Most companies pay sales people a combination of a salary, a commission, and a bonus for hitting a quota, putting a portion of their pay at risk. The belief is that at-risk pay motivates sales people to work hard and direct effort towards sales activities that encourage achievement of sales goals.

In reality, however, many of the commissions and bonuses companies pay sales people aren’t truly at risk — and as a result, the company may be spending money in ways that produce little in the way of extra effort or motivation.

Pay mix – the ratio of fixed pay (base salary) to variable pay (incentive or at-risk pay) – is commonly used to gauge the extent to which a sales compensation plan motivates sales people to drive current results. A 60:40 pay mix is the average for sales forces, but the mix varies across industries and sales roles.

A very aggressive mix (say 0:100) is common in industries such as insurance that use independent contractors as sales agents. A less aggressive mix (say 75:25) is typical in industries such as pharmaceuticals that want sales people to focus on customer education, and for technical sales jobs that have a large problem-solving component.

Within an industry or company, pay mix often varies across sales roles. One technology company targeted a 50:50 pay mix for sales people in new customer acquisition (CA) roles, but a 70:30 mix for sales people in account management (AM) roles. This encouraged the CAs to ‘hunt,’ while the AMs focused on cultivating relationships with existing customers.

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Generally, it’s believed that an aggressive pay mix (i.e. a high second number) motivates sales people to drive short-term results.

But these planned pay mixes can be a misleading indicator of the extent to which pay is at risk and tied to sales people’s current performance. This is because frequently, a large percentage of sales are ‘free’ to the sales people and will be realised without current sales effort.

Free sales come in two forms

Franchise sales have nothing to do with sales people. Customers may buy from a firm because the company has superior products, great branding, effective digital marketing or favourable pricing. Franchise sales are increasing in many markets as the internet makes customers more informed, connected and socially-influenced, and therefore less dependent on sales people when making buying decisions.

Carryover sales are attributed to a sales person’s past effort and occur without new sales activity. Examples include sales from long-term contracts and sales from customers who purchase out of loyalty, habit, or desire to avoid switching costs. Products such as chronic care medications have high carryover. Other products, such as many types of capital equipment, have very low carryover.

Free sales are not free to the company; they require investment in areas such as product development, marketing and previous sales effort. In the short term, however, these sales are free to the sales people. Consequently, incentives paid on free sales are a hidden salary. They are not at risk and therefore do little to truly motivate sales effort.

To understand the extent to which a sales force pay plan motivates current performance, look at a true pay mix by treating incentives earned on free sales as fixed, not variable pay.

For example, a company that sold implantable medical devices to surgeons sought to reinforce a ‘pay-for-performance’ culture with a commission-based incentive plan and a 43:57 targeted pay mix. Analysing the numbers, they recognised that carryover sales were significant. Once surgeons became comfortable using a particular device, they were unlikely to switch to a competitor’s product, even if the sales people became less attentive. After accounting for the portion of commissions linked to carryover sales, the company estimated true pay mix to be 77:23. The planned pay mix greatly overstated the extent to which pay was linked to sales people’s current performance.

incentive payout formulas

Companies can address this problem by adjusting incentive payout formulas. One strategy is to set a payout threshold so no incentives get paid until a certain sales level or percentage of quota is achieved. Another strategy is to accelerate the commission rate for increasing levels of sales or for sales above quota.

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For example, an industrial packaging company targeted a sales force pay mix of 75:25 and thought this gave sales people strong incentive to sell. However, more than two-thirds of the company’s annual revenues were driven by multiyear contracts customers signed in prior years. Two-thirds of the 25% earned as incentive was hidden salary, making the true pay mix 92:8.

A change to the incentive payout formula could remedy the situation. If sales people had to exceed the free sales level (say 70% of quota) before they started earning incentives, it is likely they would work harder to drive new sales. Further, accelerating the incentive payout rate as quota achievement grew to 100% and beyond, could motivate sales people to achieve even higher performance. The threshold and accelerators could help align the true pay mix with the planned mix.

If sales people realise they don’t have to work for a large portion of their incentive pay, hidden salary weakens the motivational power of the incentive. If sales people believe all incentive pay is the result of their recent effort (even when it is not), hidden salary has less impact. But even in these situations, companies need to recognise hidden salary for what it is. True pay mix, not planned pay mix, best reflects the extent to which sales compensation encourages sales people to drive current sales results.

© 2017 Harvard Business School Publishing Corp.

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