Is Your Commission Plan a Problem?

Is Your Commission Plan a Problem?

Want to create and sustain a top-performing sales team and get the steady growth you need for your business?

Rethink the relationship your sales team has with the money you pay them for what they do. Conventional commission plans are at the heart of a problem that’s shockingly widespread in sales organizations today: underperforming salespeople remain employed far too long the the same workplace. Even worse: there remains a stubborn unwillingness to do anything about it.

Let’s look at how this happens, the reasons why it remains a problem, and how you can solve it.

1) HOW THIS HAPPENS

An accountability program that relies on paying people commissions as its core reward is a sure-fire way of obtaining subpar performance. Salespeople aren’t meant to be paid for just showing up and doing adequate work: they’re meant to perform consistently at a top level so your business can grow steadily.

That’s what the money is for (or is supposed to be for).

So why then do so many business leaders instead just settle for subpar performance, year after year?

To answer that question, look at what happens in a typical company. Sales targets are set annually and half the team will hit those targets.

Half. That’s it. While 10% will be too new to measure effectively, the remaining 40% will continually miss their quota, despite having every opportunity to accomplish their goal.

Think about that last point for a moment: in a typical sales organization today, four in ten of your people aren’t doing what you hired them to do. And you keep rewarding them for this!

No business out there today would tolerate that kind of track record from their accounting department (can you imagine 40% of invoices not getting paid?) So why does sales get a pass?

2) WHY THIS REMAINS A PROBLEM

Here are highlights of the resistance I see from companies who know they have a sales performance problem but stay stubbornly wedded to settling for the status quo:

  • “The chronic non-performers are paid less, so they are not costing as much to keep on payroll.”
  • “It’s better to have a marginal performer covering a key territory than to have it left open to the competition.”
  • “It’s best to leave them alone and let them quit on their own rather than fire them because its costs less.”
  • “This is normal, and you can never have a team accomplishing 100% of their goals.”

All of these are excuses that keep sales leaders from achieving maximum revenue acceleration from their team. It treats salespeople as cost centers, rather than revenue centers. It also overlooks the fact that when poor performers are retained, your top performers leave because they don’t like to be part of a mediocre organization.

Unless you put individual accountability at the core of your relationship between your business and your sales teams, you risk being stuck in this endless cycle of subpar performance and a diet of excuses to justify that level of activity (or inactivity). Greater accountability hinges on creating a new relationship between performance expectations and financial compensation.

3) HOW YOU CAN SOLVE IT

The best companies define and refine performance metrics beyond quota performance, not commissions. 

I cover this in a case study in Chapter 1 of my book, Nonstop Sales Boom. In essence: the company in the review was successful in creating a team of supercharged sellers, but only after they began involving their team members in setting tightly managed targets and providing training where needed. Poor performers were either coached up or out quickly.

This is a repeatable approach that any business can implement. Therefore, tackle this problem once and for all using a three-step approach that I call Start High, Reach Higher, Stay Accountable.

Here’s how it works. 

START HIGH: Pay your team a high base salary. Make the salary the same as the on-target earnings would have been with their old base-plus-commission model.

REACH HIGHER: Hitting targets are now the baseline minimum of continued employment in your sales department. Communicate this clearly and with a contract. Each target can be different depending on the territory, the tenure of the sales reps and the product mix. Add an accelerator commission for people who overachieve.

STAY ACCOUNTABLE: Measure leading and lagging KPI’s and communicate to the team weekly where they are at using a sales dashboard. Complement this with weekly coaching and hold each team member to account for reaching their individual sales goals. As the year progresses, make decisions about who stays and who goes based on their willingness to do the work required to hit the goals, and their ability to hit their goals. Do not keep non-performers in place for any longer than five successive quarters.

DO IT NOW

Stop settling for status quo, subpar performance. Look carefully at your commission plan and ask yourself whether it’s built on assumptions that reward achieving minimum performance, or recognize and encourage top results from your sales team quarter after quarter, year after year.


要查看或添加评论,请登录

Colleen Francis的更多文章

  • Unstoppable Coaching - The Rule of 3s

    Unstoppable Coaching - The Rule of 3s

    “If you aim at nothing, you will hit it every time.” —Zig Ziglar All sellers in your organization—from the top to the…

    1 条评论
  • Find the source - Know the urgency

    Find the source - Know the urgency

    “Turn a situation or problem upside down. Look at it backward.

  • Retaining Your Customer Isn’t an Entitlement

    Retaining Your Customer Isn’t an Entitlement

    “My worst fear in business is about losing my best, most profitable, most loyal customer…” That’s a common fear:…

    2 条评论
  • Process - not Product. A Case Study in Effective Prospecting

    Process - not Product. A Case Study in Effective Prospecting

    A big shift in the marketplace today is affecting the way you prospect with new potential customers and how you…

    3 条评论
  • Handling Sales Slumps: Let Obstacles be your Teacher

    Handling Sales Slumps: Let Obstacles be your Teacher

    Downturns happen to everyone in sales. But when they do, there’s a right way and a wrong way to respond.

    1 条评论
  • Social Media: From Time Sink to Power Tool

    Social Media: From Time Sink to Power Tool

    As a sales leader, you’re fiercely vigilant about where you spend your time daily, so it’s tempting to be wary of…

  • You Don’t Just "Build" a Sales Pipeline

    You Don’t Just "Build" a Sales Pipeline

    The best predictor of consistent success in sales is determined by the continued health of your sales pipeline. It’s a…

    3 条评论
  • The Science of Closing in Sales

    The Science of Closing in Sales

    “Science is a way of thinking much more than it is a body of knowledge.” —Carl Sagan In sales, there is art and science…

    7 条评论
  • How to Fill the Vacuum of Uncertainty

    How to Fill the Vacuum of Uncertainty

    It sounds daunting: filling the vacuum of uncertainty. Because it is.

    2 条评论
  • How AI fits into your prospecting now

    How AI fits into your prospecting now

    “The future is already here, it’s just not evenly distributed.” —William Gibson Forward-thinking sales professionals…

    2 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了