Incentive Compensation and Sales Performance Management Survey

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ActekSoft ACom3 Review Part 2

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In this second part of the ActekSoft ACom3 Sales Performance Management solution review, I will focus on some of the concepts that make this solution a particularly good fit for insurance clients. The first part of this article is here.

Management of producer (payee) data
The insurance industry has very challenging requirements regarding producer (payee) data. ACom3 supports an unlimited number of direct and indirect hierarchies with no limits on the number of levels it contains (some of ActekSoft’s clients pay more than 20 levels). ACom3 also has an integrated license and compliance module which can easily manage logic for compliance violations.

Communication / Workflow
ACom3’s correspondence module can be setup to automatically send letters or emails on demand or based on conditions configured the system (for example in can send an e-mail when a license will expire in a certain number of days, or when a debit balance exceeds a certain dollar amount). The workflow module can be leveraged to facilitate and streamline internal and external communications.

Unearned Commissions
ACom3 provides built-in features to facilitate logic to handle unearned/future commissions such as annualized payout and advanced payment with automated charge backs for policy terminations that take place while there is still an unearned commission balance on the advance. ACom3 also has a reserve feature which holds back a portion of the advance payment to offset future chargebacks.

Scalability
Unlike many other industries, the insurance industry always requires computation at the transactional level and not at a summary level. Because of the volume of transactions and often complex hierarchies which can transform an originating transaction into an additional 10 or 20 transactions, efficient scalability is critical. ACom3 uses the concept of work units which can distribute processing across multiple servers and processors.

Insurance specific concepts in Formulas
Compensation formulas contain many insurance specific concepts such policy age and policy age/holder age calculations, a wide range of performance based tiering options, and the ability to tie advances and automated charge backs to calculations.

Strong Retroactive Capabilities
Retroactive processing is particularly important to the insurance industry and ACom3 supports in excess of 20 retroactive objects that allow the system to reverse and reprocess transactions for as many periods back required. Retroactivity is often required to resolve incorrect assignment of producers to a customer or policy, incorrect hierarchies, the use of an incorrect schedule, etc. ACom3 marks all transactions that need to be reprocessed in prior and current periods to ensure that tiered based payments are correct.

Security and Audits
Data confidentiality and security is highly regulated in the insurance industry. ACom3 was built with these requirements in mind and offers strong security and audit functionality, audit reporting, secure data transfers, and encryption out of the box.

Final Thoughts
Overall, I was impressed by the richness of ACom3. The size of the company could have been a concern for potential clients, but with Callidus now standing behind ActekSoft, this should no longer be a concern. The new challenge which ActekSoft will have to manage is to retain the same level of client-focus they have demonstrated in the past for their current and new customers.

While I found that ACom3 is not the ‘sexiest’ application, several improvements were recently made to its user interface with its release version 6.0. ACom3 provides several insurance specific features, and its focus on transactional processing makes it a solution worth considering for many projects.

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The Power of Trust

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This summer I was sitting on a dive boat off the coast of Cozumel chatting with the dive master and about to dive Palancar caves when two distinct thoughts occurred to me. First, I trust this dive master. He is an expert in his craft, and I know he has successfully and safely led people on this dive before and second, I’m fairly certain I could lead people on this dive myself.

What led to that point where I felt like I was self-sufficient enough to a lead a deep dive that requires somewhat complex navigation? One that can have unpredictable currents and no signs or markers on the surface to indicate a starting point? Experience – the fact that I have done hundreds of dives and in particular have done the Palancar cave dive numerous times in a wide variety of conditions.

If it had been my first time in the water, I might have been able to get down to a reef, swim around, and surface hopefully without doing harm to myself. There is little to no chance, even with a map, that I could have found the right reef, found the caves, utilized my air efficiently, controlled my buoyancy and understood my dive charts well enough to have a safe dive. And ultimately that’s why you pay for a dive master or a guide – experience, knowledge and to minimize risk.

When it comes to selecting a software vendor, this holds true as well. There are numerous methodologies or “maps” that can be found with Google to give you some idea of how to do it yourself. If anyone would like to see the selection methodology that I utilize for my clients, please send me an email and I would be happy to share it with you. However, even with your vendor selection map in hand, quite quickly as you start to do research on the vendors in the space you will realize that there are a large number of companies that appear to have solutions to your business problem. A little farther on in the process, you might realize that there are vast differences in the vendor’s solutions. As an example - they all have some form of reporting but some are partnered with best-in-class third parties, some are integrated, some are very good at pixel-perfect static reports, while other are good at ad-hoc reporting or perhaps executive dashboards. How to interpret the cost to implement and maintain, the improvement or value-gap to current state, the trades offs between solutions, the ease of use and how others have used that particular reporting solution to add economic value to their companies are all questions that beg to be answered. This same analysis should happen across multiple dimensions of functionality and once you find a good match of functionality to prioritized requirements, the process has just begun. To go back to the diving analogy, you have only “found the reef.” So far I have just scratched the surface of the complexity and nuances of successful vendor selection, but at the end of the road your company needs to make a costly decision between multiple complex solutions to meet your complex business needs –sound risky to do without a guide?

If you are thinking about embarking on a vendor selection process that can be fraught with pitfalls, the first question you might want to ask is – “Based on experience can I lead this myself?” Next summer, I would love to be on a boat off the coast of an island that I haven’t been to before (Truk anyone?), chatting with an experienced dive master about a dive I have never done, and feel comfortable in the success and safety of the dive.

Justin Lane is a Sales Performance Management veteran and a colleague of mine at OpenSymmetry. He helps clients develop best in class Compensation Management Program processes and implement the underlying technology to support those processes.

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Ventana Research Sales Performance Management Value Index

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Ventana Research recently released their Sales Performance Management Value Index 2009 research paper which benchmarks four leading SPM solution suppliers and their solutions.

Unlike the Gartner SPM report which I have discussed a few times, the Ventana Value Index evaluates how well vendors’ offerings meet buyers’ requirements for software that enables and supports Sales Performance Management. The Index evaluates the software in the context of seven key categories: adaptability, manageability, reliability, usability, functionality, total cost of ownership, and return on investment.

You can jump on their website to download the executive summary after a quick registration.

The research notes that there are 5 vendors providing solutions across the sales performance management spectrum: Callidus Software, Merced Systems, Synygy, Varicent Software and Xactly Corporation. The other solution providers were out of the scope because their offerings are too broad (focus on CRM and Sales Force Automation) or too specific (focus on only a certain area of SPM or on a specific industry).

As expected, after compiling the weighted scores for each category, the value index difference is within 1% for the top 3 vendors (Callidus, Varicent and Merced), with Xactly lagging only a few percents behind. Most categories yielded very close results, with the largest (but still small) gaps in the capability and validation categories.

These results are not extremely surprising since the research focused on how well the SPM offerings met the buyers’ requirements, and since most SPM solutions offer very similar core functionality. However, this doesn’t mean that there are no significant differences in how, or how well the solutions handle various SPM requirements.

As for Synygy, some things could be inferred from a company concerned to be benchmarked against competitors by an independent research firm.

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Buy the Car, Rent the Car or Take the Bus

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I found an interesting comment on LinkedIn from Chris Collins regarding the difference between On-Premise, On-Demand (Single-Tenant) and On-Demand (Multi-Tenant).  This is not the first time I hear or use the car rental versus car buying analogy, but I think it is well explained and I enjoyed the ‘bus’ example:

Here is one analogy that I use to demonstrate the concept of SaaS to non-technical audiences that always seems to get them understanding the basic idea. I tell them to imagine 2 cars and a bus.

BUY THE CAR: The first car they buy and pay for outright. They are responsible for all maintenance, insurance, gas. This is analagous to buying the hardware and traditionally licensing the software yourself in house. You as the buyer are very interested in the technology you are getting.

RENT THE CAR: The second car they rent by the month. You don’t own the car but you have some say over where the car goes and you are still somewhat interested in the technology. When you go the rental car parking lot, you have a choice of cars and your decision of which car to choose is somewhat based on technology. Also, one person rents one car. This is somewhat analagous to a traditional ASP model. The point is someone else might own it, but you are still interested in the technology underlying it.

TAKE THE BUS: The bus is multi-tenant. When the transmission (platform) is changed on the bus, every tenant is affected because they are riding on the same platform. BUT when you take the bus, unlike when you buy or rent a car, you are not as interested in the underlying technology but in what the bus can do for you. You are now looking primarily at the service aspect, what need can it fulfill for you? If you need to go to the mall and a bus arrives whose ticker says “Mall” on its route, then you take it for that reason, not because of the the transmission on the bus. You only pay for the cost to get to the mall, not by month or not the full cost of the bus.

However you can take the analogy a little further. If you are transporting precious cargo on the bus, you will of course want to make sure the bus is safe from hijackers while stopped and in transport just the same way customers still want to be sure their precious data is protected. If there is a particular transmission type that that is known to have holes in it and cargo sometimes falls out, the customer will want to know about that upfront.Then you risk losing the customer’s focus on the service and put it back on the technology. That is a very important concept.

Do you think this applies to a Sales Performance Management solution licensing model decision?

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Ready, Set, Go!

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In most cases, an SPM implementation leverages several consultants (as I posted before, either from a 3rd party consulting company specialized in Sales Performance Management like OpenSymmetry, a large IT consulting firm like Accenture, or directly from the solution supplier).

With a very aggressive implementation schedule, and a significant investment in time and money, it only makes sense to want the consultants to perform at their maximum efficiency. That’s why several ‘things’ should be ready before the clients arrive on site.

Internet Access: Some clients think that Internet is not a necessity. They might be right, but having access to the web and to e-mails can significantly improve performance.

IT Access: Access to different system areas are required; a database administrator will need access to the databases, an ETL designer will the password to the ETL tool, comp designers will need access to the comp solution, etc. Some software and security certificates might need to be installed, or maybe the consultants will need a network ID. It sounds trivial, but I’ve been on projects where it took weeks to get the proper access to these resources.

Facility Access: A visitor pass and an escort might be sufficient for a few days until the real pass is ready, but if this stretches so long, it will be a major inconvenience for the consultants. Consultants tend to work long hours, so this pass should also work after hours.

Work Space: Consultants don’t need fancy offices, but they will need somewhere to work. Sharing a cubicle is OK, but asking 10 consultants to work in the same small windowless and non-ventilated room is a recipe for unhappy and unproductive consultants.

Phone: Unless everyone on the team is located in the same building, on the same floor and within shouting distance, having access to a phone is important.

Subject Matter Experts (SME) Availability: An SPM implementation always represents a time investment for the client. It is surprising that often, the client is not available to answer questions, attend meetings, etc. The list of SMEs / project contacts should be compiled ahead of time and provided to the consulting team.

Project Information: The consultants will, of course, also require relevant project information such as the project scope, compensation plans, data, reports, etc. This is the area where there is the most room for improvement.  Many companies don’t realize exactly what is required for the implementation to start, and consulting companies sometimes don’t communicate this very well or ahead of time.

In my experience, getting these things right will not only help speed up the project, it will also set the tone for the entire engagement and contribute to getting the project to the finish line on time.

I just started a new project two weeks ago and this client has been exemplary. Everything was ready before I arrived on-site, and they even prepared a cubicle for each member of my team with our names on it! Since I started consulting, this is the first time I don’t have to print out my own name and pin it to the cubicle’s wall.

These little things are sometimes all what a consultant needs to be motivated.

Contact me if you would like to receive a readiness checklist for your SPM implementation or if you’d like to discuss key readiness elements to kickoff your project.

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Quality versus Quantity: Aligning Sales Incentives with Profitability (Part 4)

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Managing Change
Preparing sales people to focus their time on new objectives is no small endeavor. Field sales organizations in particular are less likely to conform due to their remote nature. The good news is that a well-designed incentive plan can motivate the necessary change. A poorly designed plan and or bad execution of the plan can be worse than no change at all, as disenfranchised sales and service people can upset customers and contribute to a loss in profitability.

New incentive-plan execution is often the wobbly third leg of the incentive-plan-management stool (with discovery/prioritization and plan design being the other two legs). Communication is a critical component of implementation, and good communication starts at the top. Leadership must clearly define and consistently reinforce the rationale for moving to a more profit-based system. All members of the management team must demonstrate behaviors that are consistent with the new order.

Compensation’s role is to ensure that pay differential aligns with the profit-enhancing outcomes being reinforced by management. The line manager is a crucial component in this mix. Ensure line managers thoroughly understand the crediting rules under the new plan, and what is the range of potential pay based on various and realistic performance scenarios. Help enable the manager to motivate each individual sales person through coaching discussions around the opportunities for performance and pay. This should be a one-on-one exercise, since each individual’s motivation for performance, pay and recognition is slightly unique. Managers need to know that compensation management will quickly address issues surfacing from the line. Conducting a line or line-manager focus group prior to plan roll out can surface what will likely be issues once the plan goes live.

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