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Sales Comp Redesign Coach

辅导B2B SaaS公司的CEO、CRO、CFO或销售副总裁进行销售薪酬计划重新设计——当现有计划与战略不一致时,鼓励...

person作者: charlie-morrisonhubclawhub

sales-comp-redesign-coach

Coach a sales-leadership team through redesigning the compensation plan. Sales comp is the single most powerful behavior-shaping lever a B2B SaaS company has. Most plans accumulate patches over 2-4 years and quietly drift away from current strategy; redesign is overdue at most companies but rarely done well.

A bad redesign damages trust, drives top reps to leave, and damages the year. A good redesign aligns behavior with strategy, retains top performers, and improves predictability of revenue.

When to engage

Trigger when:

  • "Our comp plan was designed 3 years ago and feels misaligned"
  • "We have 7 SPIFFs running concurrently and reps are gaming them"
  • "Top reps are sandbagging or pulling deals across quarter boundaries"
  • "Reps are not engaging in expansion / cross-sell because comp doesn't reward it"
  • "We need to redesign comp for next fiscal year"
  • "Board / CEO wants a comp-plan review"
  • "We're moving to a new sales motion (PLG, hybrid, enterprise) and need a new comp plan"
  • "We have rep-level disputes about quota fairness"

Do not engage for: hiring-package design (different — about TC structure, not behavior incentives), SDR-comp-only optimization (use a more-focused playbook), or executive comp design (different stakeholder set).

Diagnosis: what is your plan actually rewarding?

Before redesigning, audit the current state.

Step 1: list every comp element

  • Base salary
  • Variable / commission rate
  • Quota (annual, quarterly, monthly)
  • Accelerators (above quota)
  • Decelerators (below quota)
  • SPIFFs (current + retired)
  • Bonuses (one-time, threshold)
  • Special programs (President's Club, kicker, recovery commission)
  • Clawback rules (early churn, contract renegotiation)

Step 2: trace the behaviors each element rewards

For each element, write what behavior it incentivizes:

  • "Commission on ARR" → close deals at any size
  • "Accelerator at 100%+ of quota" → push hard once near goal
  • "$5K SPIFF for closing in Q4" → pull deals into Q4 from Q1
  • "Clawback at 12 months for early churn" → reduce churn-prone deals
  • "Per-logo bonus" → close many small deals over fewer big ones

Step 3: compare to current strategy

  • If strategy is "move upmarket" but comp rewards logo count → misalignment.
  • If strategy is "expand existing customers" but AEs don't get expansion credit → misalignment.
  • If strategy is "improve retention" but comp has no churn link → misalignment.
  • If strategy is "focus on ICP-fit deals" but comp is purely volume → misalignment.

The redesign mandate is to fix specific misalignments, not redesign for redesign's sake.

Step 4: rep-level feedback

Talk to 5-10 reps individually:

  • "What does the comp plan reward today that you think shouldn't be rewarded?"
  • "What behaviors do you want to do that the plan doesn't support?"
  • "Which elements feel unfair?"
  • "Which elements feel game-able?"

You'll learn more in 5 hours of rep conversations than in any number of comp-design workshops.

Comp-plan structure

Base / variable mix

Standard ratios:

  • AE (full-cycle): 50/50 (sometimes 60/40 in higher-ACV / longer-cycle motions)
  • AE (closing-only, BDR-fed): 50/50
  • SDR: 70/30 or 80/20
  • Account Manager: 60/40 or 70/30 (closer to base because retention work)
  • Customer Success Manager: 80/20 or 90/10 (mostly base; small variable for expansion or retention metric)
  • Solutions Engineer: 80/20 or 90/10
  • VP / Director of Sales: 50/50 to 60/40

The 50/50 logic for AEs: enough variable to drive behavior, enough base to retain through bad quarters.

OTE benchmarks

Wildly varies by market, ACV, segment. Rough 2026 benchmarks:

  • SMB AE (sub-$25K ACV): $90K-$150K OTE
  • Mid-market AE ($25K-$200K ACV): $150K-$250K OTE
  • Enterprise AE ($200K+ ACV): $250K-$400K OTE
  • Strategic AE (six- and seven-figure deals): $350K-$600K+ OTE
  • SDR: $60K-$100K OTE
  • AM: similar to AE in same segment
  • VP Sales: $250K-$500K base + $250K-$500K variable depending on company stage

These are negotiation-floor benchmarks; geo, equity, comp-philosophy adjust significantly.

Quota math

  • Quota for AEs typically: 4-6x OTE in ARR (i.e., a $200K OTE rep should be carrying $800K-$1.2M ARR quota).
  • This means commission rate is roughly 1/(quota multiple): if 5x quota, 20% of variable per dollar of quota — but applied to the variable comp, not the OTE.
  • Industry-common rule: $1 of OTE → $5 of ARR delivered. Below that, model breaks; above, reps may underearn.

Accelerators

Standard: above 100% of quota, commission rate jumps:

  • 100-115%: 1.5x rate
  • 115-130%: 2x rate
  • 130%+: 2.5-3x rate

This rewards over-performance and creates a "stretch" incentive. Avoid:

  • No accelerator (rep maxes at 100% and stops pushing).
  • Aggressive accelerator without cap considerations (a 5x rate above 130% can lead to outsized payouts the company can't actually afford).

Decelerators

Below 100%, commission rate is lower:

  • Common: 100% rate from 60-100% of quota, 50% rate below 60%.
  • Avoid: zero commission below threshold, which crashes morale.
  • Some plans: ramp threshold (e.g., reps don't earn variable until 50% of quota, then earn from there).

Caps

Most modern plans don't cap commission. Capping is a big red flag — top reps will leave or sandbag once near cap.

Metric architecture

The metrics drive behavior. Choose intentionally.

Logo vs ARR

  • Logo-only comp → reps close many small deals, ignore deal size.
  • ARR-only comp → reps chase big deals, may avoid ICP-fit-but-smaller deals.
  • Hybrid (most common): primary on ARR with small logo bonus.

New ARR vs Total ARR

  • New-ARR-only: pure hunters. Don't engage with existing customers.
  • Total-ARR (including expansion): hybrid hunters / farmers. Often muddy.
  • Common modern pattern: AEs primarily on new-ARR, separate expansion comp for AMs / CSMs.

ACV-weighted

Some plans weight by deal size — bigger deals worth more than just their direct ARR. Reduces incentive to chase small ICP-misfit deals.

Gross margin

For products with significant variable cost (services-heavy, high COGS), comp on gross margin rather than revenue. Avoids reps closing deals that lose money in delivery.

Multi-year deals

  • Common: comp paid on first-year ACV regardless of contract length.
  • Better: comp paid on first-year ACV + small recurring bonus on years 2-3 if customer retains.
  • Less-common: comp on TCV (total contract value); creates incentive for long contracts but distorts unit economics.

Discount-adjusted

Some plans reduce commission rate as discount % rises. Avoids reps over-discounting.

  • E.g., 100% rate at list, 80% rate at 10% discount, 60% rate at 20%, 40% at 30%.
  • Effective; can feel punitive. Communicate clearly.

Role-specific design

Sales Development Rep (SDR)

  • Primary metric: meetings booked / qualified opps generated.
  • Common: $X per qualified meeting, $Y per opp accepted by AE.
  • Avoid: pure activity metric (calls, emails) — leads to gaming.
  • Tie SDR comp partially to closed-won opportunities (e.g., $1000 per closed-won opp they sourced).

Account Executive (AE)

  • Primary metric: new ARR (or new ACV).
  • Quota: 4-6x OTE.
  • Standard plan: base + commission + accelerators + clawback for early churn.
  • Optional: bonus for ICP-fit deals; bonus for multi-product deals.

Account Manager (AM)

  • Primary metric: net retention + expansion ARR.
  • Plan: heavier base, smaller variable, but variable directly tied to NRR / expansion outcomes.
  • Avoid: pure retention metric (incentivizes status-quo); always pair with expansion target.

Customer Success Manager (CSM)

  • Comp model varies: pure base, base + small variable on retention, base + variable on expansion.
  • Trend: CSM compensation increasingly tied to expansion outcomes (often 10-20% of OTE as variable).

Solutions Engineer (SE)

  • Common: 80/20 or 90/10 base/variable.
  • Variable tied to AE's quota attainment (shared accountability).

RevOps

  • Typically pure base; sometimes small bonus on team-level outcomes.

VP / CRO

  • 50/50 to 60/40.
  • Variable tied to overall sales-team attainment, often with kickers for individual rep retention, hire-target attainment, or strategic milestones.

SPIFF layer

SPIFFs are short-term incentives layered on the base plan. Use sparingly.

When to SPIFF

  • Launch a new product / feature; need rep focus.
  • End-of-period push (Q4 close).
  • Specific competitor displacement.
  • Multi-product attach.

When not to SPIFF

  • To paper over a misaligned base plan.
  • To compensate for unfair territory.
  • More than 2-3 SPIFFs running at once (reps lose focus).

SPIFF design

  • Time-bounded (4-12 weeks typical).
  • Specific behavior (not "close more deals").
  • Clear payout (flat amount per qualifying event; not complex tiers).
  • Auditable (rep can self-track).

Retire SPIFFs that have run their course. Most companies accumulate too many.

Territory + quota assignment

The quota / territory design is half the sales comp problem and often gets less attention.

What makes a quota fair

  • Reps see the math (don't black-box it).
  • Quotas are loaded based on territory potential, not arbitrary.
  • Top performers don't get punished with disproportionately higher quotas (the "more-you-sell-more-quota-you-get" trap).
  • Below-quota reps are managed as performance issue, not blamed on territory.

Territory design principles

  • Equal market opportunity (revenue potential), not equal account count.
  • Account-list visibility to reps (no surprises).
  • Stable for at least 12 months (territory shuffling annually destroys trust).
  • Hand-offs and conflicts handled via deal-registration / hand-off processes.

Ramp quotas

New AEs need 90-180 days to ramp. Ramp quota:

  • Month 1-3: 25% of quota expected.
  • Month 4-6: 50% of quota.
  • Month 7-9: 75%.
  • Month 10-12: 100%.
  • Variable comp paid against ramp quota, not full quota.

Quota disputes

Set up a quota-review process:

  • Mid-year review of quota against actual market potential.
  • Adjust if territory changed materially (M&A in the market, account losses, etc.).
  • Don't adjust just because rep complains.

Rollout

The redesign rollout is where most plans break.

Timing

  • Aim to roll out at fiscal year start.
  • Mid-year changes break trust (reps planned around the old plan).
  • Communicate 60-90 days before fiscal-year start.

Communication

  • Town hall: leadership presents the new plan, the rationale, the math.
  • 1-on-1: every rep gets a personal walk-through with their direct manager.
  • Plan doc: a comprehensive 5-10 page doc reps can refer to.
  • FAQ: anticipate the top 20 questions and answer them.
  • Calculator: a spreadsheet where reps can model their earnings under different deal scenarios.

Parallel-run period (optional)

For first quarter under new plan:

  • Pay reps the higher of old plan vs new plan.
  • Builds trust; reduces fear.
  • Costs the company a quarter of margin; sometimes worth it.

Common rep questions / pushback

  • "Why is my quota higher than last year?" (tie to territory growth, market growth, company growth.)
  • "I'll earn less under the new plan." (model: are they actually earning less, or are they earning the same with different timing?)
  • "This punishes top performers." (often a fair concern; address directly.)
  • "Why is the SPIFF gone?" (because the SPIFF was over-corrected for; explain.)

Legal / tax / accounting

ASC 606 commission expense

Under ASC 606, commission costs are amortized over the contract life (typically 2-5 years for SaaS). Implications:

  • Doesn't affect rep payout timing.
  • Affects company P&L; needs finance-team coordination.
  • Plan changes affect ASC 606 calculation; involve finance early.

Commission timing

Two common patterns:

  • Pay-on-booking: rep gets commission when deal closes.
  • Pay-on-cash-collected: rep gets commission when customer pays first invoice.
  • Pay-on-cash protects against deal-then-default scenarios; common for newer / risk-averse companies.

Clawback design

  • Standard: full clawback if customer churns within 6 months.
  • Pro-rated clawback: 100% if churn in month 1-3, 50% if month 4-6, 25% if 7-12.
  • Clawback ties rep behavior to retention; without it, reps close anyone who'll sign.
  • Avoid: clawbacks beyond 12 months (too long; rep can't influence).

Draw / recoverable advance

For new reps in ramp, sometimes pay an advance against future commissions ("draw").

  • Recoverable: rep must pay back if they don't earn it.
  • Non-recoverable: company eats the difference.
  • Use sparingly; can mask weak rep performance.

Termination handling

  • Voluntarily terminated rep: typically forfeits unpaid commissions, depending on contract.
  • Involuntarily terminated: depends on plan and jurisdiction.
  • California: very pro-employee; reps generally retain commissions earned through termination date.
  • Have employment counsel review the plan annually.

Failure modes

1. Over-engineering

Plan with 12 metrics, 5 SPIFFs, 3 accelerator tiers, conditional bonuses. Reps can't figure out what to do. Fix: simplify to 1-2 primary metrics + 1-2 secondary.

2. Mid-year changes

Changing comp mid-year breaks trust. Even if necessary, do it transparently with a clear rationale.

3. Ignoring rep feedback

Plans built in isolation by RevOps / Finance / VP Sales without rep input often miss obvious problems. Always include rep voices.

4. Comp-plan-as-strategy substitute

Hoping the comp plan will fix a strategic problem (e.g., "we're not selling to enterprise; let's increase enterprise comp"). Compensation can shape behavior at the margin; it can't compensate for product gaps, ICP confusion, or market dynamics.

5. Inflexible plans

No mechanism to adjust for unusual circumstances (M&A in the market, Black Swan events). Build a quarterly review process.

6. Quota-credibility loss

Reps believing quotas are arbitrary, set to ensure under-payment. Transparency on the quota math and territory potential is the only fix.

7. Top-rep dependency

A plan that disproportionately rewards 2 top reps creates concentration risk. If those reps leave, the team's comp dynamics collapse. Plan should reward top performers but also build broader team strength.

Workflow

For a redesign:

  • Week 1-2: Diagnose current plan. List elements; trace behaviors; compare to strategy.
  • Week 2-4: Talk to reps. Get qualitative input.
  • Week 4-6: Draft new plan structure. Model payouts under historical deal data ("If this plan had been in place last year, what would each rep have earned?").
  • Week 6-8: Stakeholder alignment (CEO, CRO, CFO, VP Sales, Finance). Iterate.
  • Week 8-10: Legal review. ASC 606 review. Tax review.
  • Week 10-12: Communication plan. Rollout assets. Manager training.
  • Week 12 (or fiscal-year start): Launch.
  • Months 1-3: Monitor closely. Address questions. Adjust unintended consequences.
  • Month 6: Mid-year health check.
  • Month 12: Annual review and refinements.

Integration with other coaches

  • icp-redefinition-coach: comp must align with new ICP definition.
  • enterprise-sales-coach: enterprise comp differs from SMB / mid-market.
  • expansion-revenue-coach: AM / CSM comp drives expansion behavior.
  • nrr-recovery-coach: comp can be lever in retention recovery.
  • founder-ceo-firing-coach: new CEO often inherits broken comp; redesign in first 90 days is common.

Comp redesign is a 12-week project minimum, often longer. Don't rush it; the rep-level fallout from a bad rollout can take 18 months to recover from.