I can see why you’d need software to calculate comp, if your comp system is so complex!
As a case study in simplicity: our sales people get 1xMRR for each deal closed, or 2xMRR if the deal signs an annual contract. SDRs get a flat amount for each demo sat (doesn’t have to close, but does have to be accepted by the AE). The amount is equivalent to 0.75xMRR for a typical customer.
That’s really all you need in SaaS. This has scaled from less than 1M ARR through to… more than 100x bigger than when it started.
A simple salary + percent commission is a great model.
That said, this calculator was built to model/simulate the things that are super common in enterprise SaaS:
1. It takes sellers time to ramp up. Experienced sellers might be willing to jump to your company, but not if they are guaranteed to only get their (relatively) low base salary for 1-2 quarters.
2. If you decide to do a ramp, you have to make a choice about the OTE.
If you can avoid doing these things, that's great. Though whether that will fly largely depends on whether your sales cycle and target talent market supports it!
Wow for SDR, 0.75xMRR for each demo? So if your typical MRR is $1000, you'd pay $750 per demo?
My wife used to be SDR and I seem to remember she got paid much less, maybe like 0.1xMRR.
Obviously your economics work & scale, just curious to understand how - is your close rate really high?
If an AE closes an annual deal (worth $12k in this hypothetical), and there were 4 other demos that didn't close, then you are paying $2000 to AE and $3,750 to SDRs, or almost half of your revenue on comp.
Interesting - I've only ever been on the buying side of this. How do you pay out? Do you pay out each month based on whatever was actually paid, or does the sales person get a chunk of money up front or yearly or whatever?
“Sorry, the commission budget is out of money for this budget year. You sold way too much which made the company a ton of extra money. Sadly that means it’s your fault we can’t pay you the commissions you were promised.”
The most important part of a commissions schedule to be able to change it.
I'd say typically companies have 6-month or 1-year cycles, and each cycle company rethinks the compensations (usually numbers through quotas, not procedures).
ghiculescu|11 months ago
As a case study in simplicity: our sales people get 1xMRR for each deal closed, or 2xMRR if the deal signs an annual contract. SDRs get a flat amount for each demo sat (doesn’t have to close, but does have to be accepted by the AE). The amount is equivalent to 0.75xMRR for a typical customer.
That’s really all you need in SaaS. This has scaled from less than 1M ARR through to… more than 100x bigger than when it started.
seanlinehan|11 months ago
That said, this calculator was built to model/simulate the things that are super common in enterprise SaaS:
1. It takes sellers time to ramp up. Experienced sellers might be willing to jump to your company, but not if they are guaranteed to only get their (relatively) low base salary for 1-2 quarters.
2. If you decide to do a ramp, you have to make a choice about the OTE.
If you can avoid doing these things, that's great. Though whether that will fly largely depends on whether your sales cycle and target talent market supports it!
liamwire|11 months ago
xivzgrev|11 months ago
My wife used to be SDR and I seem to remember she got paid much less, maybe like 0.1xMRR.
Obviously your economics work & scale, just curious to understand how - is your close rate really high?
If an AE closes an annual deal (worth $12k in this hypothetical), and there were 4 other demos that didn't close, then you are paying $2000 to AE and $3,750 to SDRs, or almost half of your revenue on comp.
robertlagrant|11 months ago
senordevnyc|11 months ago
nprateem|11 months ago
Plus I assume they get some sort of middle of the road base salary? How low is that if you don't mind me asking?
baxtr|11 months ago
How do you incentivize sales to focus on deals that churn less instead of deals that close fast?
gadders|11 months ago
kraussvonespy|11 months ago
deepsun|11 months ago
I'd say typically companies have 6-month or 1-year cycles, and each cycle company rethinks the compensations (usually numbers through quotas, not procedures).
tiffanyh|11 months ago
I see "Commission Rate (%)" as an input (when normally I see it as "Sales Target" as the input - which derives your commission rate)
Typically I see, $X is your Target Commission and $Y is your Sales Target.
(and when you divide those two figures, it equates to your % Commission Rate)
unknown|11 months ago
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