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Greetings!
Some obsolescence is inevitable. Like your first cell
phone that was as big and heavy as a brick. You
remember, it was the one that didn’t have a display
screen, couldn’t take pictures, or connect you to the
worldwide web. Yep, it's obsolete. Was its
obsolescence planned to get you to spend more
money or did someone just figure out how to make a
better mousetrap? This month’s article addresses a
similar question in the context of the ever-changing
sales compensation plan. Is it really a diabolical plot
to cut pay levels and save money? Before you
answer that question, first read the article and then
decide.
And, yes, I am interested to hear from you. Let me
know if you found this month’s article to be of value
or if you have any suggestions for future newsletter
topics.
Best regards,
J. Mark Davis Managing Principal Valitus
Group, Inc.
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by J. Mark Davis
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Why the Sales Compensation Plan Must Change
Why is it that sales compensation plans change
so frequently? I’ve heard countless sales reps
suggest that it’s because they finally figured out how
to make money on the old plan, so management
changes it in order to reduce their pay. In fact, too
often the sales force will suspect that any sales
compensation redesign effort is an attempt to reduce
costs. However, in my sixteen years of helping
companies design and implement sales compensation
plans, I’ve had only one client organization tell me
the primary objective was one of cost reduction.
In my experience, even the best sales incentive plan
will eventually become obsolete. I took a moment to
look up the word “obsolescence”. Here are a couple
of paraphrased definitions: “being in the process
of passing out of use or usefulness; becoming
obsolete (The American Heritage Dictionary of
the English Language)" and “a loss in the utility or
value of property that results over time from intrinsic
limitations or external circumstances
(Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of Law)." Are we
really talking about planned obsolescence?
The answer is no. Rather than reflecting a sinister
plot to cut pay, the driving forces behind a sales
comp plan change are typically about those intrinsic
limitations and external circumstances that simply
reflect the dynamic nature of business.
The Real Drivers of Sales Compensation Plan
Change
Here’s a list of some the primary drivers of sales
compensation change, each provided with a case
example of how I’ve seen this play out. I’ve often
said that the sales compensation plan is the caboose,
not the engine. This short list represents issues
which are upstream from the sales compensation plan
itself. These all reflect potential disconnects to
which you should first look when the effectiveness of
the sales force is waning.
- Business objectives – Changes in a
company’s business objectives will often set in motion
a series of subsequent changes in how the sales
force is organized, deployed, and rewarded.
Case example: Several years
ago I consulted for a client that had recently
changed its business strategy. They were
shifting away from their historic core business of
selling telecommunications equipment (with declining
margins) to providing telecommunications software
(with much higher margins) to run on that old
equipment. Did the sales compensation plan need to
change to reflect their new product mix, channels,
roles, and method of accounting for services revenue
instead of product revenue? Absolutely!
- Go-to-market strategy – Even
without a change in business objectives, the go-to-
market strategy may change. By go-to-market
strategy, I’m talking about the means by which a
company takes its offering to market. It entails the
definition of the target market segments as well as
the approach by which a company will most
effectively reach those markets (e.g., the channels
of distribution, sales organization structure,
deployment model, and the definition of sales and
sales support roles).
Case
example: A
business services client needed to improve the
effectiveness of its sales organization. The
fundamental business objectives hadn’t changed, but
they realized that the old way of going to market
through separate vertical market sales organizations
meant they were leaving money on the table. The
silo sales force approach failed to capitalize on the
synergies of their various sales resources who were
selling many of the same products, through a similar
sales process, to similar functional buyers. In this
case, organization structure and role definition were
the real upstream change drivers. However, once
those issues were resolved, the sales compensation
plan had to fall in line.
- Customer buying preferences –
When customers change the way they prefer to buy
from you, assuming it’s a reasonable and/or
unavoidable change, always ask if the current selling
roles and the way they’re rewarded support that new
customer buying process.
Case
example: I once worked with a consumer
electronics company that sold into the retail
channel. A number of their largest key accounts
indicated that the vendor’s account managers were
spending too much time on merchandising (“fluff and
buff”) activities and not enough time on things they
really valued, such as training the retail floor sales
staff and developing co-marketing strategies to grow
the retailers’ (and vendor’s) business. As a result,
the vendor created a new merchandising specialist
role to focus on the “fluff and buff”. This allowed the
account managers to spend more time on higher
value-adding (in their customers’ eyes) activities,
further cementing their dominant position in the
market. In this case, the sales compensation plan
changed to reflect the account managers’ more
strategic role in growing key account
relationships.
- Role definition – How (and
whether) roles are defined is one of the most critical
enablers of sales compensation effectiveness. It’s
only when a selling role is clearly defined that a truly
compelling and targeted sales incentive plan can be
constructed. And, to the extent any of the
aforementioned drivers have changed how you define
your selling roles, the sales compensation plan will
likely need to change too.
Case
example: In pursuing a new and attractive
retail channel, a consumer products company had
departed from its roots that had enabled it to grow
to international prominence as a trusted brand. With
management’s new focus on their retail aspirations,
the account managers dedicated to the core
business became complacent in managing their
existing account base. Management realized in
hindsight that they needed to get back to basics by
more aggressively defending and growing their core
channel. This meant a diligent new business
development effort that looked considerably different
from the maintenance/order taking selling role into
which most account managers had lapsed.
Compounding the complacence of the sales force, the
old incentive plan didn’t require new account selling,
nor did it differentiate between revenue from existing
versus new accounts. As a result, the new business
development imperative had to become very
prominent in the new sales compensation plan.
- Supporting
systems/infrastructure – Occasionally, supporting
IT systems prevent a company from measuring
performance in ways that are most directly aligned
with its business objectives. IT’s performance
measurement capabilities (or lack thereof) often
surface as a stumbling block in the sales
compensation design process, which is why a
stakeholder from IT often participates in the
incentive plan design effort.
Case
example: The sales executives of a
transportation services company had long talked
about the profitability of each account they served
as well as the margins on each shipment they made.
However, the IT systems historically hadn’t allowed
them to measure profitability below an aggregate
team level. When upgrades to their IT capabilities
enabled them to more accurately measure profitability
for an individual sales person, the sales compensation
plan was changed to reflect the profit imperative that
had long been part of their culture and day-to-day
sales efforts.
- The old plan is no longer working –
For any number of reasons and absent the
aforementioned issues, sometimes the old tried and
true sales compensation plan ceases to work
effectively. This is yet another reason that
continued monitoring of performance results relative
to sales force and sales compensation plan objectives
is so important (see my two-part article on
evaluating incentive plan performance, entitled: Are You
Getting the Most out of Your Sales Compensation
Plan?).
Case example: A
computer peripherals client had become addicted to
sales contests. The problem was so pervasive that
salespeople would coast at the beginning of the
month until a few days later, as expected, that
month’s contest was announced. The core sales
compensation plan had been supplanted by the
contest du jour. To fix the problem, the sales
compensation plan had to be redesigned to focus on
what the contests were trying to incent in the first
place: sales volume, product mix, and price
realization. With that done, they began the long
change management process of weaning the sales
force off of an over-reliance on contests.
Take a Good, Hard Look
Do you see your organization in any of these case
examples? Are you resisting the notion that the sales
compensation plan is a dynamic tool that must
change to remain current with your evolving
business? You might be wondering, “How often
should the sales compensation plan change?” You
should evaluate the need to change the plan on an
annual basis. With a sound sales compensation plan
in place and without a significant environmental
change, it will often need only a tweak as opposed to
a major overhaul. At the same time, however, avoid
mid-year plan changes unless it’s so broken that the
business or employee morale is suffering as a result.
Also, maintain a healthy perspective on the role of
sales compensation. Don’t expect the sales
compensation plan to define your business strategy.
At the same time, however, don’t wait too long after
some of these upstream changes take effect to
evaluate needed changes in the sales comp plan. In
my experience, changes to the sales compensation
plan often lag too far behind changes in these areas,
creating a real disconnect. Remember, sales
compensation is the caboose that needs to follow the
strategic engine driving your business.
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