The psychology of compensation:  How to keep reps motivated

revpartners guest blog quotapath

This is a guest post on how to keep reps motivated written by RevPartners, a management and consulting firm that designs and executes revenue engines to supercharge their customers’ growth with services such as HubSpot Onboarding, RevOps as Service, and SEO/PPC. The RevPartners team orchestrates, optimizes, and reports on their client’s marketing, sales, and operations processes through automation and tools. RevPartners’ mission is to democratize revenue operations by making it accessible, consumable, and actionable in HubSpot.

In the 2011 film Margin Call, a tense scene takes place toward the end when a high-ranking manager tells the traders “a decision has been made to unwind a considerable portion of the firm’s holdings in several key asset classes.”  

Get ready for a fire sale.

That particular day was going to be the last day of employment for all of the traders. On top of that, they were tasked with selling off as much as they could, at whatever price they could, to whomever they could. (The manager even mentioned their mothers as an option.)

If they could sell off 93% of the assets they were responsible for, they would receive a $1.4M bonus. If they couldn’t, they would miss their bonus and be blocklisted from getting another trading job anywhere for their participation in the selling of damaged assets with no swaps.  

Although this is an extreme example the likes of which 99.999% of salespeople will never experience, the scene captures how powerful of a tool motivation can play in the field of sales.  

With that, let’s dive into exactly what motivates salespeople, whether it be a title, money, or just to deliver a good product to other people, and how companies should respond.

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Types of motivation

Two types of motivation exist across sales, sports, academics, and really anything else:  extrinsic and intrinsic.

Extrinsic

If a person is extrinsically motivated, then they primarily value external sources or outside influences.  When a salesperson works harder because they know the result is a higher commission rate, they take an action, in large part, because they want to achieve a particular outcome.  This also includes taking action to avoid negative outcomes.  

Intrinsic

As a counter, when someone is driven by inherent satisfaction, enjoyment, or personal interest, they are said to be intrinsically motivated. For example, when an athlete plays a sport simply because they love the game, they take action to fulfill an internal desire.  Any outside, tangible benefits that are received would simply be considered a bonus.

How to keep reps motivated in Sales

Extrinsic vs. intrinsic motivation

The world of sales is a great example of how both types of motivation often exist side-by-side and produce varying results depending on how they are handled.

Extrinsic

When salespeople are extrinsically motivated, they are motivated by external factors such as monetary rewards, commissions, bonuses, and recognition from peers or superiors. The upside of this is that it will usually lead to a focus on achieving sales targets and closing more deals, especially when you tie in accelerators in your compensation plan to reward overperformance.

On the flip side, although extrinsic motivation can be effective in driving short-term performance, it may not necessarily lead to long-term job satisfaction when the inevitable slow month or bad quarter arises.

Intrinsic

According to a survey, most salespeople are actually intrinsically motivated to succeed at work.  These are people who are driven by internal factors such as personal interest, passion for the product or service, and a sense of accomplishment from closing deals.  The upside here is that even when a certain commission threshold is not reached, the salesperson is still motivated to take on new challenges and continue improving.

Companies can best support these individuals by providing opportunities for skill development, recognition, and a positive work environment that promotes a sense of purpose and accomplishment.

The vast majority of salespeople are neither fully intrinsically nor extrinsically motivated, but rather some combination of the two.  Also, some salespeople also cite helping the customer at all costs, even putting them above company and personal interests, as their chief desire.  These people are said to be “altruistically motivated”.

Create Compensation Plans with confidence

RevOps, sales leaders, and finance teams use our free tool to ensure reps’ on-target earnings and quotas line up with industry standards. Customize plans with accelerators, bonuses, and more, by adjusting 9 variables.

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Individual vs. team compensation

In the scene from Margin Call referenced earlier, the senior manager also states that beyond the individual goal of selling off 93% of the assets in their personal portfolios, if the team as a whole sold off 93%, then each trader would gain an additional $1.3M one-off bonus. This highlights the fact that in sales, there are both individual and team compensation plans.

Individual-based compensation systems

When an organization relies on individual-based compensation systems, salespeople have a high level of autonomy and control over their own performance and earnings, as their compensation is directly tied to their individual efforts and results. This can help foster healthy competition and drive team members to excel and outperform their peers.

The downside is that when this is taken too far it can lead to behaviors such as undermining colleagues and creating a toxic work environment.  Also, when compensation is solely based on individual performance, there will naturally be less collaboration (e.g. hoarding leads).

Team-based compensation systems

This commission structure tends to promote collaboration, knowledge sharing, and mutual support among sales team members as they work together and support each other in reaching targets.  

The downsides here are fairly obvious as some sales team members may rely on the efforts of others and not pull their weight, leading to free-riding behavior. Also, high-performing salespeople may feel demotivated if their efforts are not directly rewarded and recognized in a team-based compensation system, as their individual contributions may be diluted.

The role of perceived equity

In psychology, there is a concept known as the “equity theory” which suggests that individuals compare their inputs (e.g., effort, skills, experience) and outcomes (e.g., compensation, rewards) in relation to those of others to assess whether they are being treated fairly in the workplace.

If a salesperson’s perception is that their compensation is fair and equitable, it can positively impact their motivation, engagement, and job satisfaction, leading to increased performance and effort in their sales role.  On the other hand, if a salesperson perceives that their compensation is unfair or inequitable compared to their efforts and contributions, it can negatively impact their motivation, leading to decreased performance, job dissatisfaction, and potentially even turnover.

Companies can mitigate problems in this area by emphasizing transparent and clear communication about compensation plans, providing regular recognition and rewards to salespeople who meet or exceed performance expectations, and regularly evaluating and adjusting compensation plans to ensure they are perceived as fair and equitable.

Different types of compensation structures

One of the biggest motivational differentiators is sales compensation structures.

Commission-based compensation

This arrangement, in which compensation is directly tied to performance, provides high motivation for salespeople to maximize sales, and tends to attract and retain highly motivated salespeople who thrive on financial incentives, a sense of autonomy and control over earnings.

On the negative side, it can lead to a “feast or famine” mindset, resulting in salespeople focusing solely on high-commission products or customers.  It may also create a hyper-competitive environment, leading to potential conflicts and unhealthy competition.

Salary-based compensation

When salespeople receive a fixed salary regardless of their sales performance, it will often promote a more collaborative and team-oriented sales environment, as they are not solely focused on individual commissions.  It may also encourage a long-term perspective and relationship-building with customers, as salespeople are not solely driven by immediate sales results.

As for the bad, it will often lead to complacency or lack of motivation as there may be no financial incentives for exceeding performance expectations. 

Summing it up 

Everyone in the sales field wants to do a good job, just not always for the same reason…

  • Some are motivated by money and some by an internal drive for daily improvement.
  • Some enjoy competing against peers in a healthy way, and some would rather collaborate on everything.  
  • Some are only willing to put forth effort if they feel everyone is being rewarded in the same exact proportion.  
  • Some desire to be rewarded based solely on wins and losses, and some want a guaranteed income regardless.

In the end, companies need to structure their plans as fairly as possible (Hello, QuotaPath!) and  make every effort to adjust to the individual needs and motivational preferences of their team members if they want to achieve long-lasting success.  

To learn more about RevPartners, visit revpartners.io.

What is the standard software sales commission percentage?

Standard SaaS commission rate blue background

This blog includes the most commonly used software sales commission percentage with multiple compensation plan templates to explore for your own use.

The “Great Resignation,” a nickname for the millions of employees who voluntarily left their jobs in 2021 and 2022, has shifted. 

Now, we sit amid a “Great Restructuring,” as tech layoffs continue to mount. In March 2023, for instance, Layoffs.fyi tracked another 30,000 layoffs from 79 tech companies with four days left in the month.

As these layoffs have piled, so have chatters of lower on-target earnings for SaaS sales reps.

However, in our experience partnering with hundreds of growing SaaS companies, we haven’t noticed major changes to compensation packages or with the standard software sales commission percentage.

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What is the standard software sales commission percentage?

We define the standard software commission percentage as the amount of money a software company pays its salespeople for each sale they make.

This percentage often varies depending on the type of software, product, size of the company, and role. But in general, the standard software commission percentage is 10% for account executives.

As such, that’s why you will see most of our commission calculators begin with a 10% rate, or a base rate of 10%

Below we look into some of the factors that can impact your software sales commission percentage.

The type of software and subscription

The type of software sold can affect the commission rate. For example, software that is sold on a monthly subscription basis, such as cloud-based software, typically has a lower commission rate than software that is sold on an annual basis.

This is because monthly subscriptions have a higher probability of churning since they aren’t committed to 12-month terms. As such, a company might pay a lower commission rate for monthly subs and a higher one on annual ones to encourage reps to sell the latter.

The size of the company

Additionally, the size of the company can also affect the commission rate. Larger companies typically have lower commission rates than smaller companies. That’s because larger companies have more resources going into the deal which increases the cost of the deal. Think marketing, research and development, sales engineering, and more. For smaller-stage companies, reps typically earn a higher rate because companies aren’t spending quite as much to win deals.

Role of salesperson

If your AE earns 10% on each deal they bring in, would you expect the sales development rep to earn the same once the deal closes? We hope not. Paying that much would impact your gross profit margin and effective rate. 

As such, SDRs typically have a lower commission rate than salespeople who are responsible for closing deals. For instance, our SDR compensation plan template that pays the SDR a percentage on Closed/Won deals that began as leads generated by the SDR pays 4%. 

Account managers also typically receive a lower commission rate on upsells and renewals, such as 5%.

However, early signs of an AM commission rate shift have begun unfolding in 2023, and with good reason.

Since the venture capital world has changed over the last 20 months, now investors are looking for risk-free companies. And one of the best business metrics that indicate a healthy company includes gross revenue retention (GRR). So if, you’re focused on GRR, consider increasing the software sales commission percentage on renewals and upsells. 

Product lines

The products sold can also affect the commission rate. Products that are high-value, such as enterprise software, typically have a higher commission rate than products that are low-value, such as consumer software. This is because high-value products are more likely to generate a significant amount of revenue for the company, which means that the company is willing to pay a higher commission rate to salespeople who are able to generate sales.

You might also see compensation plan examples that pay lower commission rates on products that do not generate as much revenue for the company, or products that the company plans on sunsetting. We recommend this tactic when looking to motivate your reps to sell more lucrative offerings. 

Create Compensation Plans with confidence

RevOps, sales leaders, and finance teams use our free tool to ensure reps’ on-target earnings and quotas line up with industry standards. Customize plans with accelerators, bonuses, and more, by adjusting 9 variables.

Build a Comp Plan

Highest commission rates and lowest

In general, the highest SaaS commission rates you’ll see are around 20%. That’s very high though, and we would only recommend this commission structure for companies that have low customer acquisition costs or on products and services with high gross margins. 

Benefits of a standard software sales commission percentage

A standard commission rate in SaaS can provide a number of benefits, including:

  • Creates a more equitable sales environment. When all salespeople are making the same commission rate, it can help reduce competition and create a more collaborative sales environment. This is because salespeople are not competing against each other for higher commission rates but instead are focused on working together to close deals.
  • Simplifies sales compensation. When you have a standard commission rate, you don’t need to worry about different commission rates for different salespeople or different products. This can make it easier to track sales commissions, communicate variable compensation to your team and gain buy-in from your team.
  • Improve sales performance. When salespeople know that they are making a fair commission rate, they may be more motivated to close deals.
  • Reduce sales costs. When you have a standard commission rate, you don’t need to worry about overpaying salespeople.

Overall, a standard commission rate can provide a number of benefits for both salespeople and companies. If you are looking to improve your sales team’s performance, a standard commission rate may be a good option to consider.

Drawbacks

One of the only drawbacks regarding standard commission rates is that they can deter top performers who exceed quota. 

Salespeople who are highly motivated and experienced may be looking for a commission rate that is higher than what you are offering. 

So, to absolve that concern, consider a compensation plan template that includes a base rate on all deals that close up to 100% of the quota and an accelerated rate for all deals thereafter. For inspiration, check out the Commission with Accelerators example. 

“When I worked in a public company and a private company, I never had accelerators less than 2x, and then I bumped to 3x,” said  Inside Partners Operating Partner, Sales & Customer Success Pablo Dominguez. “I love to pay those top 10% of reps a shitload.”

Sales compensation plan examples with 10%

For additional sales compensation plan examples that feature a 10% software sales commission percentage, check out:

Interested in automating sales compensation management and commission tracking? Start a 14-day free trial with QuotaPath and sync your CRM to uncover the benefits of commission transparency and accuracy.

MBO meaning in sales enablement

MBO blogs, 5 ways to put MBOs into practice

This blog unpacks the MBO meaning in sales and ties them to sales enablement.

According to Celeverism, some of the more successful companies that implemented management by objectives (MBOs) goal frameworks include Hewlett-Packard, Xerox, and Intel. 

Pretty impressive. 

Management by objectives (MBO) involves a process of assigning employee tasks based on company goals. 

Marketing departments, for example, typically adopt MBOs by aligning their goals with company objectives. 

In practice, say a marketing goal involves doubling its email list in one year. Following an MBO approach, employees gather performance data to determine how well the team can perform with current resources. Then they define everyone’s role in the marketing team and create a list of objectives for each team member to complete in order to reach the larger goal. 

Management then researches which step to take to double their email list, apply new information to each employee’s individual goals, and determine whether to hire more people to manage the workload. 

According to Hubspot, this approach gives employees an understanding of how their job functions relate and add to company success. 

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The origin of MBO and who it’s best for

What are MBOs and where did they come from? Author, consultant, and educator Peter Drucker first introduced the MBO term in his 1954 book,  The Practice of Management by Peter Drucker. The concept grew in popularity throughout the 60s.  And, by the 80s and 90s, MBOs had become a regular practice in the workplace.  

Any business model could benefit from MBO goals, but for fast-paced work environments with quickly scaling benefits, MBOs are a must, according to Adobe.

Think SaaS sales teams. 

MBO meaning in sales doesn’t change too much from its original definition, only that it is directly tied to sales performance in revenue and enablement.

MBO meaning in sales revenue examples

  • Expand sales abroad by 10%
  • Achieve new bookings target of 50 per month
  • Achieve an average deal size of $150,000

Sales enablement MBO examples

  • Decrease sales cycle to three months
  • Build teamwide quota attainment to 80%
  • Provide sales asset management that saves sellers 90 minutes a week
  • Train and ramp new sellers faster to competence following a defined set of criteria
  • Increase win ratio by 10%
  • Achieve a payback period of 1.5 years for new products

Now that you have a better idea as to how MBOs work for a company from a management and team member’s perspective, here are five ways to put MBOs into practice. 

  1. Define objectives: First, determine objectives for the entire company. Once you determine those goals, then each department should come up with department goals and how each individual will help to achieve these.
  2. Share objectives with employees: Use the SMART acronym when sharing with the team (specific, measurable, acceptable, realistic, time-bound) to define the objectives. 
  3. Encourage employees to participate: Invite your employees to help determine the department and individual goals. This will motivate them beyond company achievements. 
  4. Monitor progress: Consistently check on the progress of goals and share updates regularly with the team. Based on what’s achieved or not achieved, teams may need to redefine goals and objectives.  
  5. Evaluate performance and reward achievements: This step requires honest feedback from upper management. Leaders should meet one-on-one with individuals, review their progress, achievements, or lack thereof toward their individual MBOs for those who hit their MBOs, and reward them accordingly. For those who didn’t, provide coaching, support, and possibly a new  MBO, or path, to achieve those goals. 
Create Compensation Plans with confidence

RevOps, sales leaders, and finance teams use our free tool to ensure reps’ on-target earnings and quotas line up with industry standards. Customize plans with accelerators, bonuses, and more, by adjusting 9 variables.

Build a Comp Plan

MBOs pros and cons

Just like everything else, there can be pros and cons. MBOs are no exception.

According to Investopedia, boosting employee participation and loyalty happens when MBOs align with company objectives. 

However, some critics say MBOs encourage employees to achieve goals by any means necessary, even at the cost of the company. 

Here are a few pros and cons to consider.  

Pros

  1. Employees understand their goals and take pride in working toward them and accomplishing achievements. 
  2. Creating one-on-one time with an employee to assign tailored goals will increase output and long-term happiness within the company. 
  3.  One-on-ones increase communication between the manager and the employee.
  4. Management creates goals that directly impact the success of the company.

Cons 

  1. Although MBOs focus on company goals and output, they may create an environment solely focused on those targets. Other parts of a work environment can be just as important like having a healthy/work-life balance or areas of contribution, which MBO structures compromise. 
  2. The risk of employee stress increases because deadlines have become more regimented in order to reach goals.
  3. Employees may feel that they have to reach goals by any means necessary, which could mean cutting corners and compromising the quality of work. 
  4. If management only relies on MBOs, then other responsibilities may fall off the radar if they don’t fit under the MBO. 

Measuring MBOs

All MBO goals can be measured using technology to monitor employee progress and track activity. This will allow managers to generate reports, track deal information and sales activities based on individuals, and set a specific timeline. 

QuotaPath’s commission tracking software can help. Our platform tracks revenue objectives so reps can easily see their quota attainment, commission progress, and their projected earnings forecasted based on their existing pipeline. It’s easy for reps to see how much they’re earning from every deal while keeping track of how close they are to hit their quota. That means management can track their team’s overall performance with the team leaderboard while also understanding some shortcomings, allowing them to test “what if” scenarios. To learn more, book time with our team. Or, get started for free with a 30-day trial.

Download a SDR compensation policy template

SDR commission agreement template

We’ve shared downloadable AE compensation policy templates as well as a generic sales commission agreement. Next up: we have an SDR compensation policy template. 

Download the SDR comp policy template


Why use this template for your SDR policy

If you’re involved in sales, you know that one of the key components to success is having a solid commission policy. Yet, these can be tricky to write out for several reasons.

First and foremost, you need to tailor the policies to the company’s specific needs and goals and the sales teams that make up a revenue department. That leads to much back and forth between stakeholders involved in the process.

Additionally, sales compensation agreements consider various factors that can impact compensation, such as the type of product or service being sold, the length of the sales cycle, and the size of the deal. 

What’s more, sales compensation policies must be legally sound and compliant with any relevant regulations or laws, which call for specific language or clauses to ensure that it is legally binding and enforceable.

Finally, sales commission agreements involve money, and money is emotional.

Both the company and the sales team are vested in ensuring that the commission structure is fair and transparent, which can lead to detailed negotiations and complex calculations.

Inside the SDR compensation policy template

To help write your compensation agreement, we created a downloadable SDR commission agreement template. We designed this SDR compensation agreement template so that you can customize it to the unique needs of your SDR team. 

The default plan models the Qualified Opportunity Bonus & Closed Won Commission SDR comp plan example. This compensation plan (one of 20 free comp plan templates from Compensation Hub) pays a flat-rate bonus when the SDR qualifies. Additionally, for any deal the AE closes that the SDR generated the lead for, the SDR earns a commission percentage.

The template also includes sections on commission rates, payment terms, and performance metrics, as well as provisions for disputes and clawback

To automate the distribution and signatures of compensation policies, check out QuotaPath’s Plan Verification feature.

We believe that a strong compensation policy is key to building transparency and trust on your sales team, and we’re excited to share this resource with you.

Download our SDR commission agreement template today and take the first step toward maximizing your sales success!

Try QuotaPath for free

Try the most collaborative solution to manage, track and payout variable compensation. Calculate commissions and pay your team accurately, and on time.

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About QuotaPath

QuotaPath automates sales compensation management and commission tracking for scaling GTM teams. Integrate your CRM for trusted and real-time earnings and forecasted earnings data. Simplify commission payouts and communications, and align your teams with a variable compensation source of truth. 

Sign up for a  30-day trial, or book time with our team for a custom demo. 

Is sales commission a period cost?

is sales commission a period cost blog

This is a guest blog from our friends at Sage that answers if sales commission is a period cost.

Is sales commission a period cost and, if so, what kind of period cost is it?

Period costs are expenses that only indirectly relate to the product development process, while product costs are those that directly relate to product development. So, period costs include expenses like marketing budgets, utility fees, business travel, and employee benefits. Product costs are expenses that are necessary to physically build the product being sold, such as raw materials, manufacturing supplies, and direct labor.

But what about sales commissions?

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What is a sales commission?

A sales commission refers to additional compensation paid by an employer to a sales representative when they meet and exceed minimum sales targets. In most commission models, this compensation is added on top of the employee’s base salary as a monetary incentive.

Done right, a sales commission model can unlock your sales reps’ full potential, motivating them to outperform sales targets.

Industry-wide sales commission rates are generally believed to average around 20-30% of gross margins. However, this average is hugely influenced by commission structures. Using Glassdoor salary data, Mailshake estimates that architecture sales agents have the highest commission average at 37%, followed by the likes of retail, pharmaceutical, and telecommunication sales.

Why sales commission should be considered a period cost

Sales commission usually falls into the category of selling, general, and administrative expenses (SG&A) or operating expenses, both of which are period costs. However, it can also be classified as cost of goods sold (COGS), which is typically classed as a product cost.

Here are some reasons why sales commission should always be considered a period cost.

Financial reporting implications

Treating sales commission as a period cost simplifies the process of producing a comprehensive income statement. Period costs are included on your business’s income statement and should be categorized appropriately to glean insights into the costs incurred by each.

This serves to help your finance team calculate your company’s net income and analyze the impact of your expenses within the accounting period. Sales commission should be accounted for on an accrual basis (i.e., when the sales commission is billed to a rep rather than when it is received). This is in order to comply with ASC 606 regulations, which we’ll discuss shortly.

Tax implications

In order to file accurate business taxes and avoid financial audits, you need to meticulously document period expenses. Just like your other period costs (office expenses, advertising, etc), sales commissions make up your total period cost and need to be reported to ensure that you’re paying the right amount of taxes. 

Different countries have different tax authorities. In the US, for example, the governing tax body is the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). In the UK, it’s HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC). The rules regarding whether sales commissions are tax-deductible may vary by location. 

In the US, sales commissions are tax-deductible under both selling, general and administrative expenses (SG&A) and cost of goods sold (COGS) classifications. HMRC also recognizes commission as an allowable business expense that is tax deductible. So, it’s critical for your company’s financial health that all your sales commission payments are categorized correctly as period costs on your tax return. 

Filing tax returns is a hefty task for finance teams. To automate the tedious tax filing process and avoid the financial and legal repercussions of inaccurate tax filing, utilize tax software for small businesses. Tax software streamlines tax filing by allowing you to upload invoices, receipts, and other period expense documents into the cloud, in real time. 

With all of your financial records in one centralized location, you can enjoy painless tax reporting experiences and ensure that you’re audit-ready.

Image sourced from sage.com

Decision-making implications

To explain the decision-making implications of sales commissions as a business expense, it helps to cover all three classifications of period costs: current, historical, and predetermined.

Current expenses are costs incurred within the current period.

Historical expenses are costs that relate to previous periods and therefore do not factor in decision-making.

Predetermined expenses are upcoming costs that are expected to incur in a future period and therefore must be considered when calculating overall budgets.

For businesses that need to comply with ASC 606 (which we’ll explain further in the next section), sales commissions should be classed as predetermined period costs. This means that they are calculated as an estimation and spread out over the contract lifetime. Naturally, this makes them critical to financial decision-making, most notably budget calculations.

This is all to say that failing to correctly classify sales commissions as period costs can limit data transparency and result in poor financial decision-making.

Create Compensation Plans with confidence

RevOps, sales leaders, and finance teams use our free tool to ensure reps’ on-target earnings and quotas line up with industry standards. Customize plans with accelerators, bonuses, and more, by adjusting 9 variables.

Build a Comp Plan

ASC 606 and subtopic 340

What is ASC 606 and how does subtopic 340 relate to sales commission? 

Explanation of ASC 606 and why it’s important

ASC 606 is a revenue recognition standard launched by the Federal Accounting Standards Board (FASB) as a joint initiative with the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB). Its primary objective is to standardize how revenue is recognized for all sales agreements and contracts between companies and customers.

As laid out by the ASC 606 standard, the five steps for recognizing revenue are as follows:

Image created by writer. Data sourced from financialforce.com. 

ASC 606 standardizes global revenue recognition by providing a single source of truth. As a result, there are fewer disadvantageous inconsistencies in revenue requirements and information pertaining to revenue recognition is more informed, robust, and valuable.

Compliance with ASC 606 does however mean that accounting for sales commissions has grown more complex.

How the subtopic 340 ties to commissions specifically

ASC 606’s subsection, ASC 340-40, dictates that sales commissions must be capitalized as intangible assets (on the company’s balance sheet rather than expensed immediately), correlated to a customer, and amortized over the expected contract term in alignment with the performance obligations laid out in the contract. 

Amortization is the process of spreading out the costs of intangible, long-term assets (in this case, sales commissions) over their anticipated lifetime. This contrasts with revenue recognition before ASC 606, where businesses could use manual spreadsheets to track sales commissions as and when the bonus payment was made. 

With the task of capitalizing, forecasting, and amortizing to complete, manual spreadsheets are no longer sufficient. Companies need to use small business accounting software to perform advanced forecasting and reporting to relieve admin burdens and generate hyper-accurate insights — all while keeping compliant.

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Factors that determine if sales commission is a period cost

Still not sure whether to class sales commission as a period cost? Here are some factors that can help you decide.

Timing

The timing of your sales commission payments can help you determine whether the expense comes under period cost classification. If, for example, your sales commission payments are based on the volume of sales a representative secures over a period of time (under ASC 606 compliance), then the requirement to amortize the expense means that you should class it as a period cost.

Revenue relationship

Sales commission that is classed as income rather than expense is not a period cost. This occurs when your company earns a commission. (For example, when your company makes a commission by selling a product through a business partnership.) This type of sales commission is considered revenue.

Incentive structure

Along with the self-explanatory “salary plus commission” structure, some of the most popular sales commissions structures are:

  • Gross-margin commission: This is a profit-based commission in which payment is calculated using the gross revenue generated from the sale. So, the higher the price a sales rep sells an item for, the higher their commission is in alignment with how much the product cost to build.
  • Revenue commission: Sales reps receive a flat percentage on every sale. So if a product was worth $2000 and the rep’s commission rate was 5%, they would receive $100 compensation.
  • Tiered commission: Commission continually goes up once reps hit a specific target.
  • Straight commission: The rep receives no fixed salary or wage. So, they only generate income from the commission that they make on a sale. 
Image via Pexels

As you can see, commission incentive structures can vary significantly. Evaluate carefully whether the incentive structure counts as an incremental cost of obtaining a contract with a customer, as per ASC 606 regulations. Consider whether the cost would incur regardless of whether the contract was obtained. 

Payment frequency

Are payments made monthly, bi-monthly, quarterly, or annually? 

As we’ve covered, sales commissions classify as period costs when they have a set structure that aligns with ASC 606 regulations. Sales commission payments should be scheduled in alignment with payment structures and regulations and reported accurately on your income statement.  

Industry norm

For most industries, it is the norm to classify sales commissions as a period cost. It mitigates non-compliance and tax repercussions, which can have serious financial and legal consequences for your business. The exception is usually within businesses that earn commission as income, in which case commissions must be strictly separated and reported appropriately.

Final thoughts

So there you have it. Sales commissions are a period cost. Now, how do you execute a commission model that is incentivizing, streamlined, and hassle-free?

With sales compensation software, you can easily build custom compensation plans and align sales reps with your revenue objectives. QuotaPath is an easy-to-use commissions solution with excellent forecasting and integration capabilities. Use it to unify teams, scale workflows, and eliminate confusion around sales commissions. Use Ledger to amortize sales commission costs and stay compliant with ASC 606. Try QuotaPath out for free over a 30-day trial (no credit card required). Or, chat with their team to learn more by scheduling a demo.

What is considered a good quota attainment rate?

Quota attainment calculation

Sales quota attainment is a critical metric for any sales team. It measures how well a team is performing against its sales goals and offers a peek into the reality of your on-target earnings (OTE) for interested hires.

But setting a good quota attainment goal can be challenging. 

For starters, if you ignore market factors and set a quota attainment goal without considering it, you’re bound to miss it. You must understand the size of the market, the competition, the buying habits of your target customers, and environmental factors that may give buyers pause. 

Another challenge is not setting realistic goals.

If you set your sights too high, your team will grow discouraged and give up. But, if you set your sights too low, you’re not going to achieve your sales goals.

Lack of a solid process and resources can also deter your quota attainment percentage. Teams are more likely to thrive when a good sales process is in play and the training, tools, and support complement that process. 

What is quota attainment?

Quota attainment represents a percentage that shows how close a salesperson is to meet their sales goals for a given period. It’s calculated by dividing the salesperson’s total sales by their quota for that period. Quota attainment is typically measured monthly, quarterly, or annually, and it’s often used to determine a salesperson’s compensation.

On the flip side, when you understand the market and have strong sales enablement and historical performance data, you should be able to set a fair and reasonable quota attainment goal for your team.

Easier said than done, however. What is a realistic quota attainment? We explore below. 

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80% is considered a good quota attainment rate

Our suggestion has been and will remain a minimum of 80%. 

“My 80% bar differs from what other sales teams say,” said QuotaPath CEO and Co-Founder AJ Bruno. “Others set an 80% target that translates to the sales team attaining 80% of their quota over the year.”

But AJ’s 80% rule is that 8 out of 10 sellers should hit their quota. 

“This perspective promotes consistency across the entire team,” AJ said. 

Others agree. 

We recently ran a LinkedIn poll and the results favored 80%  more than any other option. Although, to our delight, 90% and above came in second. 

Poll via LinkedIn

Why 80%? 

In addition to the consistency that 80% drives across the entire team, 80% also represents a realistic number. It’s not out-of-reach, but it’s also not too easy in that it becomes an arbitrary number or a threat to your revenue targets. 

“You want your quotas to be achievable by most, but not incredibly easy to achieve, and also not super difficult,” per Revenue.io’s blog, “Sales Quotas: Everything You Need to Know for 2022.

Following the 80% rule also accounts for the performance of both your top and bottom performers. That way, the former can pick up the slack for the latter and the organization as a whole can hit its targets.

Plus, 80% quota attainment is a good indicator of your team’s performance. If your team consistently hits its quotas, it means they’re doing a good job of prospecting, qualifying leads, and closing deals. This is a good sign that your sales process runs smoothly and that your team feels motivated to succeed.

Create Compensation Plans with confidence

RevOps, sales leaders, and finance teams use our free tool to ensure reps’ on-target earnings and quotas line up with industry standards. Customize plans with accelerators, bonuses, and more, by adjusting 9 variables.

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How to set a realistic quota that gets your team to 80% attainment

Our Chief of Staff and Interim Head of Sales Graham Collins wrote a great blog on how to set SaaS quotas. Below, we pulled his key takes.

  1. Quotas should be equal to some multiple of their OTE.

    This might be 3x the rep’s OTE or 8x depending on the size and stage of your company. Our rule of thumb is a quota 5x that of the rep’s OTE. This ensures the sales the rep brings in are greater than the cost of the rep itself to keep on your team. So, if your OTE is $120K, following a 5x rule, that means their quota would be $600K.
  2. Sales cycle length and company stage play a big role.

    To ensure that your quotas are reasonable, use data and benchmarking reports from companies that match your size and sales cycle from your industry. It also doesn’t hurt to talk to peers, mentors, and your friends at QuotaPath.
  3. Adjust when needed.

    Remember that you should adjust quotas to account for changes in the market, the economy, and your own sales process. Evaluate your quota and attainment rates so that you can ensure quotas remain challenging but achievable.

Quota attainments around tech

RepVue, a platform with verified sales organizations’ ratings, recently published the top sales team attainment numbers from their reviews. And, guess what? The best fell between 80-90%.

Take a look at the top 3.

  1. Miro: 85%
  2. Veeva Systems: 84%
  3. Gusto: 83%
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Give your reps visibility into their attainment progress

Of course, there will be times when your team doesn’t hit their quotas. But if you’re setting realistic goals and providing your team with the resources they need to succeed, you should be able to achieve 80% quota attainment on a regular basis. 

To help track progress and give your reps real-time visibility into their performance and forecasted attainment, check out QuotaPath. Our sales compensation and commission tracking software integrates with your CRM, like HubSpot or Salesforce, and translates pipeline data into earnings and attainment progress. 

Let your reps see how close they are to achieving their goals and encourage them to bring in those lingering opportunities to reach them. 

Sign up for a free 14-day trial and begin tracking, or talk to our reps by scheduling a demo to learn more. 

The most installed commission app on HubSpot Marketplace

HubSpot commission tracking with quotapath

After heavily investing in our native HubSpot integration, we are honored and proud that QuotaPath is a leading commission software app on HubSpot Marketplace.

QuotaPath has seamlessly automated sales commissions to remove the burden of manual calculation for thousands of HubSpot users across RevOps, Sales, and Finance. We’ve made it possible for stakeholders to access real-time earnings, attainment, and forecast data at any time both in HubSpot and QuotaPath.

That’s right, this is a two-way relationship between the platforms and a truly one-of-a-kind CRM commission tracking integration. 

So, how did it begin? 

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We recognized the similarities between us early on. For instance, HubSpot believes in swapping friction for clarity, consistency, and ease of use, which mirrors how we think about sales compensation. Our platforms would work well and deliver a positive experience for those looking to make variable pay more transparent and meaningful. 

So, we launched an official integration in 2021 and deepened our partnership in April 2021 when HubSpot Ventures invested in QuotaPath

Since then, we have continued to evolve our platform in step with HubSpot. 

Today, we both offer transparent pricing, a free-to-try model, and a simple UX atop a high degree of functionality. For us, that’s led to faster onboarding rates (23% faster) for customers who come to QuotaPath with HubSpot, as well as higher retention rates (120%).

QuotaPath’s HubSpot integration includes:

  • Quick implementation setups
  • Real-time data integration
  • Customizable mapping of fields
  • Earnings viewable directly in HubSpot
  • A HubSpot-Certified App

Two-way investment

In 2021, HubSpot Ventures invested in QuotaPath.

“For sales teams, the CRM is the center of every customer interaction. QuotaPath helps by bringing a part of the CRM that doesn’t exist today—there’s no real way to calculate earnings and commissions off of CRM data.” said Head of HubSpot Ventures Brandon Greer.

Below, learn more about QuotaPath and HubSpot, and how to leverage the most out of this exclusive integration. 

Inside the HubSpot QuotaPath integration

QuotaPath is the only commission software that offers a true native integration with HubSpot. 

That means no manual refreshes or waiting on updates to see existing and forecasted earnings and attainment data. In QuotaPath, this information is real-time and accurate. As long as the data in HubSpot is correct, QuotaPath’s data will match. 

Additionally, your field names in HubSpot migrate to QuotaPath, so that you and your team won’t have to learn new terms between the two platforms.

“Because QuotaPath and HubSpot share the same fields, I can align my language to what my teams are seeing in HubSpot. When I call it an ‘amount’ or ‘close date’ in QuotaPath they know what it means from HubSpot,” said Katie Cooper, Muck Rack’s Senior Business Manager, Business and Data Operations.

We also earned HubSpot app certification by having a success rate of 98%+ for all activities, more than 100 customers using the integration, meeting HubSpot’s security best practices and other metrics tied to privacy, reliability, performance, and usability. 

Plus, we took the integration a step further. Sellers don’t even have to leave HubSpot to view their earnings data via a QuotaPath HubSpot card.

With QuotaPath, you can:

  • Import HubSpot Deals in 4 clicks
  • View QuotaPath Earnings directly in HubSpot
  • Identify which records count toward earnings
  • Map comp plans with HubSpot CRM data from designated fields
  • Import custom HubSpot fields
  • Define Deal stages to pull from HubSpot
  • Preview mapping and input additional filters
  • Set payout eligibilities and schedules

“When I’m reviewing commissions in QuotaPath, I’m not checking to see if they’re right in QuotaPath. I’m checking to see if the deals and fields in HubSpot are correct. Knowing that the data comes from HubSpot is a huge peace of mind. I can trust it,” said Katie.

Operationalize sales compensation with HubSpot and QuotaPath

Having trust in the data provides huge value when it comes to syncing HubSpot and QuotaPath — as does the simplicity of setup and ability to operationalize your sales compensation strategy.

With a UX that’s easy to make changes in, QuotaPath admins can learn the platform quickly and see fast time-to-value.

In fact, many of our users run commissions for their entire GTM team just weeks after signing. The HubSpot integration takes only a few clicks to set up. Should you need help, our team is ready to jump in at no additional charge.

“Our Customer Success Rep Josh was so patient with us,” said Jay Wallace, Sales Founder and VP of Worldwide Sales at runZero. “He made strong recommendations in HubSpot that led to a better output with QuotaPath. He really went above and beyond.”

Plus, when you need to refer to compensation data from previous quarters or fiscal years  — or get a pulse on cash flow — QuotaPath makes this info accessible to all stakeholders. This offers a nice change for those coming from organizations with private spreadsheets. 

By operationalizing your sales compensation process, you will save time calculating and paying commissions, when you need to add new team members, compensation plans, SPIFs, and more. 

“A major game-changer for me is the ease with which I can onboard a new team member,” Katie said. “Assigning a plan, quota, and rate in QuotaPath saves me about 30 minutes per employee.”

What’s more, reps build accountability over their variable compensation by having a universal system to check commissions, communicate discrepancies in-app, and reference comp plan policies on demand. 

hubspot quotapath two-way integration
HubSpot Cards featuring QuotaPath

Motivate teams

Rep accountability is great, as is motivation. 

QuotaPath’s HubSpot commission tracking integration gives reps instant visibility into how the next deal impacts their earnings. This eliminates the guessing games around how SPIFs impact their earnings, or how close they are to quota or the next commission tier.

For instance, Joe St. Germain, Blackthorn’s VP of Sales, noted how after implementing QuotaPath, his reps used the forecasted earnings and attainment view to run “what if” scenarios.

 “Our reps realized they could run scenarios and see how much they could earn from our monthly kickers,” Joe said

As a result, reps made big pushes to move the incoming deals across the finish line, Joe said.  

EverView’s Director of Operations Ron Morgan shared a similar experience.

“Our comp plan was easily measured and easily viewed by our sellers in QuotaPath, which drove positive selling behaviors,” Ron said, who noted a record sales year after implementing QuotaPath.

Plus, with our HubSpot cards feature, reps can toggle between existing earnings and forecasted earnings directly from their HubSpot view. 

Create Compensation Plans with confidence

RevOps, sales leaders, and finance teams use our free tool to ensure reps’ on-target earnings and quotas line up with industry standards. Customize plans with accelerators, bonuses, and more, by adjusting 9 variables.

Build a Comp Plan

Encourage HubSpot CRM hygiene

By adding commission values to individual deals via QuotPath and HubSpot, we’ve found that organizations have benefited from improved CRM hygiene. 

Turns out, to get reps to care about accurate data in the CRM, tie it directly to their commission potential. In doing so, you’re immediately delivering a direct incentive for reps to maintain their pipelines. Those “hypothetical numbers” in the CRM become tangible by showing how the data informs their future paychecks.

One RevOps leader, for example, noticed in the first weeks after implementing QuotaPath that his reps kept HubSpot cleaner once they could see how their pipeline translated to earnings. 

A similar logic applies when reps flag errors in QuotaPath.

“When they say, ‘This looks wrong in QuotaPath,’ I can ask them if it’s wrong in HubSpot, too,” Katie said. “If it is, they can fix it in HubSpot and QuotaPath will automatically adjust.”

HubSpot and QuotaPath, a match unlike any other

The HubSpot CRM already provides so much information to your GTM team. Now, take it to the next level by giving them a tool that converts that data to actual earnings. 

Ready to add automated commission tracking and payouts to your HubSpot setup? Learn more by scheduling time with our team for a custom demo. Or, sign up for a 30-day trial (no CC required). Build your comp plan within QuotaPath, integrate HubSpot, and invite team members to begin tracking.

 Learn how HubSpot and QuotaPath can help your business reach its goals.

What are sales objectives and key results (OKRs): And why are they important?

How to set good OKRs

This is a guest blog from our friends at Dialpad on sales objectives and key results (OKRs).

In sales, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed with numbers and unattainable targets. Sales objectives and key results (OKR) is a goal-setting approach that enables organizations, and individuals to reach their potential.

This article will explain everything you need to know about OKRs and why they’re important. We’ll also show you some simple examples to illustrate how sales OKRs work.

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What are sales OKRs?

OKR is a dynamic management approach made up of ‘objectives’ – measurable goals, and ‘sales results’ – a series of smaller aims to help brick-and-mortar stores and eCommerce firms reach their objectives. It creates alignment within teams by helping members engage better.

OKRs encourage a team-focused approach because working towards your own key results will often cross over with other team members’ key results. This also encourages accountability as team members work on individual key results that will help the whole team reach the objective.

The purpose of OKRs is to track your sales goals in real-time. They are objectives, usually set quarterly, with a set plan (the key results) of how to work towards them. But these aren’t just targets that need to be hit. They are also ambitious objectives that encourage teams to develop and learn. In fact, if you find you are ticking off your list of objectives easily, you probably aren’t challenging your team enough.

For example, if a team leader wants to decrease the time taken for sales reps to pick up parked calls within a call center, they could set the goal of decreasing call waiting times by 50%. But this doesn’t look at core problems and encourages short-term fixes.

Using the OKR approach of goal-setting, the team would look into why response times are down. Measurable goals would be set, such as decreasing call waiting times by 50%. But key results could also include categorizing calls and prioritizing callers. This would mean results are long-term, and the teams would be discovering new ways to work.

OKRs encourage transparency within a business. Team members working towards the same objectives should be kept in the loop about what each other is doing. Their individual goals (key results) are often tied in together.

OKRs should also promote ambition and growth within your team. It’s not only effective when working in sales. This approach can also be used in any line of business. It’s a framework that is split into two sections: sales objectives and key results.

Image via Dialpad
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Sales objectives

The “objective” part of your OKR is the overall goal and motivation for your key results. It should set out what you aim to achieve and why this is important for your business and employees. You must create a concise objective that explains what you need to do to reach your end goal.

Objectives can be either qualitative or quantitative. OKRs should be measurable. But you don’t have to get straight into numbers in your objectives. You specify these in your key results.

You can choose an objective, such as ‘Integrate our online sales channels using an e-commerce integration platform.’ Then your key results could set out how you would do this. Alternatively, you could set something more specific, such as ‘Increase productivity of sales channels by 25%.’

Key results

Key results are measurable goals that help you track your progress toward your main objective. They are basically steps created to allow you to reach your main objective. There are always multiple key results, some of which will tie in together. It’s also important to create a hierarchy to establish which results are more important, which help others, and which can be left until later.

For example, if you’re trialing a new call forwarding service within your sales department, you will want to track its functionality. So an example objective could be – “Use new call forwarding service to decrease the hang up rate of customers by 10%”.

Key Results

  • Have all sales team trained on new tool within week 1
  • Create a call-forwarding strategy using peak call times
  • Decrease call-waiting times by 25%
Image via Pexels
Streamline commissions for your RevOps, Finance, and Sales teams

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The difference between OKRs and KPIs

OKRs are sometimes confused with KPIs (key performance indicators). Here are the main differences between the two:

  • OKRs are created to boost engagement and are team-focused. KPIs evaluate business activities, projects, or products.
  • OKRs tend to change quarterly, depending on the business. KPIs are long-term goals.
  • OKRs tend to have a hierarchy and are connected. The key results are created to help achieve the objective. KPIs are of equal priority and usually separate.
  • OKRs encourage ambition and development within a team. KPIs are more about hitting targets.

Let’s say a Google Analytics agency, Dubai, is having trouble getting repeat customers.

KPI: Increase the number of repeat customers by 50%.

This could be done by offering a discount to repeat customers. The company would hit its targets, but the results would be temporary while the deal is offered.

OKR Objective: Encourage repeat customers.

Key Results

  1. Increase customer satisfaction by 20%
  2. Improve communication with current clients 
  3. Ask for feedback once projects are completed

These are goals that tie in together, making them more efficient. They are also in order, so the team knows what to prioritize. The results encourage communication, so the teams are learning new skills, such as using the perfect talk-listen ratio. Even if customer satisfaction is only improved by 15%, the current results are sustainable and leave room for growth in the future.

Image via Vecteezy

Why are OKRs important?

Promoting Teamwork

For example, if customer journey optimization is one of your priorities, your main objective would be to improve your customers’ experiences. But your key results would bring your team together to reach this objective.

For example, the first key result could focus on tracking the current customer journey, while the second could involve gathering feedback from customers. The final key result would focus on creating a new customer journey using the information gathered from the first two key results. With team members working towards your main objective using individual key results, you are creating a more well-rounded team who can work together.

Track progress in real-time

Setting long-term goals is important. But once you reach them you want to know how you got there. What problems did your team face along the way? What did they learn?

Also, if your team failed to meet its goals, you need to know why. What stopped your team from achieving its objectives? What progress did they make?

We see teams create OKRs most frequently on a quarterly basis. But do what works best for your team. Key results are measurable, so you can see exactly how your business is progressing. But it’s not just about your figures, it’s also about your team’s development. Transparency and ambition are key. You don’t just want to track your sales, you want to look at how your team has progressed. This can be as simple as finding out what they have learned while working on their key results. It could also include discussions on how the team can improve in the future.

Overcoming problems

With OKRs, your sales team is all working towards the same objective. Even if team members have individual goals, they all crossover and benefit each other. Weekly meetings mean that team members can look at problems together and work out how to solve them. Communication within a team is very important. 

How to set good OKRs

  • Look at problems within your business – what isn’t working? What can be improved?
  • Be clear and concise when setting objectives – you need to know exactly what you aim to achieve from this goal.
  • Set measurable goals – how will you know you’ve been successful?
  • Make goals achievable – don’t look at goals completely out of reach, shelve them for later.
  • Don’t make goals too easy – remember this isn’t a checklist, it should promote ambition.
  • Look at how your OKRs can improve your KPIs – don’t just duplicate them.
  • Look at past objectives – were they successful? Can they be built on?
Image via Pixbay

Measuring your success with OKRs

We have talked about your OKRs being measurable, but how exactly do you measure your success? One of the main ways to do this is by analyzing the sales metrics. But this isn’t all of the information. You also want to review team learnings, gained advantages, and how the team collaborated.

For example, if a sales manager doesn’t think that their teams are properly utilizing their call logs they may set the objective: ‘Increase productivity of sales calls by 10% using received calls list.’ One of the key results could be: ‘Use call logs to determine the best times for sales calls.’

Measuring your success, in this case, would come from comparing the previous period’s sales figures with this period’s. This would determine whether this key result had helped the team to achieve the overall objective. However, even if your team has not met the objective’s target, the information you gather throughout the process is helpful. For instance, team members could compare data on the best times for sales calls. This can help them increase the likelihood of meeting the objective next period.

Start creating your sales objectives and key results

Now you understand the importance of OKRs and how they work, it’s time to get your team together and set up some objectives. Don’t expect to get it right straight away. This management approach evolves over time while you tweak objectives and key results.

Remember, having too many objectives will be counterproductive to your team. Don’t create more than 3 or 4 at once. If you have more than this you’re spreading your team too thin. This can lead to them creating quick fixes to quickly complete objectives. The whole point of OKRs is to set goals to improve sales effectiveness long-term. Think quality over quantity. 

About the author:

Jenna Bunnell is the Senior Manager for Content Marketing at Dialpad, an AI-incorporated cloud-hosted unified communications system that provides valuable call details for business owners and sales representatives through features like Dialpad call waiting. She is driven and passionate about communicating a brand’s design sensibility and visualizing how content can be presented in creative and comprehensive ways. Check out her LinkedIn profile.

Why Sales? How to answer this classic interview question

two women talking over work

No two sales interviews are exactly alike. In some, the focus may be on your experience and education. Other interviewers may be more concerned with seeing if your personality will mesh well with the existing team. But there’s one question that seems to crop up more often than not, and it’s a doozy: “Why sales?”

This question can come in a few different formats. The why sales interview answer is very similar. It seems like such a simple query, but finding the right way to answer this burning question could mean the difference between scoring a new position or going back to the drawing board (or the job board, as the case may be).

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Why sales? The reasoning behind this common interview question

Sales jobs are all about convincing someone that they need whatever it is you’re trying to sell. That could be software, paper, real estate — almost anything — and during an interview, the commodity you’re trying to sell is yourself. The question “why sales?” is valuable for several reasons:

  • It puts your skills to the test. If you can’t convince your interviewer that you’re the best candidate for the job, that could make your potential boss a bit wary. This is your opportunity to showcase your ability to make a product or service shine.
  • It separates candidates who do their research from those who don’t. Answer “why sales?” with a clear-cut, well-constructed answer that acknowledges both your own strengths and a few of the company’s key attributes. Do that, and it’ll be apparent that you did your homework before sitting down to chat.
  • It reveals what drives you. Sales requires enthusiasm beyond a desire to make tons of cash. When times are slow, what’s going to inspire you to keep working? Let’s say you’re interested in a growing industry like SaaS sales. Are you driven to develop long-lasting relationships with customers to pave the way for upgrades and upsells? Most employers are looking for the big-picture answer to “why sales?,” not just someone who wants to close the big account and move on.

Why sales interview answer

Why are you interested in sales? You need to know the answer to that question before you sit down for your interview. Think of this like an elevator pitch. Develop a short, catchy explanation of what attracts you to sales and why you think you’re going to be good at it. This should be about 30 seconds to a minute long, no more. You’ll likely have a chance to elaborate further, but the idea is to sell yourself without selling.

  • Does the challenge of closing a sale get your heart pumping?
  • Do you feel strongly about the product or service you’re selling?
  • Do you get supercharged by the competitive aspect of beating out your colleagues?

You can tailor your why sales interview answer to the company for which you’re interviewing, too. Check out their website and visit sites like Glassdoor to see what makes the business tick. If employees talk about monthly sales quotas or tiered commission, see if that resonates with you. If so, reference that as you being “committed to surpassing monthly quotas by 10%” or something similar.

Above all, it’s important to be honest. You’re likely interviewing with someone who has been through this process countless times and met with dozens if not hundreds of applicants. They can smell a lie from 10 miles away. In other words, don’t ramble on about your 100% close rate unless you have the cold, hard figures to back it up.

Streamline commissions for your RevOps, Finance, and Sales teams

Design, track, and manage variable incentives with QuotaPath. Give your RevOps, finance, and sales teams transparency into sales compensation.

Talk to Sales

Examples of great answers to the question

The interviewer may ask “why are you interested in sales?” as soon as you sit down. If you’re brand new to this space, see if you have a personal or professional background that ties into whatever you’d be selling. If so, make that experience the basis of your answer.

Example (assuming you’re applying for a job selling restaurant technology):

Example:

“I spent 10 years as a server and manager in top-tier steakhouses. That includes lots of hands-on time programming and training employees on various POS systems. I know the mechanics. More importantly, I know exactly what owner-operators need and know how to position the product as a solution to those pain points.”

Say you’re experienced in the same industry but want to move from the company you’re at. Talk about what you can bring to the table and why you want to make the switch.

Example:

“My current role includes the entire tri-state area, and I’m very familiar with the territory and potential customers. I would love the opportunity to bring my contacts to Company X and introduce them to a new, more efficient, more affordable product.”

Demonstrate your knowledge of the company. This could mean referencing recent news stories (positive ones only, of course). Or, you could discuss something in the company’s mission statement that aligns with your own core values.

Example:

“I was excited to read about your recent expansion into the international arena and the impending launch of Product XYZ. Having previously worked on a team tasked with marketing products to an international audience, I feel it’s the perfect time to bring my skillset and experience to your company.”

Emphasize skills pertinent to the industry. If you’re applying for SaaS sales jobs, discuss your tech background and willingness to play the long game.

Example:

“Having worked with web-based applications in the past, I’m in a unique position to identify what customers need at every level. I also value customer relationships. Some of my biggest sales came from long-time clients who trusted me enough to invest in upgrades when I recommended a new package.”

Why do you want to work in sales? What not to say:

When it comes to interview questions, sometimes what you don’t say is more important than what you do say.

  • “I need the money.” Clearly, someone seeking employment is looking for compensation. Employers understand that you have financial goals you need to meet. That said, money shouldn’t be your only motivator — if it is, don’t admit it.
    Anything vague. It’s quite possible to talk a lot without saying anything. That kind of slick, salesy talk won’t work on interviewers who have heard it all.
  • Complaining about your current boss or disparaging their product/service. No one wants to hire a Negative Nellie. Bad attitudes are not only contagious, they’re toxic. Present the kind of positive, uplifting energy that helps entire teams succeed. After all, one person does not a sales department make. Remember, a rising tide lifts all boats.
  • Any references to “always be closing.” The idea that sales is about talking customers into products they don’t necessarily need is ethically questionable and quite outdated. Modern-day sales techniques are more about addressing the clients’ needs and shifting the sales pitch to match those concerns and priorities.

“Why sales?” is one of the top interview questions for good reason. It gives discerning employers insight into applicants’ motivations and helps them evaluate preparedness. For job seekers, the question is an opportunity to highlight their best assets. Master this question and you’ll stand out from other candidates for all the right reasons.

Questions sales candidates should ask during an interview

Now that we’ve got your interview responses sorted out, let’s explore some of the questions you should ask the interviewer.

  • Can you tell me more about the sales team and their roles?
  • What are the main challenges facing the sales team currently?
  • How is performance measured and what are the expectations for the role?
  • What percentage of the sales team is hitting quota?
  • Can you tell me more about the company’s sales process and how new sales representatives are trained?
  • Can you provide examples of successful sales campaigns or initiatives?
  • Can you tell me more about the company’s products/services and target market?
  • How does the company support its sales team in terms of technology and resources?
  • Can you tell me about the company culture and how it relates to the sales team?
  • Can you tell me about opportunities for growth and advancement within the sales team?

Happy interviewing!

About QuotaPath

QuotaPath’s commission tracking and sales compensation management software automates and simplifies tracking, calculating and paying out sales commissions. Teams who see the most value from our platform already track their deals using a CRM and have between 20 and 250 employees with plans to grow. Learn more by scheduling a time with our team.

How to set up a successful sales SPIF

what is a spif

More than 40% of reps aren’t motivated by their comp plans.

An easy fix? Consider SPIFs.

There are various ways to motivate specific sales rep behaviors and drive performance. Although properly prepared sales compensation plans address most overarching business goals, there are times when short-term rewards like SPIFs are necessary.

What is a SPIF? 

A SPIF, also known as a SPIFF or SPIV, is a short-term element of the overall incentive compensation management plan. What does SPIF stand for? SPIF stands for sales performance incentive fund or special performance incentive fund. It is designed to motivate specific behaviors of quota-carrying teams, such as salespeople, customer service agents, lead qualifiers, and sales engineers.

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What is a SPIF in sales?

SPIFs can be used across departments within an organization to improve performance or to encourage and reward specific behaviors. In sales specifically, leaders run SPIFs to inspire revenue-generating behaviors.

When and how are SPIFs used?

Sales teams often add SPIF programs to meet short-term goals like:

  • Closing a pipeline gap
  • Improving specific behaviors or metrics
  • Motivating reps to sell new customers or product types

To drive participation and reward attainment, employers offer various types of incentives or rewards to team members based on the rules set forth at the beginning of each SPIF program.

SPIF in QuotaPath
Easily implement and track for SPIFs in QuotaPath.

SPIF challenges

Well-executed SPIFs can be very effective. However, long-term or repetitive use can reduce their impact and diminish returns. Keep the following challenges in mind to increase the odds your SPIF program is a success.

SPIFs are often planned hastily

First and foremost, it’s common for teams to add SPIFs in response to unanticipated marketplace or organizational changes. As a result of this reactionary nature, SPIFs usually lack organization, planning, and strategy. Rushing into a poorly executed sales incentive rewards program can cause more harm than good by driving the wrong outcomes, distracting reps, or creating goals that conflict with those of your overall sales incentive program.

That’s why it’s best to plan SPIFs while building out your compensation plan design proactively. Create a  step-by-step process for adding unexpected SPIFs to minimize the risks of reactively introducing poorly executed programs.

Poorly executed SPIFs are common

Additionally, leaders usually calculate their SPIF program outside of their main compensation management services. In doing so, this increases the associated financial risk and makes it more difficult to track or analyze. So, it’s best to leverage a commission tracker that allows you to quickly add customized SPIF plans to facilitate compliance and control monitoring.

Sales reps can’t keep their eye on the prize

Plus, most sales organizations encourage reps to track their SPIFs independently, using a manual commission tracking spreadsheet or the likes. This is both time-consuming and error-prone. And, reps can’t easily monitor their progress toward their overall attainment goals. This reduces the motivational impact of the program as they approach the end of the designated period. 

It’s difficult to prevent cheating

Along with difficult tracking processes, SPIFs may lead to reps holding deals until they can benefit from the SPIF. When reps know a SPIF program is about to begin, they may delay closing deals to count them toward the desired program goal. To avoid this, wait to announce the upcoming SPIF until it’s time for the SPIF to begin. 

ROI measurement isn’t easy

Measuring the success of a SPIF program after its completion entails a complex process further complicated by manual tracking. Sales compensation platforms facilitate post-SPIF analysis, so you can determine which SPIFs are worth repeating.

Too many SPIFs are counterproductive

Last but not least, offering SPIFs too often reduces the motivational impact they have, leading to diminishing returns. If you feel the need to offer SPIFs frequently, you should revisit and revise your overall sales compensation plan. Ensure it’s driving the right behaviors and types of sales.

How to execute successful SPIFs

Take the time to properly plan SPIF programs to increase your odds of success and ROI. Below we share how to plan for your first SPIF.

  1. Start with clean accurate historical sales data. This makes it easy to identify times and product lines best suited for SPIFs.
  2.  Plan SPIFs when you design your sales commission plans. These programs can be easily integrated into the overarching comp plan, so they are implemented when they’re most needed to balance seasonal variability and key milestones throughout the year.
  3. Use SPIFs to support established sales initiatives. These include planned promotional offers for new products or a new market segment to pursue.
  4. Determine the overall compensation budget and what percentage to allocate for SPIFs. Then carefully track SPIF spending throughout the year to stay on budget.
  5. Always measure SPIF performance against objectives. This prevents repeating expensive mistakes and increases future successes.
  6. Use past SPIF performance insights to help guide future SPIF planning and adjustments.

The key to completing this process successfully is clean accurate data. An integrated sales compensation platform, like QuotaPath, makes this possible.

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Integrating SPIFs with Your Overall Compensation Plan

Keep in mind, that you’ll want to integrate your SPIF with your overall compensation plan.

To do so, follow these seven guidelines.

Alignment with Business GoalsEnsure your SPIFs directly align with your overall business objectives. Don’t create a SPIF in isolation. Analyze your current sales performance and identify areas where a targeted incentive can provide a boost. Is it acquiring new customers, increasing sales of a specific product line, or shortening the sales cycle? Structure your SPIF to incentivize behaviors that contribute to achieving these goals.
Complement, Don’t CompeteSPIFs should complement your base salary and commission structure, not replace them. Ideally, the SPIF acts as a motivator for exceeding expectations or achieving specific milestones. A well-designed SPIF shouldn’t cannibalize existing commissions or create a situation where reps prioritize SPIF goals over core sales objectives.
Transparency and CommunicationClear communication is crucial. Communicate the SPIF’s goals, eligibility criteria, earning potential, and timeframe clearly to your sales team. Everyone should understand how the SPIF works and how it integrates with their overall compensation plan.
Budget ConsiderationsAllocate a realistic budget for your SPIF program. Consider the potential cost of the incentives and factor that into your overall sales compensation budget. Track the program’s effectiveness and ROI (Return on Investment) to ensure you’re getting a good return on the financial investment in the SPIF.
Avoid OveruseWhile SPIFs can be a powerful tool, overuse can dilute their effectiveness. Reserve them for strategic initiatives and avoid bombarding your team with constant SPIFs. This can lead to confusion and make it difficult for reps to focus on core sales activities.
Integrating with Tracking ToolsUtilize your sales performance management software or CRM system to track SPIF progress. This allows reps to monitor their performance toward earning the incentive and provides insightful data for future program optimization.
Regular Review and RefinementDon’t set it and forget it. Regularly review the effectiveness of your SPIF programs. Analyze data, gather feedback from your sales team, and make adjustments as needed. Over time, you can refine your SPIFs to become even more impactful in driving desired sales behaviors and achieving your business goals.

By following these strategies, you can integrate SPIFs strategically into your overall compensation plan. This ensures they act as a valuable tool for motivating top performance, achieving sales objectives, and ultimately contributing to your company’s success.

SPIF Best Practices

We’ve gathered some tips on how to get SPIFs right to further boost your success.

Set well-defined goals for each SPIF. Knowing what you want to accomplish at the outset makes it easier to communicate to your team and to gauge success at the completion of the program.

Provide clear direction to your reps. They need to understand what they need to do to earn the incentive and what target, such as X leads or Y deals at $Z, equals success.

Designate who is eligible for the SPIF. This prevents confusion and prevents disappointment.

Specify a clearly defined start and end date for the SPIF.

Consider all SPIF-related costs to prevent going over budget.

Avoid SPIFs that contradict your main sales compensation plan.

Keep it simple. Complicated rules only lead to frustration, disappointment, and less participation.

Don’t use SPIFs too often. They become less effective at motivating and exciting the team if they become the norm.

They should be unexpected. Otherwise, reps will sandbag deals if they know when SPIFs are scheduled.

Make them possible for everyone. So, instead of offering a reward for the top X reps, set a SPIF target all team members can reach, like anyone who hits 100% of quota.

Tie success to things reps can control. For example, complete X dials per day for so many days versus speaking to X prospects per day.

How to use SPIFs to drive key business metrics

You can use SPIFs to drive specific business metrics, such as NPS scores, gross profit margin, and more.

For example, you could reward SPIFs or kickers for products that generate higher gross margins. To motivate your team to sell and upsell your most profitable products, pay your team higher rates on new business or renewals that include the products that yield higher gross margins.

You could also give a SPIF on non-discounted deals to promote full-priced deals. Maybe it’s $100 for each one on top of the commission they earn from closing the deal.

Another SPIF might entail $250 every time the rep closes a multi-year deal to drive gross revenue retention.

Key Metrics to Track During a SPIF

So, which metrics should you track? Consider starting with these five:

  1. SPIF Achievement Rate: This metric measures the percentage of sales reps who successfully achieve the specific goal or behavior required to earn the SPIFF incentive. It helps measure the program’s overall effectiveness in motivating desired actions.
  2. Sales Velocity: Track the average time it takes to close a deal during the SPIF period. Ideally, the SPIFF should incentivize faster deal closure, leading to a potential increase in sales velocity.
  3. Revenue Generated: Monitor the total revenue generated as a direct result of the SPIF program. This helps determine the return on investment (ROI) of the SPIF by comparing the cost of the incentives to the additional revenue generated.
  4. Product/Service Mix: If the SPIFF targets specific products or services, track the sales mix during the program. This reveals if the SPIFF is successfully driving sales towards the desired products/services.
  5. Rep Engagement: While not one of the direct sales metrics, monitor rep engagement throughout the SPIF. This could involve tracking participation rates in training sessions or surveys to gauge their enthusiasm and overall satisfaction with the program.

Bonus Metric:

  • Cost per Acquisition (CPA) of New Customers: If the SPIF aims to acquire new customers, track the CPA during the program. This helps assess the cost-effectiveness of the SPIFF in acquiring new business.

By tracking these key metrics, you can gain valuable insights into the effectiveness of your SPIF program. This allows you to refine future programs for optimal results and ensure they align with your overall sales goals.

Do SPIFs work? Why and when to use SPIFs.

Nearly every sales organization runs sales performance incentive funds (SPIFs) throughout the year. But do they work? Learn when and how to use them effectively.

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Communicating SPIF Programs to Your Team

Effective communication is paramount when introducing a Sales Performance Incentive Fund (SPIF) program to your sales team. Here’s how to ensure your team is clear, motivated, and ready to succeed:

Transparency and Clarity: Start by clearly outlining the program’s goals and objectives. What specific behaviors or achievements does the SPIF incentivize? What are the desired outcomes the program aims to achieve? Be transparent about the criteria for earning the SPIF and the program’s timeframe. This clarity ensures everyone understands how to participate and what to do to win.

Highlight the Benefits: Don’t just explain the mechanics; emphasize the benefits. Frame the SPIF as an opportunity for reps to earn additional rewards and recognition for their hard work. Showcase how the program aligns with their personal career goals and contributes to achieving team objectives. By highlighting the potential rewards, you can generate excitement and motivate reps to participate actively.

Provide Resources and Support: Equip your team with the resources they need to succeed. Develop training materials or conduct coaching sessions to ensure everyone understands the SPIF details and the specific actions required to earn the incentive. Make ongoing support available to answer questions and address any roadblocks reps might encounter.

Communicate Regularly: Don’t just announce the program and expect magic to happen. Maintain open communication channels throughout the SPIF period. Provide regular updates on progress towards goals, celebrate individual and team achievements, and address any concerns that may arise. This ongoing communication fosters a sense of engagement and keeps reps focused on maximizing their earning potential.

Consider Feedback: After the SPIF concludes, gather feedback from your team. What worked well? What could be improved? This feedback loop allows you to refine future SPIF programs to better align with your team’s needs and preferences. By incorporating their insights, you can create even more effective incentive programs that drive exceptional sales performance.

By following these communication strategies, you can ensure your SPIF program is a well-understood motivating force that propels your sales team toward achieving outstanding results.

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Spiff vs CaptivateIQ vs Xactly vs QuotaPath

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SPIF examples

Companies with the best SPIF incentives tailored them to their teams. What motivates some sales reps may not appeal to others. Hence, it’s best to know your team and their preferences before selecting a reward for your SPIF program. Otherwise, you risk reduced participation and results. We find that successful SPIFs fall into seven categories:

Money – This is a popular choice, but not everyone is motivated by more dollars.

Praise & Recognition – Some people enjoy being in the limelight and see rewards in this category as potentially positioning them for promotion or advancement based on performance. These include:

  • Feature of top performer’s name on the leaderboard
  • Inclusion in the President’s Club
  • Receipt of a displayable award/trophy

Access – These types of SPIFs provide access to special information, support, and resources not available to everyone. These incentives offer professional advantages. But some reps may not value them because they don’t cost the company any or much money. These include:

  • The ability to select which sales engineer they’re paired with
  • A private calling booth solely for the individual’s use
  • First dibs on new accounts or the ability to pick a handful of target accounts
  • A one-on-one dinner with the executive team providing access to exclusive information
  • Opportunities to attend trade shows, trainings, or certifications to help advance their career

Power – This rewards individuals with the ability to participate in a change or process impacting the sales team. These include:

  • Working with the creative team to build the next sales deck
  • Inclusion in discussions about sales compensation structure
  • Influence over the terms and location of the next President’s Club

Gifts – Like money, gifts are quite commonly used as SPIF incentives. These include:

  • Basic gift cards
  • Books
  • Items to make work life better, like noise-canceling headphones or an extra-wide computer monitor
  • A subscription to a platform like Headspace or a music streaming service

Consider these examples to get your creative juices started once you figure out what is attractive to your reps.

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Unsuccessful SPIFs and solutions

Regardless of how hard you try, there’s always a chance you’ll fail the first time you use a specific incentive. If you can determine why it was a flop, make adjustments and try a variation in the future.

Some reasons a SPIF might fail include:

Incentives didn’t match the audience.

Although you can’t please everyone, the incentive needs to motivate most reps included in the program. Without this consideration, you’ll have poor participation and weak results. For a team consisting of diverse demographics, no single incentive will appeal to everyone.

That’s when it’s beneficial to offer reward points where X points are awarded for each unit achieved. Then at the end of the SPIF period, recipients can redeem their points for gifts of their choosing from a selection you offer. And, remember to reveal the gift options at the beginning of the program so reps know what they are working toward.

Promoting a team SPIF

Rewarding the entire sales team for hitting a team goal can negatively impact your team’s culture. This holds especially true if the team falls a few dollars short of a multimillion-dollar goal. Top performers end up feeling short-changed and weaker reps face backlash. Instead of team SPIFs, consider an incentive that applies to everyone who exceeds quota or another target. 

Why 91% of sales teams missed quota this year

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Leveraging Technology for SPIF Management

If you’ve made it all the way here, you should feel fully prepared to implement a SPIF that motivates and rewards your reps. Thank you for joining us!

Our last recommendation is to partner with a tool like QuotaPath to make SPIF management seamless and adaptable to your process.

In doing so, you’ll take advantage of:

Streamlined Administration and Reduced ErrorsManual SPIF administration can be time-consuming and prone to errors. Technology automates many of the administrative tasks associated with SPIF programs. This includes calculating incentive payouts based on pre-defined criteria, tracking individual and team progress, and generating reports. By automating these tasks, you free up valuable time for your sales team and managers, while minimizing the risk of errors in calculations or payouts.
Enhanced Visibility and MotivationTechnology can provide real-time data and insights into SPIF performance. Sales reps can easily access dashboards that show their progress towards earning the incentive, fostering a sense of transparency and encouraging them to stay focused on achieving goals. This real-time visibility motivates reps to push harder and maximize their earning potential throughout the SPIF period.
Improved Data-Driven Decision MakingTechnology allows for easy data collection and analysis of SPIF programs. You can track key metrics like cost per acquisition of new customers, revenue generated through the SPIF program, and overall return on investment (ROI). These data insights allow you to measure the effectiveness of your SPIFs and make informed decisions about future programs. By leveraging data, you can refine your SPIF strategy to maximize their impact on sales performance and overall business objectives.

Try QuotaPath’s free commission tracking software in a trial experience. Or, schedule time with a member of our team to learn how to optimize your entire compensation process. 

How to successfully grow your RevOps practice

Scaling your revops team

Revenue operations, commonly known as RevOps, is more important in today’s market than ever before. 

As buyers have shifted buying behaviors to conduct their own research and trial a product before even speaking to sales, companies have had to adjust. And one of the bigger adjustments over the years has been the rise of RevOps. 

What does a RevOps person do? RevOps aligns the entire revenue team by delivering data and visibility into a business’s more important metrics and processes. Then, they leverage their findings to improve efficiencies and drive revenue predictability according to Clari. In fact, SaaS companies with RevOps practices have reported the following increases in productivity and outcomes:

  • 100% to 200% increases in digital marketing ROI
  • 10% to 20% increases in sales productivity
  • 10% increase in lead acceptance
  • 15% to 20% increases in internal customer satisfaction
  • 30% reductions in GTM expenses

So, it’s understandable that RevOps has rapidly risen in popularity. For example, job opportunities for RevOps-related job titles increased by 300% over the past 18 months. 

Plus, 41% of surveyed companies in Revenue.io’s recent study reported having an in-house RevOps function, a stat that’s up 15% since 2021. Another 11% of companies said they plan to introduce RevOps in 2023. 

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When is it time to add RevOps?

Not sure if your company is ready to jump on the RevOps bandwagon? Here are some indicators that it’s time to launch your RevOps practice:

  • You have a goal to drive transparency and accountability at scale across your organization.
  • Your revenue targets across Sales, Marketing, and Customer Success aren’t aligned.
  • Key business metrics across departments don’t match up.
  • You’re experiencing continuous internal strife and conflict leading to finger-pointing and mistrust.

If that sounds like your organization, read on for best practices in developing your RevOps foundation, scaling your practice, and learning from some of the best SaaS companies that adopted RevOps early on. 

Building a foundation for RevOps

Every successful RevOps function shares three key elements in common. These include assembling a cross-functional team, setting RevOps metrics to measure success, and establishing repeatable processes

Let’s take a look at each of these.

Assembling a cross-functional team

RevOps is about creating alignment across your customer-facing departments like Sales, Marketing, Customer Service, Renewals, and Product. 

When these teams are well aligned:

  • Sales can easily recognize the right customers for your products
  • Marketing can attract and retain the right customers
  • Customer experience is excellent
  • Operations can put the right tools, systems, and resources in place

When strongly aligned, you’ll see shared goals and objectives and consistent cross-functional communication and collaboration on go-to-market efforts.

Setting RevOps metrics

Once you’ve aligned your customer-facing teams, you’re ready to begin tracking metrics that are essential to your success. This enables you to have better visibility into your RevOps performance, identify potential issues, and give you time to adjust accordingly.

Commonly adoptedRevOps metrics your team should track include:

  • Revenue: Measuring revenue looks different based on the business type. In SaaS, we typically track monthly or annual recurring revenue (ARR).
  • Revenue retention: Gross revenue retention and net revenue retention have started to replace ARR as the most important metrics in 2023 when predictable revenue trumps “grow at all costs.” Measuring revenue retention provides insights into the success of Sales and Marketing processes such as whether you’re:
    • Targeting the right customers
    • Pitching the right way
    • Onboarding new customers effectively
    • Providing sufficient support to customers experiencing problems
  • Customer acquisition cost (CAC): Ensure your CAC aligns with the customer lifetime value (CLV) of your product. For example, you wouldn’t spend $100 to acquire a customer with a CLV of only $20.
  • Sales pipeline velocity: This metric tells you the average time from lead to paying customer. However, pipeline velocity is not measured in time but in revenue. You can calculate sales pipeline velocity by multiplying the number of sales-qualified leads (SQLs) in your pipeline by the average deal size. Then multiply that by the overall win rate expressed as a percentage and divide by the length of the sales cycle. High pipeline velocity is an indicator of close alignment between your sales and marketing teams.
  • Customer churn rate: This is the percentage of customers who stop paying for your product in a designated amount of time. This is often an indicator of how well customer support is performing. Average churn rates vary from 4.75% to 7.55% depending on the industry, according to Recurly.
  • Sales forecasting: Define how much individual sales reps and your entire sales function will sell in a designated time period. This is often monthly, quarterly, or annually. Historically sales created relatively unreliable forecasts that ignored critical factors like marketing spend, customer lifetime value, and customer churn rate. So, it’s best that your RevOps team create these forecasts, track progress against them, and adjust accordingly.
  • Renewals, upgrades, and cross-sells: the more renewals, upgrades, and cross-sells you attain, the greater your customer lifetime value will be. This translates to a better budget for customer acquisition to help you hit your growth goals.
  • Conversion rate: this is the percentage of leads who advance through the sales process and become paying customers. This figure alone doesn’t tell you much but it is a valuable indicator of the effectiveness of your sales and marketing efforts.

Recommended Reading: Who Should RevOps Report To?

Establishing processes

RevOps is tasked with removing silos between departments, especially Sales, Marketing, and Customer Service to create a cohesive customer journey. 

As silos are removed, inter-departmental processes throughout the revenue cycle need to be established to streamline operations and provide transparency. These might include how to hand off leads between Marketing and Sales or how to prioritize customer support requests.

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Scaling your RevOps practice

Whether you’ve yet to start your RevOps journey or you currently have a team of one, let’s look at how to scale your RevOps practice.

How do you structure a RevOps team?

RevOps is intended to unify all revenue-generating operations. It encompasses four main functions:

  1. Operations experts: Leads high-level strategy and makes sure GTM teams have what they need to function efficiently. This includes tools insights, processes, and content.
  2. Enablement specialist: Responsible for training GTM teams on things like proper messaging about current and new product features and relevant use cases.
  3. Data analysts: Review and translate data to understand revenue performance and how to improve it.
  4. Tools management technical owners: Manages all software and technical tools. These team members make decisions about tools, train GTM teams on their use, and oversee APIs and integrations to ensure they are functioning properly.

Many organizations start with only one RevOps person, typically at the director level, who oversees these functions. Then, as the business scales, they begin to grow their Revops team.  

To expand your RevOps team, start by looking at your internal staff to identify current team members you can shift into these functions. Then, fill in the gaps by hiring additional staff as needed.

Key RevOps roles for your organization include:

Chief Revenue Officer or Head of RevOps: Typically reports to the CEO and works collaboratively with heads of sales, marketing, and customer success. This role oversees the unified strategy of the revenue business.

Sales enablement manager: Arms sales with the knowledge, content, and training needed to effectively advance sales through the pipeline to a successful close.

Systems administrator: Responsible for knowing all the ins and outs of the tech stack, managing integrations, developing new processes, and migrating data as needed.

Business analyst or sales analyst: A data analyst who understands and tracks RevOps metrics. This role knows how to leverage insights from metrics to identify ways to improve the efficiency and productivity of revenue teams.

Fractional hiring is also a possible solution if you don’t have the budget or a long-term requirement for a role. It prevents you from hiring someone short-term only to turn around and lay them off. Plus, it saves time by enabling you to add someone quickly who can hit the ground running without a long onboarding period.

Investing in technology and automation to streamline processes

Once you have established product-market-fit and go-to-market processes, it’s time to build your RevOps tech stack. 

As your company grows, your tech stack should evolve accordingly. Here’s an overview of the progression from the seed stage through series C funding:

Seed stage: At this point, you are likely closing your first 10 customers and only need the basics like CRM, proposal software, automations, a payment platform, and accounting software.

Series A: Acquisition of new business while scaling existing customers is your focus here. So, potential additions to your tech stack include platforms for sales engagement, a data provider, a customer success platform, commission tracking, quote configuration, and an eSign platform for contracts.

Series B: As your sales team expands, your focus is on standardizing processes as you grow your team. You may also be approaching more enterprise prospects, creating the need to configure more complex deals. Potential additions to your tech stack at this point include sales intelligence and upgrades to some of your prior technology selections.

Series C: By now your sales team likely consists of more than 30 team members divided between new business and current customer expansion. This is where you need to focus on a stack that helps you ensure standardization while being flexible enough for upsells and various renewal situations. Again, this is where you start upgrading some of your prior technology selections to meet your requirements as you scale.

We also found a great tech stack cheat sheet that gives you more details of potential technology to meet your needs.

Developing a culture of continuous improvement and learning

RevOps success requires a culture of continuous learning, adaptation, and improvements. In practice, this takes shape by constantly tracking and analyzing data to identify ways to improve revenue operations performance.  In doing so, you’ll be able to diagnose weaknesses and improve outcomes that allow you to keep pace as market conditions change.

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Companies with successful RevOps practices

Who can you look to in the industry as a RevOps best practices example company? We sourced a few below, including us!

At QuotaPath, we have leveraged RevOps to accelerate growth. It started when our CEO, AJ Bruno, hired Ryan Milligan for the RevOps role. At the time, we had 40 employees. Ryan started as a SalesOps leader with a MarketingOps and SEO background but quickly shifted to a more centralized RevOps role.

The combination of SalesOps and analytics allowed the company to implement RevOps easily. 

According to Ryan, “The numbers are the numbers. We can’t change those numbers unless we start to think about the activities that drive the objectives, the results, and change those.”

AJ and Ryan conduct business reviews weekly where they assess the funnel from top to bottom. Ryan records information about the metrics and shares them with first-line managers so they can come to the meeting prepared with questions and ideas for continuous improvement.

Finding the right stack of tools and RevOps allows us to ensure we’re getting the most out of what we are using or make adjustments accordingly.

AJ said RevOps has been a key ingredient to QuotaPath’s growth.

Carbon Black, a cybersecurity company, began its RevOps journey to accelerate growth during a transition from an on-premise to a cloud business model. According to Daniel Carpenter, their RevOps leader, Carbon Black leveraged data science for RevOps success. It helped them drive productivity improvements for lead and account prioritization to facilitate prospecting and support Customer Success and renewals with predictive churn insights.

Carbon Black leaders have said they were glad to centralize their go-to-market operations functions under one leader. Although a challenge to finalize, the results in doing so have facilitated better process optimizations across RevOps. 

They also said that the enablement team played a critical role in driving the transformation from cloud-selling motions that their sales team and partners needed to learn.

Overall, Carbon Black believes their RevOps team was essential to meeting both its growth objectives and its speed of transformation during that transition.

Okta was an early adopter of the RevOps model, too. Jake Randall started out in finance at the company’s inception.  As the company started to grow, it embraced the RevOps approach even though it was yet to become popular.

Jake told Demand Gen Report, “A RevOps structure ensures you have a common understanding and agreement across the entire company for your go-to-market strategy, execution, and measurement to better drive growth.”

When Okta was a startup of around 50 people, they looked to optimize the entire buyer’s journey. This would enable them to grow as efficiently as possible.

As they built out their unified operations team, they made sure all operations roles had functional alignment with their business units to support them effectively. But the operations team was also a standalone function and team.

Jake summed things up by saying, “For Okta, RevOps is simply how we do business. And it’s the foundation from which a small startup became a $500M+ public company that is now delivering 50+% year-over-year revenue growth!”

Time to grow your RevOps practice

There’s no doubt that RevOps is essential to consistent revenue growth, efficient operations, and superior customer experience. Whether your RevOps journey is yet to start or you have a team of one, now you have a guide to help you scale.

Build a firm RevOps foundation by assembling your cross-functional team. Select essential RevOps metrics to track. And, establish processes to keep your organization on track.

If starting from scratch, establish the role of RevOps by identifying or hiring one person who can fulfill the four main functions of RevOps. If you’re looking to expand your team, look internally first before adding to your headcount.

Remember to select purpose-driven technology tools to meet your needs. Tracking and analyzing metrics is essential to your RevOps practice success. As is a culture of continuous improvement and learning.

About QuotaPath

QuotaPath supports RevOps, Sales, and Finance professionals by simplifying the process of sales compensation. From comp plan design through sales commission payments, QuotaPath partners with growth-stage companies to align teams over earnings and attainment visibility. To learn more, chat with our team or try QuotaPath for yourself with a free 30-day trial.

Sales manager compensation plans

sales manager compensation plan examples

In a previous blog, our Chief of Staff Graham Collins shared 5 sales compensation plan examples. This article included a sales manager compensation plan sample featuring a single commission rate that applies to all deals, regardless of team attainment. 

It’s perfect for a startup that just hired its first sales manager. The plan is logical, simple in nature, and makes room for new complexity within the plan as the organization grows.

Now, for teams looking to go beyond a single rate, we outline two more sales manager compensation plans to consider. But first, let’s review some terminology since the following compensation plan templates introduce new compensation levers.

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Sales manager comp plans definitions

Accelerator: Our first plan below includes accelerators. An accelerator is a commission tool that rewards salespeople with a higher commission rate for exceeding a certain sales quota or target. 

For example, a salesperson might earn a 10% commission on sales up to $100,000, but receive a 15% commission on sales above that amount. The higher commission rate is known as the accelerator, and its purpose is to incentivize salespeople to exceed their sales targets.

Attainment point bonus: In our attainment-point bonus compensation plan example below, sales managers earn a fixed dollar amount for every percentage point closer to the 100% target.

For example, if the bonus rate is $100, and the team reaches 95% of the goal attainment, the manager would earn a bonus of $9,500.

Buffer: Sales manager compensation plans usually include a buffer to ensure your manager is not held to the entire team’s performance. This measure accommodates team absences, underperformers, and overperformers. 

So, instead of setting the sales manager quota to 100% of the team quota, you would hold your managers to 80%-90% of their team’s collective quota. 

Cliff or commission floor: A cliff/commission floor in variable compensation requires the commissionable employee to earn a minimum amount of quota or revenue before being eligible for variable pay. We see cliffs used in conjunction with other commission structures, such as accelerators or tiers, to provide a balance between guaranteed income and incentivizing high performance.

While we don’t recommend cliffs for sales compensation plans at the rep level, we do at the leadership level. 

What does a sales manager position pay?

Next, let’s look at a few data points as far as sales manager salary and on-target earnings (OTE). 

Senior Sales Manager salaries

According to 2023 data from Bett’s Recruiting, senior-level sales managers in tech earn a salary between $140,000 and $200,000 annually. When factoring in commission potential, those numbers increased to $280,000 and $400,00 for total OTE. These numbers will vary by experience, region, and size of the company.

First-time Sales Manager salaries

The same report showed that first-time sales managers make a salary between $120,000 and $160,000.

“However, this number can vary based on experience, company size, and even location in some cases. For example, an SM with more than three years of experience will see $140,000 – $200,000 in almost any tech hub region” — Bett’s Recruiting. 

Pay mix

Pay mix refers to the ratio of base salary and variable pay that makes up an OTE. This is usually listed as a percentage breakdown with a base salary listed first.

For sales managers, the two most commonly adopted pay mixes are 50/50 or 60/40. 

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Sales manager compensation plan: Commission with Accelerator

One of the most widely implemented sales manager compensation plans is this structure, Commission with Accelerator. 

Under this commission plan, the manager earns a fixed commission rate on every sale by the manager’s team. Then, once the team surpasses 100% of its quota within the quota period, the manager’s commission rate increases for every subsequent deal.

Note: the commission rate should change with the size of the team. Meaning, as hiring increases, someone departs, or someone is promoted, the commission rate should fluctuate with those changes. 

Typically, leadership adjusts the commission rate on a monthly or quarterly basis to account for team changes. Failing to adjust the rate accordingly can significantly impact the manager’s earning potential.

Lastly, consider adding a “cliff” to this plan. A cliff or a commission floor ensures the sales manager does not receive a commission. In the example below, the cliff is cleared after the team achieves 50% of the target.

Sales manager compensation plan example: Accelerators

  • Commission Tiers:
    0-100%: Base rate: 3.1%
    100%+: 1*5 base rate 4.63% (non-retro)
  • Annual OTE: $200,000
  • Base:variable: $100,000 / $100,000
  • Pay mix ratio: 50:50
  • Annualized Team Quota: $3.6M Annually
  • Quarterly Team Quota: $900,000
  • Manager Buffer: 90%
  • Manager Quota: $3.24M Annually

Sales Manager Compensation Plan: Bonus

Next up is the bonus-based sales manager compensation plan. This structure pays a pre-determined bonus for each attainment point tied to the manager’s team’s total quota attainment progress. 

It’s like the Single Rate Bonus Plan for account executives but for leadership.

Under this plan, the Sales Manager’s bonus percentage is equivalent to their team’s quota attainment percentage. For example, if the team hits 93% of the quota, the Sales Manager will earn 93% of their bonus (at $250 per percentage point). That’s regardless of the size of their quota.

Like our other comp plan template above, this structure includes a manager buffer of 90%. 

However, with this sales leadership compensation plan, the bonus for managers stays the same regardless of team size. As the team grows or scales back, the quota may change, but the per-attainment bonus remains the same.

Sales manager compensation plan example: Bonus

  • Single-rate bonus: $250 per percentage point of attainment
  • Annual OTE: $200,000
  • Base:variable: $100,000 / $100,000
  • Pay mix ratio: 50:50
  • Rep Quota: 150,000 Quarterly
  • Annualized Quota amount: $3.6M Annually
  • Quarterly Team Quota: $900,000
  • Manager Buffer: 90%
  • Manager Quota: $810,000 Quarterly
  • Manager Quota: $3.24M Annually

Which plan should you use?

We can’t decide for you, but we do have some pros and cons to each plan. 

The first plan with accelerators includes a fixed cost of sales and is easy to understand. 

However, because the plan fluctuates with the team, it will require changes throughout the year. Additionally, this plan can affect earnings potential if it remains unchanged and may send your manager in a hurry to hire to maximize earnings potential. Because, in theory, the more people the manager has on their team, the higher the manager can make.

Meanwhile, the sales manager bonus structure promotes consistent earnings across periods and can account for high variability on the team. But, your leader may push back against hiring plans as it benefits them most when the team is smaller. This plan is also a bit more complicated to understand how individual deals impact earnings. 

Compensation resources

For additional compensation plan templates, visit Compensation Hub. This free and ungated resource includes 20 of the most-trusted comp plan templates. With 9 adjustable variables, build a plan aligned and fit to your business. 

When you’re ready, send the plan for review internally, then save it directly in QuotaPath to kick off a 30-day trial of our automated commission tracking and sales compensation management solution. Sync your CRM in a few steps and eliminate the need for manual tracking. 

We’ve found our most successful customers have between 20 and 250 employees with plans to grow, that use a CRM, like HubSpot and Salesforce, to track deal data, and that are looking for an easier way to manage commissions. Is that you? Start a free trial today.