A Really Simple Sales Compensation Plan (RSSP) for MSPs

Warning:  Anyone looking for an in-depth review of organizational science or motivational theory, please stop reading and hit the Harvard Business Review for more.  Those who believ

November 22, 2010

5 Min Read
A Really Simple Sales Compensation Plan (RSSP) for MSPs

By Nimsoft Guest Blog 2

compensation plan

Warning:  Anyone looking for an in-depth review of organizational science or motivational theory, please stop reading and hit the Harvard Business Review for more.  Those who believe that the very best managed services sales people are coin-operated machines, driven by cash, bling, aka serious cheese, read on to explore a Really Simple Sales Plan (RSSP) that works.

I have always thought that the most effective commission plans err on the side of very simple.  To co-opt the contemporary phrase, the plan should be clear enough for a fifth grader to grasp. No algorithms, statistics or complex math of any kind. We want our sales team focused on selling our solutions and making customers happy, not doing linear regressions on an HP-12C.  Addition and multiplication with dollar signs attached are the only mathematics inside a Really Simple Sales Plan.

So let’s start with the basics. What types of behavior should a Really Simple Sales Plan drive?  We want to incent behavior that drives the valuation of my MSP business through the roof – behaviors that build the financial multiples that bankers and buyers use as yardsticks to determine purchase price.

  1. Revenue Generation: The most obvious.  We want our sales pros to fuel recurring revenue growth by closing new logo business on long-term annuity type MSP contracts.

  2. Stickiness: We want our sales pros looking for upsells into their install base – while NOT losing the hunger for new customer conquests.

  3. Profit Generation: We want our sales pros to drive profit by selling the service types with the highest gross profit margins on board.

  4. Strategy Alignment: We want our sales pros aggressively selling new services that are solidly aligned with our product direction.

  5. Satisfaction: We want our sales pros acting with integrity – doing what’s right – to help create a delighted customer experience.

Sounds hard. Complicated. But it doesn’t need to be. Here is a template for an RSSP that is 100% in sync with our MSP business objectives.

 

– FY 2011 Managed Services Sales Plan –

Sales Executive: Phil LaForge
Territory: Western Region
Salary: $50,000 per year

1.  New Customer Contracts: You will be paid a commission equal to 5% of the Total Contract Value (TCV).

  • Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR): $3,000

  • Contract Term: 24 Months

  • Total Contract Value (TCV): 24 months X $3,000 = $72,000 Commission Calculation: $72,000 X 5% = $3,600

2. Existing Customer Renewals: You will be paid a commission equal to 2.5% of the Total Contract Value (TCV).

  • Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR): $5,000

  • Contract Term: 24 Months

  • Total Contract Value (TCV): 24 months X $5,000 = $120,000

  • Commission Calculation: $120,000 X 2.5% = $3,000

3.  New Cloud Services Kicker: Your commission percentage will be increased by 1% on any contract that includes monitoring and management of one or more Windows or Linux machine cloud instance(s).

4.  Rules of the Road:

  • a. You will be paid any commissions due to you in the pay period following the close of the contract.

  • b. If you negotiate a contract that allows “termination for convenience” your commission will be calculated as a three-month contract.

  • c. You must have recorded and maintained the opportunity in SalesForce to be eligible for commission payment.

  • d. If you separate from the company, commissions due as of the date of separation will be paid in your final paycheck.

  • e. The company can change any/all elements of this plan based on our business requirements.

– End of Sales Plan –

Next Steps

That’s it.  If the lawyers and HR Department stay out of it, the entire plan sits well on one page.  Of course “your mileage may vary.” You might use higher or lower commission multipliers based on base salary levels, market OTE (on-target earnings), average deal size, average sales cycle and profit targets. You can implement different commission variables and still keep the elegance in place.

OK, it’s a really simple model, but does it accomplish the business goals.  Lets give our RSSP a quick run through.

  1. Revenue Generation: CHECK.  The core commission calculation and termination for convenience clause drives locked in Total Contract Value.  Just what the bankers like the most.

  2. Stickiness and Satisfaction: CHECK.  It’s short sighted not to pay reps on renewals.  We want reps listening for new opportunities and being a sounding board for customer concerns.  Plus, nothing aggravates an MSP buyer more than having their rep drop off the face of the earth after the ink dries.  On the other hand, using a lower percentage multiplier for renewals is a completely reasonable way to make sure that reps stay hungry “hunters” rather than passive “farmers”

  3. Profit Generation and Strategy Alignment: CHECK.  Deal “Kickers” are a great way to drive sales of higher margin services.  And a great way to introduce new offerings.  Pay the kicker on the entire TCV and you’ll see reps get higher margin products in the funnel much faster.

Is your sales plan directly linked to the valuation of the business? Is it simple enough that your reps stay focused on the customer and trust that the commission plan just works?  If you can’t answer yes to both, build your own version of the RSSP and see motivated sales reps bring home more business and keep customers happier than ever.

Phil LaForge is VP and GM, service providers at Nimsoft. Monthly guest blogs such as this one are part of MSPmentor’s annual platinum sponsorship. Read all of Nimsoft’s guest blogs here.

 

Read more about:

AgentsMSPsVARs/SIs
Free Newsletters for the Channel
Register for Your Free Newsletter Now

You May Also Like