Compensation Plan Design

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The Origin of the word “SPIFF”

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I had a discussion today about what was the origin of the word ‘SPIFF’. It seems like everybody using spiffs has a different idea on how it should be spelled (spiff versus spif) and what it actually means.

Last year I mentioned that SPIFF might stand for Sales Performance Incentive Fund, Special Performance Incentive Fund or Special Performance Incentives for Field Force, among many other potential meanings.

I also linked to a Wikipedia article citing the following etymologies:

An early reference to a spiff can be found in a slang dictionary of 1859; “The percentage allowed by drapers to their young men when they effect sale of old fashioned or undesirable stock.”

Another later reference to the term “spiff” comes from an article in the Pall Mall Gazette of 1890 on the practices in London shops:

… a “spiff” system is usually adopted, spiffs being premiums placed on certain articles, not of the last fashion, indicated by a marvellous heiroglyphic put on the price ticket. These marks are well known by the assistant, and the almost invisible mystic sign explains why an article, wholly unsuitable, is foisted on the jaded customer as “just the thing.”

The Wikipedia article mentions how the word spiff seems to be connected with the use of the word in that period to mean a dandy or somebody smartly dressed (hence spiffy, and to spiff up - to improve the appearance of a place or a person).

I also read somewhere that the word “spiff” could also come from from the verb ‘to spiflicate’: To confound, silence or dumbfound - 1785 Francis Grose, Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue

In summary, the word spiff is most likely not an acronym, but did have a negative connotation; selling undesirable items.

Of course, nowadays, spiffs are commonly used as a way of incenting sales reps to sell a specific item and can be used effectively to move inventory, introduce a new product to the market, encourage selling higher margin items, teach the sales reps to sell an item they wouldn’t sell normally, or influence their behavior in one way or another (such as selling a combination of items together).

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Good Intentions, Bad Outcomes

We often hear, “be careful of what you ask for” when putting new measures into the incentive plan. The origins of this warning come from what is the transactional or short-term nature of many sales organizations.

Consider two examples:

Example 1:
A manufacturing company has two primary products – A and C. Project A is the most mature and currently the most profitable in the line. Product C is relatively new and is not forecast to be profitable for two years. The pricing for both products is roughly equal, though A is relatively commoditized and its average sale price is declining.

At the start of the year management changes the sales incentive plan such that 30% of the target incentive opportunity goes to monthly gross sales margin, as leadership emphasizes that long-term profitability is critical to the company’s future. While Product C best represents the future, the sales force is focused on Product A because of its greater contribution to monthly profitability, and it’s the easier product to sell.

Example 2:
An equipment leasing company assesses fees to its customers for excessive usage, unscheduled service calls and late returns. Account managers have in the past used discretion over the application of fees, mostly avoiding them on loyal clients with infrequent fee-bearing incidents.

Region managers are now responsible for a quarterly contribution margin in the region, and stress to account managers more stringent fee policies, which include regional manager approval of all waiver requests from account managers. While account managers understand the policy and abide by the new approval process, most do not clearly disclose to customers the applicable fees – they’ve not in the past since the fees seldom applied, and they seldom receive feedback since customer questions regarding fees get routed to a customer service center.

In both examples, the company changed the incentive plan to include a profitability measure, but did not evaluate the short-term behavioral implications and longer-term consequences. In Examples 1 and 2, the longer-term impact of a slow product launch and customer churn, respectively, was severe and more than removed any short-term profit gains.

With any proposed change to the sales incentive plan, carefully evaluate the alignment between corporate objectives and sales execution. Test concepts with a small group of proven performers to understand how they might maximize their earning opportunity. Discuss with sales and product management whether these behaviors put at risk longer-term profits, and what processes or plan design features can best mitigate the risk.

When considering alternatives for better aligning sales compensation expense with profitability, remember that any meaningful plan change requires analysis before and reinforcement after its implementation. Such changes are not easily undone. A low-risk approach is the quarterly campaign or “SPIFF.” SPIFFs are by nature temporary and in many circumstances can be an effective way to evaluate behaviors and impact in a real-world environment. Another low-risk approach is to report and provide feedback on profit-based goals at the individual rep or team level, without tying the impact of goal achievement to pay. Low-risk approaches usually mean low reward (impact), but they are steps to help you walk before you jump.

Scott Barton is a senior consultant in sales effectiveness and compensation.  Contact him if you have any questions regarding this article series, sales compensation or if you are looking for an experienced consultant to help you out build your compensation plans.

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