Delaying compensation plans until after the fiscal year begins creates a vacuum where salespeople are unsure how to behave. This uncertainty paralyzes productivity and demotivates the team, wasting the energy generated by the sales kickoff (SKO).
In a project-based company, salespeople are heroes for closing large, complex, custom projects. This incentive structure is directly opposed to a product model that requires standardization. The transition to product will fail unless sales compensation and culture are realigned to favor standard product sales.
A one-size-fits-all sales role fails in consumption models. Success requires segmenting the team into specialized roles—new business acquisition, customer onboarding, and account management—each with distinct incentives aligned to their specific function, from initial sign-up to value realization and expansion.
While bonuses tied to revenue incentivize employees to perform specific tasks, they are purely transactional. Granting stock options makes team members think holistically about the entire business's long-term health, from strategic opportunities to small cost savings, creating true psychological ownership.
Don't hire more reps until your current team hits its productivity target (e.g., generating 3x their OTE). Scaling headcount before proving the unit economics of your sales motion is a recipe for inefficient growth, missed forecasts, and a bloated cost structure.
Don't finalize a comp plan in an executive silo. Share the draft with trusted, top-performing reps and ask them to break it. They will immediately spot loopholes and unintended incentives, allowing you to create a more robust plan that drives the right behaviors from day one.
Salespeople's biggest frustration with comp plans is being held accountable for outcomes they can't directly influence. This perceived unfairness is a primary driver of attrition, making it critical to align incentives strictly with a seller's direct responsibilities and control.
Annual plans can't predict every business need, like a new product launch or acquisition. A pre-approved budget for discretionary incentives (SPIFs) allows sales leaders to quickly motivate reps toward new, unforeseen priorities without having to disrupt the core compensation plan mid-year.
Sales compensation is the most powerful lever for changing a sales team's behavior quickly. More than training or directives, incentives tell reps what they are supposed to do and why, directly shaping their daily actions and strategic focus.
Combat the tendency for teams to ease into the new year by anchoring them around what must be completed in the first month. This creates a "fast start," builds early conviction in the annual plan, and prevents playing catch-up in February and March.
To handle 'bluebird' deals without demotivating reps, avoid hard caps. Instead, implement a policy where commissions exceeding a high threshold (e.g., 400% of variable pay) are 'subject to review.' This protects the company from unearned windfalls while maintaining unlimited potential for legitimate efforts.