Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 2

Often Overlooked: Day-to-Day Impact of a Sales Compensation Plan

Today much of the emphasis on sales compensation planning focuses on the behavioral versus the
operational side to impact organizational performance. Searching Google for sales compensation
consultants will return 1.3 million search hits. It seems there are plenty of consultants and experts who
can help you craft the right compensation plan for your company. However, there is another aspect of a
sales compensation plan that is often overlooked or not fully addressed, the day-to-day implications of
calculating, tracking and reporting commissions as part of a sales compensation process.

This typical scenario occurs every month or pay period in many organizations. A mid-sized company (less
than 100 employees) sells credit card processing and point of sale devices to merchants and store front
owners. On a daily basis a funding report by a third party is sent to the finance department. The data in
an Excel spreadsheet is uploaded into the customer tracking system and used to calculate commissions
on each deal. Jumping to the end of the month we need to process all the deals for accounts payable
and payment processing including sales commissions. The operations and/or finance team has to create
a payment report which goes through a management approval process. A significant part of the
payment process is the calculating, tracking and reporting of sales commissions in detail. It’s not
uncommon to have someone in a company spend several days at the end of the month processing sales
commissions and creating commission statements.

So, what does the above scenario have to do with creating a sales compensation plan? The short
answer is plenty. When creating a sales compensation plan which consists of items like quota targets,
base commission rates, accelerators and commission splits you need to understand how changes in the
plan affect your operations. Let’s take the example above. You decide to pay commissions every two
weeks versus once a month to better track your sales team’s progress. Now the workload for your
finance team of creating commission statements and processing payments has doubled.

In talking with companies creating or revising their sales compensation plans I highlight three points of
consideration in their day-to-day operations. 1) Understand your company’s workflow’ which means
really understanding the sequence of connected steps your company goes through from a closed order
to sales commission payments. 2) Understand the use of technology in your company’s workflow. Know
where and how data is used in your company in calculating, tracking and reporting sales commissions. 3)
Understand that timely commission statements and payments are just as important as having the sales
organization understand their commission plan.

Understanding the impact of decisions regarding the payment of sales commissions by those who
actually prepare and distribute this information can help avoid the peril of unintended consequences.
Properly motivating a sales team is of primary importance to any organization, however slowing the
organization with a poorly thought out process or inadequate tools can lead to late payments and a
frustrated sales force. Take the time to plan your process for minimal friction points and find software
tools that can help speed the end result, a satisfied and motivated sales team!
Tom Brubaker is the Vice President of Sales at Nirvaha Corporation, the creator of OneClick
Commissions. OneClick Commissions is the easy to use, any time, any place sales commission statement
creator that takes your Excel commission template and turns it into a beautiful commission statement
you can print or email to one or hundreds of sales representatives in minutes. Don’t give up the tools
you know and use every day, make them easier and faster to use with Nirvaha’s OneClick Commissions.

You might also like