VP of Sales Compensation Plan

VP of Sales Compensation Plan

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Great, you’ve hired your VP Sales. Now it’s important to know how to?pay?this critical role. I don’t think it’s necessarily as nuanced and interesting a topic as how to pay and scale the sales team itself, or how to hire for this role.

But incentives are critical, and the VP Sales will likely be the Seemingly Most Expensive hire you ever make.?That’s stressful. So let me tell you what I did and learned. The 50/50/25+ plan. And as you can see if you look at?the Boston Strategy Group chart at the right , as usual, it’s just a little different from The Ordinary way to go.?Not a lot different, but meaningfully so.

The 50/50/25+ Plan.

Here’s what I learned and knew before I figured out the 50/50/25+ plan:

No best efforts cr*p.?Even if you hire a VP Sales very early, there has to be a clear quota and plan for him or her to hit.?No best efforts stuff. I know it’s teamwork in a start-up. But sales is sales.

In a start-up, the VP Sales has to also be aligned to costs, not just revenue.?It’s natural for a VP Sales not to care about costs.?Just to want a budget and a top-line number to meet. But costs are critical when you’re adding sales reps and then a VP Sales ahead of profitability.?Sales just feels sooo expensive early on.

The VP Sales has to somehow be accretive.??This seems almost impossible unless you give her a big quota, which as we’ve discussed, doesn’t scale.?So how can this big salary not just be a big drain on limited capital? How can the VP Sales not be a “tax”, at least from a financial plan perspective?

The Good VP Sales have large OTE (On-Target Earnings) Expectations.?You can’t get a great VP Sales for a nominal $1X0k salary.?You can get a crummy one, however.

Many candidates will tell you they want a guaranteed draw for 6+ months.?They’re leaving something good for something risky.?So guarantee me my full bonus for 6+ months until I’ve built up a big enough pipeline to close enough revenue to hit my number.?Sounds fair — on the surface.

It’s tough.?And I got most of this wrong before I got it right.

So here’s what I figured out, for us, and it worked well.?It’s just one way to go:

A High OTE is No Big Deal — if your VP Sales Hits Your Number.

So don’t sweat it.?Instead, align it. Do you really care if the OTE is $300k, or heck even $500k, if the VP Sales brings in $Xm more revenue than you expected??Of course you don’t … and you don’t pay it if it doesn’t happen … plus bonuses “vest” over the course of the year …

So we paid 50/50/25+, which means:

50% of OTE paid as base salary.?No draw (i.e., no guaranteed bonus for X months until you scale).


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50% of OTE paid as a bonus, with the target being the overall company revenue number for the year.?Top-line revenue, inclusive of churn, inclusive of upsells and self-service, net of everything.?The same number you and everyone else in the company is trying to hit. A number that’s hard to hit, but that you have say 50-60% confidence you can hit.

25% or more upside for exceeding that plan.?Basically, we paid our VP Sales X% of every single dollar after we hit the plan for the year out.?That % has to go down over time, but the basic idea was if the Stretch Plan was hit (Stretch for us = plan that I had a 25% confidence in hitting), then there would be a 25% boost on top of the OTE.?If the Stretch Plan was exceeded, the comp goes up from there. No cap.

It was that simple.?And what it meant was, like the sales rep comp plan, if the VP Sales killed it — the money would follow.?And if he didn’t, it didn’t, and the cost wasn’t that stressful. And since our Real VP Sales killed it, he made good money, was highly accretive, and we got to cash-flow positive at $4m in ARR even paying our VP Sales well and paying our sales reps 25% of the deal size.

A few thoughts on the plan:

Ideally, don’t do a guaranteed draw.?I know it seems to make sense.?But the thing is, if you pay your VP Sales in full on hitting the plan, it shouldn’t matter if that gratification is delayed a few months, so long as the real OTE is high.?A draw actually can be an excuse for laziness. It sucks some of the hunger out. And lets the candidate blame others for their own issues. {Yes, I know some will disagree and this is controversial.?Just my view.} If you do end doing a draw, keep it short (e.g., one quarter) and make sure the VP Sales have to “make it up” in sales quota payments by the year-end.

But do pay well when they kill it — against a sane plan.?And please don’t cap the upside.?That’s the trade-off.?No draw, no huge salary for just showing up.?But you have to pay very well when a realistic plan is hit (not a ridiculous one), and you have to pay?very, very?well when you exceed it.?This will appeal to a great VP Sales on the way up.?It won’t appeal to a mediocre one or one on the way down.

Pay bonuses out monthly, even if the goals are quarterly.?This is the flip side of the no guaranteed draw.?No delayed gratification here. It’s hard enough to come into something new as VP Sales and make magic happen.?Once it does — pay now. Not later. Don’t make your VP worry her quarterly bonus might not come, or be subject to vagaries.??

Pay it out monthly, even if it’s a bit of a guesstimate, and true it up later.?Many sales leaders have some scar tissue about not being paid a bonus or two. Just pay ’em.?Be better than that, and build trust and loyalty back.

In the beginning, consider bonuses and goals that match the overall company ARR goals — not just net new bookings.??My VP Sales and I both worked toward the same goal as everyone else in the company — the end-of-the-year revenue goal.?EchoSign has a self-service component, and the Client Success team managed churn, and upsells were split between Sales and Client Success.?You could make an argument the VP Sales should only be responsible for net new revenue from sales. And that may be the way to go later. But until you are at $Xm in sales, I say everyone should have the same revenue goal where practical.?One overall revenue goal for the founders and VPs and everyone. It also incents the VP Sales to work with the other functional areas around post-signature revenue (support, product, client success, etc.).

Good luck!?I think anything works well here, as long as you align interests, and the plan is achievable.

Charlie Bateman

Vice President || 20 years in revenue, management, coaching, SaaS/Tech, and raising 3 daughters.

7 个月

Thoughts on paying a VP Sales a commission, similar to an AE, if they have to take over deals?

回复
Bryan Plaster

Founder @ AI Agent Life at AI{PL} | Intelligage | Responsible, Ethical, Sustainable AI Strategy

1 年

Love it Jason M. Lemkin. Definitely not capping the upside in early stage. Accelerate it!

The plan sounds good. But my question is how long will this plan last? Is it more apt for start-ups or for brown companies as well.

Kyle French

SaaS VP Sales/Head of Revenue, from $500k to $120mm. Air Force pilot/veteran. MEDDPICC Certified, data driven. Expert at Build/Train/Lead for teams that close enterprise deals. Pavilion member/CRO School grad.

1 年

Paying bonuses monthly is a great way to make closers really, really happy… Im also shocked at how complicated some companies make their commission structure. Three pages? Crazy.

CHESTER SWANSON SR.

Next Trend Realty LLC./wwwHar.com/Chester-Swanson/agent_cbswan

1 年

Well Said.

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