Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Tips on putting together an incentive plan for inside sales

Any tips for putting together an incentive plan for "inside sales" employees? We are trying to get our employees into a "value-added selling" frame of mind (instead of price-point) and want to provide an incentive

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What type of inside sales are they doing? Do they qualify for the 7i exemption or are they non exempt employee? These questions must be answered because, if they are non-exempt, any incentive earned must be included in their hourly rate. If they are exempt, it would make it much easier to implement an incentive with less administrative costs. Assuming you conclude they are either exempt, or that the administrative burden if they aren't is "worth it," then here are a few tips for designing their incentive plans:

(1) Incentives are a great way to support an initiative to change behavior, but the rest of the initiative needs to be in place as well. This may include training, systems enhancements, coaching and mentoring, etc.

(2) If you really want to use incentives to motivate and excite, they need "carrots and sticks" to be part of them. Over time you will want to migrate base salaries down as a percent of target total compensation so that the target incentive must be earned in order for the employees to maintain market-competitive pay.

(3) The amount of pay at risk depends a great deal on the nature of their inside sales roles. Although it can be more complex than this, one simple division is between jobs that are primarily "inbound" and those that involve more aggressive "outbound" calling. If an inside seller mostly reacts to requests from customers and is primarily doing an order management function (perhaps with some ability to cross-sell or up-sell), then a relatively smaller percent of pay at risk (in the incentive) is appropriate. For outbound inside sales people who more strongly influence a prospect's decision to buy through their own creativity and initiative, more pay at risk (and more associated upside) would be a good idea.

(4) Beyond this, the basic principles of role-based incentive design apply, including:

- Pick measures that are linked directly to income generation for the company

(e.g., revenue, units sold, margin) rather than activity level (e.g., number of calls)

- Pick as few measures as possible to cover the primary accountabilities of the role. One or two would be a good number for a newly-instituted plan. Three might be OK. More than three would have to be well-justified as it dilutes both the message communicated by the incentive plan and the payout value of accomplishing any of them.

- Design the plans with sales leadership's involvement so that they introduce them with a message like, "Here are our new incentive plans. We are thrilled to share them with you because we believe they will significantly increase both your income and that of the company. Let me show you how . . ."

- Provide great materials to communicate the plans -- since the reason you're doing it is to motivate and excite your inside sales people.

- As soon as you have an idea of what the final design may be, start planning for accurate and timely administration of the plans and great reporting. You risk losing much of the motivational value if employees don't see a frequent and easily understood connection between their results and their earnings.

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