To ensure sales reps focus on long-term value (LTV), structure compensation to reward customer success. Pay half the commission on contract signing and the other half only when the customer hits a predefined activation metric, known as the Leading Indicator of Retention (LIR). This forces reps to sell to right-fit customers.
By fixing the upfront cash collection, the business generates enough surplus to potentially double sales commissions from $50 to $100 per deal. This elevated pay structure attracts a completely different caliber of salesperson—"an order of magnitude better"—who can close more deals per day, dramatically accelerating growth without adding financial risk.
To powerfully reinforce desired behaviors, compensation plans must connect the reward as closely in time as possible to the sales activity. This "proximity principle" is more effective than distant, larger payouts because it creates a clear and immediate link between action and incentive, even if the initial payout is smaller.
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.
Google's Ads team structured its sales force into three specialized units. The acquisition team was paid on getting a customer to start, the onboarding team on setup success, and the account management team on growing spend beyond a predicted baseline. This aligns incentives with each stage of the customer's consumption journey.
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.
Sales leaders should instill a long-game mindset, focusing on creating lifetime customers and sustainable revenue streams rather than just hitting immediate targets. This involves planting seeds that will generate revenue for years, not just months.
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.
Unlike perpetual or even subscription models, consumption-based compensation holds sales reps directly responsible for the customer's ongoing product usage. Reps are on the hook to ensure credits are "burned down," effectively merging the roles of sales and customer success and forcing a continuous selling motion.
C-suites and shareholders are increasingly focused on the long-term profitability of customer relationships. ABM programs should be measured by their ability to increase customer LTV, which reflects success in retention, cross-selling, and building "customers for life," not just closing the next deal.
Google's new business reps were compensated on the first three months of a new customer's spend, despite handing them off immediately after the initial sign-up. This incentivized them to find high-potential customers who would derive significant value from the product, rather than just securing a large upfront commitment.