|
|
Like this article? PLEASE +1 it! |
|
Sales Compensation Plans: Improve Your Plan to Boost Your Profitability
|
| Guest post by: Gene Siciliano |
Article Overview: Everywhere I go, CEOs complain that their sales compensation plans don’t seem to work as well as they had hoped. A bad sales compensation plan effectively converts “pay-for-performance” into “pay-for-non-performance.” If your sales incentive plan doesn’t create a win-win-win-for you, your salesperson and the customer-it is bound to fail sooner or later. Here are six key features of a winning sales compensation plan.
![]() |
Free Download - Financial Mastery for the Career Teacher By Gene Siciliano |
Sales Compensation Plans: Improve Your Plan to Boost Your Profitability
Most experts seem to
agree that misguided incentive and sales compensation plans were near the heart
of the country’s financial crisis, the effects of which are still rattling
around Europe as this is written. These compensation plans encouraged
aggressive individuals on Wall Street to over-sell the wrong products to the
wrong people and pay themselves very handsomely in the process.
Everywhere I go, CEOs
complain that their sales compensation plans don’t seem to work as well as they
had hoped. Or they justify their compensation plans and attribute the poor
results to poor selling skills, unmotivated salespeople, poor sales management,
inadequate information systems and, of course, the economy.
The reality is that
while all these things can contribute to poor sales team performance, nothing
sinks motivation faster than poorly designed sales compensation plans. Some
examples I’ve seen:
· Straight commission plans:
Here, the company pays a set percent commission on every dollar sold,
regardless of whether sales levels are below, at or above where the company
wants them to be. This enables salespeople to decide for themselves how hard
they want to work and provides no incentive for them to work harder, even if
the company needs more profit.
· Poorly designed commission plans:
For example, some sales compensation plans pay the same commission rate for
profitable items that they do for unprofitable or marginally profitable ones.
This is often because the company doesn’t know how to track the details, or
because the company doesn’t know which is which.
· Incentive plans that cap earning capacity:
Some plans cap salespeople’s earning capacity even though the profitability of
sales above the cap is usually considerably more than sales below the cap. A
really good salesperson wants to know that the sky’s the limit, even if there’s
no real chance of ever reaching it.
· Incentive plans that don’t provide
incentives: Some companies have bonus plans that make the
salesperson wait for the quarter-end or even year-end to get financial
recognition. The reward is so far removed from the event that they’re no longer
connected in the salesperson’s mind.
I’ve also seen CEOs
convert their entire sales force to straight salary so they could better manage
the process—not knowing that they have guaranteed
they’ll have a truly mediocre sales force from then on.
Compounding the Mistakes
If you combine one or
more of these infamous sales compensation plan mistakes with any of the
non-compensation issues mentioned above, you can have a seriously unproductive
sales team—and not know how to go about fixing it.
A bad sales
compensation plan effectively converts “pay-for-performance” into “pay-for-non-performance.” If your sales incentive plan doesn’t
create a win-win-win—for you, your salesperson and the customer—it is bound to
fail sooner or later.
Here are six key
features of a winning sales compensation plan:
1.
It
pays more for what you want to sell more of, and less for what you want to sell
less of, relatively speaking. If you pay the same
commission rate for everything, you’re telling the salesforce you don’t care
which of your products they sell. If that’s true, fine. If it’s not, you’re
reinforcing the wrong message.
2.
It
pays more for sales that bring more profit to your bottom line.
Of course, this means you need to know which products have a higher profit margin.
If you don’t know your margins, you have a cost accounting issue as well as a
sales compensation issue. Both will kill your bottom line faster than you can
say ”money pit.”
3.
There
are no limits on salespeople’s earning capacity.
Create powerful incentives for your salesforce to keep reaching and keep
selling, even when they’ve reached their personal income comfort zone. You do
that by sharing the added wealth that comes from those extra sales—a bonus, a
richer commission rate, a trip to Hawaii, or whatever you truly believe will
excite your salespeople to keep going at full speed until year-end.
4.
The
incentive pay is awarded as close as possible to the event it’s paying for.
The idea is to strengthen in the salesperson’s mind the relationship between
the deed and the reward. You can say they’re related all you want, but if the
pay comes months later, and the salesperson has gone on to put effort in other
directions since then, the association becomes weak, at best. The best strategy
is to pay commissions monthly, every month. When adjustments are necessary due
to breakage, returns or whatever, deduct those from current payments as they
occur.
5.
It
includes bonuses in addition to commissions. Bonuses are
great for rewarding that extra effort, whether it’s for the top salesperson of
the month, quarter or year; for the salesperson opening the most new accounts
during a new campaign; etc. These are payments in addition to commissions that reward
for exceptional success—not for routine performance, and certainly not in lieu
of sale-by-sale commissions.
6.
It’s
easy for salespeople to understand. Explain your sales
compensation plan clearly to your salespeople. If they don’t understand it,
they’ll assume they’re being taken advantage of to the company’s benefit. If
you change the plan, take pains to explain the benefits of the change to them
and how they can best take advantage of the new features. They’ll figure it out
anyway, and you’ll lose some trust in the process unless you’re up front with
them.
Don’t Forget Strong Sales Management
OK, having said all
that, I need to say a few words about another critical issue—sales management.
I’m sure you’ve heard that more money can never compensate for poor management,
and that’s very true. If the person managing your salesforce is not a good
sales manager—doesn’t follow up, doesn’t train, doesn’t create a motivating
environment, doesn’t hold subordinates accountable—then no amount of clever sales
compensation plan design will make up for that.
By contrast, put a
good sales compensation plan and a good product line into the hands of a good
sales manager, and you’ll see sparks fly as the performance climbs. The
difference between your weak salespeople and your strong ones will become
dramatically evident, enabling you to very quickly build a world-class sales
organization with world-class results.
Referred by: http://donsadlerwriter.com
|
About the Author: Gene Siciliano RSS for Gene's articles - Visit Gene's website Gene Siciliano is the author of “Financial Mastery for the Career Teacher” (Corwin, 2010). Gene is an author, speaker and financial consultant who works with CEOs and managers to achieve greater financial success in a dramatically changing economy. Learn more at www.genesiciliano.com. For book ordering information, including bulk sales, please contact TJ Adams at tj.adams@corwin.com. Click here to visit Gene's website Why You Should Create a Business Plan Financial Management Five Key Questions Accounts Receivable Collections How to Get LatePaying Customers To Pay On Time SWOT Analysis How to Avoid the Really Big Mistakes Financial Mastery for the Career Teacher |
Related Forum Posts
Share this article with your friends. Fund someone's dream.
Leave a comment below or share on the left and you'll help support entrepreneurs in Africa through our partnership with Kiva. Over $50,000 raised and counting - Please keep sharing! Learn more.
Get advice & tips from famous business
owners, new articles by entrepreneur
experts, my latest website updates, &
special sneak peaks at what's to come!
The Importance of Master Data Management (MDM)
The OLD Way of Advertising, May Not be so OLD
Email us your ideas on how to make our
website more valuable! Thank you Sharon
from Toronto Salsa Lessons / Classes for
your suggestions to make the newsletter
look like the website and profile younger
entrepreneurs like Jennifer Lopez.



