What works best for motivating sales teams? The short answer is, of course, it depends on the team — and each of its members. Motivation can be a tricky puzzle for employers to solve, but with genuine interest, careful planning, and thoughtful implementation, you can resolve the challenges of motivation with an effective incentive program.
There are as many different motivation methods as there are people, but all motivation falls into one of two categories. Intrinsic motivation is the inspiration to complete a task because it is personally rewarding. Whether it’s finishing a novel, doing exceptionally well on an assignment, or turning in work ahead of schedule, personal satisfaction keeps people motivated to continue performing at the standards they set for themselves. Extrinsic motivation is the impetus to perform tasks for an external reason, either to earn a reward or avoid a negative consequence.
Intrinsic motivation is a vital piece of the motivation puzzle for team leaders. When employees are intrinsically motivated, they feel competent, find their work meaningful, and remain invested in performing well. Intrinsically motivated sales representatives can discern their own progress and continue to actively develop in both skill and confidence, but extrinsic motivation also plays a key role in the workplace. Extrinsic rewards, including bonuses, commissions, prizes, and recognition give managers a way to promote interest in more difficult or less fulfilling work. Employees are people first, and people enjoy recognition for a job well done.
Incentive compensation is an extrinsic motivator of critical concern for companies, candidates, and employees. Incentive programs come with some risk, including — but not limited to — temporary compliance rather than long-term achievement, loss of efficacy over time, the perception of manipulation, discord among team members, and increased scrutiny from regulatory bodies and/or HR stakeholders. But foresight and comprehensive risk management can ensure the appropriate use of extrinsic incentives.
When organizations develop strategies to address compensation plan risk, in the short and long term, it is easier to align compensation incentives with the company’s risk profile, design internal controls to mitigate excessive risk, ensure incentives serve their purpose, and meet internal and external regulatory requirements.
Companies can ensure plan efficacy by reassessing incentive compensation plans regularly. Consider these three questions at each assessment:
An effective incentive program is characterized by good motivators and a solid presentation. To improve the odds of program success, leaders should be clear about what motivates their employees, develop a comprehensive framework, and communicate it well. A successful incentive program must immediately be recognized as engaging, friendly, achievable, fair, and even fun to your employees. Effective incentive structures can include:
Effective incentive programs bring company and employee goals into alignment and make meeting them a winning prospect for everyone involved.
A comprehensive sales compensation management solution (SCMS) helps your company track incentive plan success and keeps employee plan details accessible, transparent, and secure. Request an SCMS demo at SalesVista today.