Get your minds out of the gutters! My mom reads these posts!
Iāve been avoiding this in my blog for some time, but Iāve broken down and decided to write about it. The āCā words Iām talking about are Commission and Compensation. A few weeks ago, a colleague and I were commiserating about the topic. Seems we both are always asked about, āWhatās the best commission plan, how should I pay my sales people, should I look at a 70/30 split, what about 100% commissionā and on and on and…… We know people want answers and help, but itās one of those topics where the only reasonable answer to a question is āIt depends.ā
Compensation and Commission issues are very difficult, and having a reasonable discussion can only be based on specifics of a situation, the companyās goals, strategies, the behaviors you want to drive. There can be many ārightā answers, but there can be an overwhelming number of tragically āwrongā answers—not the oneās that put you out of business, but those that donāt help you accomplish what you want to accomplish, are just plain dull, or require a lawyer to interpret.
But every time someone poses questions involving the āCā words, I have to stop them and say, āBefore I can begin to answer that, letās start at the beginning.ā
A part of the discussion that always tends to be left out is the business management or āaffordabilityā side of the compensation and commission discussion. Without first discussing affordability, discussions about the āCā words are meaningless, they have no context.
Let me back up. Iāve been CEO, COO, GM of several companies or divisions of large organizations. In those organizations, Iāve had R&D, Engineering, Manufacturing, and a whole lot of other functions reporting to me. Conversations with many of those executives start at an interesting point—different from my conversations with many sales executives. The conversations always address the concepts of āaffordability.ā Stated differently, what are the investment or spending constraints that we have in ādesigning the solution.ā
So I might be talking with a design engineer, and she has a ādesign budgetā in mind. That is, āhow do we develop a new product and fit within these budgetary constraints–both the expense of designing the product, and of the component parts themselves.ā Conversations are something like, āWe can afford to invest this much in GUI design, we can afford to invest this much in the core technology, we can afford to invest this much in testing.ā Likewise manufacturing talks in the same way, āWhat is the target budget for this product? Whatās the component cost? (Which produces those interesting conversations sale has with procurement) and so forth.
So the notion of designing and building a product have the concept of affordability as a constraint built into it how they design a solution. Products are designed to fit a certain design budget, manufacturing has to fit a certain manufacturing budget, and so forth.
So we need to think about the notion of affordability in designing our compensation systems within sales. Not only the overall sales budget, but when we look at the āCā words, we have to look at: āWhat can I afford to spend on a sales person, at plan?ā
This is really the jumping off point for any discussion around compensation and commission. If we donāt establish a ābudgetā for the sales person (or organization), we have no ability to reasonably control our costs.
So the question, āWhat can I afford to spend on a sales person, at plan?ā or āWhatās the value of a sales person to me, at plan?ā forms the constraints for how we design our compensation plans. Everything fits within that budget. So, if the answer is, āA sales person, at plan, is worth $100K to me, ā or āI can only afford $100K at plan,ā then I have to design the compensation and commission plan to fit those constraints.
Thereās lots of stuff that goes into answering that question, internal affordability, funding, comps with similar industries and other things. There are also different ways of looking at it, for example, fully burdened and so forth. so answering that base question is not easy. But it is the key question that has to be answered in order to build a compensation/commission system that enables us to drive the behaviors we want, lets us achieve our goals, and is affordable.
Once you answer that base question, then the rest of the design, is actually pretty easy. All you have to do is answer, āHow do I want to pay that out?ā This is where you look at various combinations of base, commission, bonus, SPIFās, whatever. All of them, mixed together, at plan have to hit your budget number.
You design those components based on the behaviors, priorities, and so forth that you want to drive. This is where most conversations about compensation and commission start, and the right answer is always, āIt depends.ā But the one thing that is inviolable, is the budget for on target performance. The design has to hit that number. If it doesnāt, youāve a bad–possibly tragically unaffordable design.
Sure, there are lots of other things to look at—how do we model/compensate underperformance, how do we model/compensate over performance, and so forth. We have to look at these in developing the compensation and commission plans. Again, all of these are constrained by the fundamental question, āWhatās a sales person worth to me, at plan?ā