined by the Committee as follows:

                      (a) If the Common Shares were traded  over-the-counter  on
               the date in  question,  whether or not  classified  as a national
               market  issue,  then the Fair Market  Value shall be equal to the
               mean between the last reported bid and asked prices quoted by the
               NASDAQ system for such date;

                      (b) If the Common  Shares were traded on a stock  exchange
               on the date in  question,  then the Fair  Market  Value  shall be
               equal to the closing price reported by the  applicable  composite
               transactions report for such date; and

                      (c) If none of the  foregoing  provisions  is  applicable,
               then the Fair Market Value shall be  determined  by the Committee
               in good faith on such basis as it deems appropriate.

Whenever possible, the determination of Fair Market Value by the Committee shall
be  based  on the  prices  reported  by the  Research  Section  of the  National

                                      -17-


<PAGE>
Association of Securities  Dealers or in the Western  Edition of The Wall Street
Journal. Such determination shall be conclusive and binding on all persons.

               17.12 "ISO" means an incentive stock option  described in section
422(b) of the Code. 

               17.13 "Key Employee"  means (a) a key common-law  employee of the
Company or of a Subsidiary,  as determined by the  Committee,  or (b) an Outside
Director.  Service as an Outside Director shall be considered employment for all
purposes of the Plan, except as provided in Sections 4.1 and 4.2.

               17.14 "NSO"  means an  employee  stock  option not  described  in
sections 422 or 423 of the Code. 

               17.15  "Option"  means an ISO or NSO  granted  under the Plan and
entitling the holder to purchase one Common Share.

               17.16  "Optionee"  means an  individual  or  estate  who holds an
Option.

               17.17 "Outside  Director" shall mean a member of the Board who is
not a common-law employee of the Company or of a Subsidiary.

               17.18  "Participant"  means an  individual or estate who holds an
Award.

               17.19  "Plan" means this Fair,  Isaac and  Company,  Incorporated
1992 Long-Term Incentive Plan, as it may be amended from time to time.

               17.20  "Restricted  Share" means a Common Share awarded under the
Plan.

               17.21 "SAR" means a stock  appreciation  right  granted under the
Plan.

               17.22 "Stock Award  Agreement"  means the  agreement  between the
Company and the recipient of a Restricted Share or Stock Unit which contains the
terms,  conditions and restrictions pertaining to such Restricted Share or Stock
Unit.

               17.23 "Stock Option  Agreement"  means the agreement  between the
Company and an Optionee  which contains the terms,  conditions and  restrictions
pertaining to his or her Option.

               17.24 "Stock  Unit" means a  bookkeeping  entry  representing the
equivalent of one Common Share and awarded under the Plan.

               17.25 "Subsidiary"  means any corporation,  if the Company and/or
one or more  other  Subsidiaries  own not less  than 50% of the  total  combined
voting  power  of all  classes  of  outstanding  stock  of such  corporation.  A
corporation that 

                                      -18-
<PAGE>
attains  the status of a  Subsidiary  on a date after the  adoption  of the Plan
shall be considered a Subsidiary commencing as of such date.

ARTICLE 18.    EXECUTION.

To record the  adoption  of the  amended  and  restated  Plan by the Board,  the
Company has caused its duly  authorized  officer to affix the corporate name and
seal hereto.


                                    FAIR, ISAAC AND COMPANY, INCORPORATED





                                    By
                                      -----------------------------------------
                                            Peter L. McCorkell
                                            Senior Vice President and Secretary


                                      -19-



© 2022 IncJournal is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission