Best Practices for Benchmarking Your Sales Compensation Plan
An important step in assessing your plan.

As your organization grows and evolves, making a practice of regularly benchmarking your comp plan can help you keep your sales team motivated and growing. Benchmarking is a process that involves gathering data and comparing it to your industry to evaluate how market competitive your comp plan is and whether you need to make any immediate adjustments or phase in changes to align with current or long-term objectives.
This review cycle also provides the opportunity to assess alignment with business strategy and refresh/educate leadership on best practices for sales compensation.
Identifying Industry Competitors
Depending on your cadence for evaluating your sales comp plan—and if you haven’t developed a cadence, believe me, you’re not alone—a lot may have changed since you last compared yourself to your competitors. Your organization has evolved. Your go-to-market strategy may have shifted. So, the businesses you compared yourself to last time may not still be your competitors.
Here are a few things to evaluate when identifying and selecting competitors for comparison:
- The maturity of your organization
- The size of your organization (number of sellers or revenue)
- Your industry and/or business segment
- Your territory (geographies or account-type specific)
- Your sales strategy and process
It doesn’t do a lot of good to compare your comp plan to a software sales company if you are working for a healthcare services company. Likewise, if you’re a small, regional business, you can’t expect to compare your plan to that of a large, multinational organization. So, make sure to do your research to find your true market competitors. And it is important to keep in mind that certain portfolio products and/or selling functions may have different competitive populations. Doing this correctly means understanding your business in great detail.
Information to Gather
You’ll need to gather quite a few details about your comp plan in order to give it a fair assessment. It may be difficult during this process to want to change things as you go, because you’ll likely see places where you can make improvements. Just try to remember that this part of the process is about gathering information about the state of your comp plan here and now. Things you’ll need to look for:
- Compensation: Document the base salaries, commission rates, bonus programs, and pay mixes for each role on your team (internal and survey data). You’ll also want to account for historical payouts under the various aspects of the plans or contests. This is where we review pay distribution and alignment to market movements.
- Performance metrics and outcomes: Document the ways in which you gauge success. These may include things like sales quota attainment, revenue attrition (churn), customer acquisition costs, product mix, etc. This is where we test the relationship between performance outcomes and pay levels.
- Territory: Assess the size of your sales territory and any trends you’ve followed over the years, as well as the way you have the territory allocated to sales team members. You also want to try to take an objective view of the health of the market opportunity and the territory’s revenue outcomes (independent of the people in the job). This is where we assess appropriateness (test for incongruence) of the territory size and scope to the job.
- Sales Activities: Document the selling process, the sales cycle length, average deal size, and conversion or win rates. Each organization’s approach to measuring the health of the sales team will vary – your metrics may differ. You want to get an understanding of whether adherence to your assumptions (of sales team activities) aligns with the best outcomes of the sellers.
- Internal equity: Chart your sales teams on a pay vs. performance graphic to identify any outliers where you may need to analyze the reasons behind any discrepancies. This is a simple visual that helps provide a starting point to guide potential actions or areas of focus.
All of this data will be your basis for comparing your compensation program to its intended outcomes as well as your competition.
What’s Next
Once you’ve identified your competitors, gathered your information, and made your comparisons, don’t jump straight into making changes. Instead, make note of areas where you hope to improve your compensation plan in light of organizational investments and the market dynamics (competitive landscape). You’ll need that information along with other pieces of information — feedback from the sales employees, feedback from customers, and a confirmation of alignment with organizational strategy and philosophies.
I’ll address these remaining aspects in upcoming posts. In the meantime, if you’re looking for a quick breakdown of the components of a sales compensation plan, be sure to check out my book, Starting Simple: Sales Compensation.






