Changing Compensation Structure from Pure Commission to Salary Plus Bonus
We ran a classic high-commission sales model for four years. Base salary of $45K with uncapped commission that could triple total comp for top performers. It worked until it did not.
The Breaking Point
Our top three reps were making $160K to $190K annually. Bottom half of the team churned every 8 to 11 months. New reps took 4 months to first deal, burning through savings while ramping. We had knowledge concentration risk and constant recruiting costs.
We restructured to $75K base with lower commission rates and team-based quarterly bonuses tied to overall revenue targets. Top end earning potential dropped to around $140K.
Performance Impact
Two top performers left within 60 days. Expected and painful. But rep retention in months 6 through 18 jumped from 41% to 78%. Reps collaborated more because team bonuses rewarded collective performance. Average deal size decreased slightly but total team output increased 23% over six months.
The surprise was in deal quality. Under pure commission, reps oversold capabilities to close fast. Implementation teams dealt with expectation mismatches. With reduced pressure on individual deal urgency, discovery calls became more thorough. Customer churn in months 3 through 9 dropped noticeably.
We gave up some raw closing aggression but gained organizational stability and customer fit. Not right for every market, but for complex sales with long customer lifecycles, the tradeoff made sense.