Recognise This! – Like Years of Service, sales incentives have their place but should not be the sole focus of employee recognition and reward.

One aspect of employee recognition and rewards is sales incentives. It’s the narrowest programme type, targeting just the elite of a small sector of employees. But the vast majority of organisations swear by sales incentives and/or a commissioned sales structure as the best approach to generate the most sales for the organisation.

During the last year or so, however, there’s been a groundswell of coverage of companies thinking differently about sales incentives.

A few examples:

Esri Founder and President Jack Dangermond (in a New York Times interview):

Q. I read somewhere that your salespeople don’t work on commissions?

A. Correct. I think bonus compensation, commission compensation, robs people of their dignity.  That’s my feeling about it. If you’re doing something just for the money, as opposed to helping a customer, then they don’t quite trust you, and you don’t really feel so good about it.  I feel very good that my staff is helping a customer figure out what’s needed and wanted in their situation, and not just trying to push something. Of course, salesmen are salesmen. They sell things. And we have about 500 of them in the United States alone.  But I don’t like the idea that they’re trying to sell something in order to get a commission.  I’d like them to rather be listening and figure out what really is needed here, and not try to sell them something they don’t need.  And it makes the whole thing more fun.

Red Gate Software Founder Neil Davidson (in a Telegraph article)

“In the early days of the company, Davidson created a fairly straightforward commission scheme. But, of course, salespeople figured out a way to game it – by pushing sales into the time period most advantageous for them, by underselling one month to show a bigger gain the following month, and so on. This wasn’t because they were unethical; it was because they were rational humans responding logically to a particular incentive structure. …

“Not only were commissioned sales not leading to better performance, it wasn’t even the arrangement salespeople themselves preferred. In the absence of commissions, Red Gate’s total sales have increased. And whilst two salespeople left the company – uncomfortable with the new regime – most stayed and are thriving.”

What’s the result of the majority of sales incentive programmes? Research reported in Harvard Business shows:

“What is troubling about the vast majority of sales force incentives, however, is that they are tied to short-term, individual, results-focussed metrics (e.g. monthly territory sales). These metrics can discourage teamwork and distract salespeople from focussing on what is required to develop sustainable customer relationships whilst driving new business and long-term success. …

“Overreliance on incentives to motivate and manage salespeople no longer works, given the complexities of today’s selling environment. Incentives are at best a partial solution to most of the challenges that sales forces face.”

That’s why,like years of service programmes, sales incentives must be part of a complete strategic employee recognition solution that recognises and rewards all employees for demonstrating the company values in their daily work – whilst achieving strategic objectives.

Are sales incentives always the wrong approach? No, but there is good reason to think differently about sales incentives beyond the way we’ve always done it.