Sales Teams: How to Decide Your Pay Offering
What you decide to pay your sales reps has implications beyond just how much money they’ll make. It can impact your ability to attract and retain top talent, affect sales growth, and reflect on your company’s brand.
Pay positioning—which, put simply, refers to how your company compensates people compared to other companies—is a critical step in sales compensation design. And it’s also a key strategy of best-in-class sales organizations.
To determine where you sit in the market, and how you might want to adjust your sales compensation strategy to compete with other organizations in your industry, there are seven key factors to consider.
But first, a little review of what pay positioning—also known as salary benchmarking—is all about.
Sales Compensation Structure and Salary Benchmarking
“In simplest terms, most sales positions earn two types of pay,” says Joseph DiMisa, a Senior Client Partner at Korn Ferry. “Base salary is the fixed portion of pay. And incentive pay—sometimes called a bonus or commission—is the variable portion.”
Together, these two components make up a rep’s total target cash compensation (TTC), or on-target-earnings (OTE), which is the cash amount they’ll expect to receive on their checks if they hit their sales targets.
How you decide to set your sales organization’s TTC will depend on your company culture and management perspective. “Many companies set their pay targets at the median or 50th percentile—right in the middle of the market,” says DiMisa. “Aggressive pay-for-performance-minded companies often pay at the 75th or even the 90th percentile, while others prefer a lower profile and set pay below competitive levels.”
To understand where a company sits, you have to look at quotas. For example, even if a company says it pays at the 75th percentile, are reps meeting those quotas and actually getting paid at the 75th percentile?
“The reverse holds true as well,” says DiMisa. “Companies with a stable, tenured workforce typically set pay targets at a lower level, like the 40th percentile. “They can afford this lower positioning against the market because their sales team turnover has historically been low. The reps are comfortable with the internal equity of pay, and market comparison has not been an issue.”
Low TTCs are typical with a company culture of “winners,” where everyone is considered a top performer who makes quota. However, DiMisa points out that even if quotas are set as if the company sits in the 40th percentile, if reps routinely meet or exceed them, the company actually pays closer to the market rate, in the 50th percentile.
But where does your company sit in relation to the market? And does that position accurately reflect your company culture and compensation philosophy? Is it time to make adjustments?
The Seven Factors of Pay Positioning
Sales compensation planning isn’t an exact science—which means sometimes it can feel like you’re taking a wild stab in the dark when deciding how to set it up. But if you keep the following seven elements in focus, you can take out the guesswork and reduce disagreements.
“Focusing on these factors helps take the emotion out of the conversation and forces you to answer specific questions,” says DiMisa. “Then you can determine the pay positioning that aligns with your answers.”
1 Company Stability
“Typically, start-up companies must pay more to attract top talent due to the implicit risk in a new venture,” says DiMisa. “The more risk, the more reward is expected.” In contrast, older companies with a proven track record are considered less risky. This stability is attractive to employees, allowing sales managers to set lower TTCs in the 40th to 50th percentile.
2 Desired Business Results
If your company sets easily attainable business goals, target pay should be at or below the median market pay. Companies with tougher performance goals typically pay more to get those results.
3 Employee Performance
Like the previous point, but on an individual level. If you give your sales reps tough goals, you’ll want to consider positioning your pay targets in the 60th percentile or higher.
4 Productivity Level
“This primarily means margins or profit,” says DiMisa. “If the company is profitable and sells (or services) products that generate a lot of profitability, then it’s more likely to pay for that through higher compensation targets.”