Wednesday, December 29, 2021

Older Moviegoers Decide To Stay Home Over Covid Concerns, Decision Impacts TV

 TV still king for local direct businesses! Philip Jay LeNoble, PhD.

COMMENTARY

Older Moviegoers Decide To Stay Home Over Covid Concerns, Decision Impacts TV

In recent years, movie studios and theaters have long relied on young moviegoers to put butts in seats.

But what about older posteriors -- especially amid an ongoing pandemic?

A recent YouGov poll for The Hollywood Reporter showed 39% of American respondents aged 45 to 64 were less likely to attend theaters, with 37% neither more nor less likely to visit the multiplex.

In particular, younger audiences make up a major piece of business, especially for many action-adventure/fantasy movies, such as Sony Pictures recent blockbuster edition of the “Spider-Man” franchise.

All this continues to hamper the movie business -- perhaps even before the pandemic put the initial kibosh on out-of-home movie watching. Since the summer with “Black Widow,” there has been a gradual resurgence of the business. That's the good news. But now what?

Younger-aged consumers might still feel invincible when it comes to getting sick with Covid -- at least according to analysis by some health experts. Older Americans are more concerned.

Rising streaming platforms -- coming at the same time as the pandemic -- created a perfect storm. That is, placing many adult-themed, non-fantasy/adventure movies -- originally targeted for exclusive in-theaters runs in non-summer/Holiday periods -- on premium streamers, either simultaneously with theaters or exclusively.

Movie analysts say it could be five or more years before the in-theater movie business recovers, which seems to count on those older adult viewers heading back to theaters.

Recent Christmas movie openings -- Warner Bros. “The Matrix Resurrections” and 20th Century Studios’ “The King’s Man,” two movies coming from respective movie franchises -- may be the start. Both movies under-performed -- $12 million and $6.4 million, respectively. Some insiders speculate the reason, in part, is those films appeal more to adults.

By way of comparison, here are the previous editions of those franchises in U.S. domestic opening box office, per IMDb’s Box Office Mojo: “Kingsman: The Golden Circle” (2017), $39 million; ‘The Matrix Reloaded” (2003), $91.8 million.

In particular, “Matrix” has been hampered -- as well as other Warner Bros. movies, due to the company's decision a year ago to offer its entire 2021 theatrical slate on its HBO Max streamer at the same time.

Now, for 2022, WarnerMedia has pulled back on that blanket proclamation. Read into that what you will. In this marketplace, following the subtle whims of all entertainment consumer segments will be the real mind bender.

Digital Ad Dollars Shift To CTV -- And Other 2022 Predictions

 With national advertising on the ropes, local direct is still the mainstream revenue source for growth in 2022. Philip Jay LeNoble, PhD.

COMMENTARY

Digital Ad Dollars Shift To CTV -- And Other 2022 Predictions

This being prime predictions season, I thought we’d end 2021 with a few offered by executives at some of the ad-tech and measurement firms on the front lines. The comments have been edited for flow and length purposes.

John Hamilton, CEO, TVDataNow:

Growth in CTV ad spend in 2022 will come in large part from money shifting from digital budgets, rather than from linear TV. Up to now, the bulk of CTV spend has come from traditional linear advertisers trying to capture audiences on CTV. But as digital performance likely craters due to the disappearance of cookies and the gatekeepers exerting more control over their ecosystems, digital marketers will also turn to CTV. 

Raw programmatic spending will grow as part of the overall growth in CTV ad spend. Still, we don't predict an increase in programmatic market share. iDirect campaigns — including those through private marketplaces/PMPs — will still be important to the largest publishers, with the longer-tail publishers opting to monetize programmatically until they reach scale.

Clean rooms — software that enables companies to match user-level data without sharing raw data — will become hugely important for CTV, as well as digital advertising. With the changes in cookies and attribution, many companies are emerging as clean-room partners to enable walled gardens to deliver performance insights to brand advertisers. Clean rooms will also help large publishers, platforms and DSPs better control privacy and security while still being able to measure CTV advertising effectiveness.

Nielsen hasn’t solved CTV’s attribution problem, and it doesn’t look like they will. Next year, a host of players will vie to step into the breach to make sure that CTV gets full credit and attribution for the performance it delivers across the marketing funnel, from brand awareness through purchase. While we don’t expect to see a complete attribution product next year, we will see a lot of progress.

Joe Hirsch, general manager, SpringServe (now part of Magnite):

Due to the vast number of CTV services available to consumers, ad-free subscriber growth will hit a ceiling in 2022. Advertising will be CTV publishers’ long-term revenue generator. At least for the present, amid the fierce competition to win over engaged audiences and convince viewers to keep tuning in, these publishers will be more focused on providing ad quality and an impeccable, seamless viewer experience than on maximizing ad revenue in the short term.

Server-side header bidding, in which higher bids can supersede a direct-sold campaign, will become mainstream in CTV buying next year. That, combined with unified auctions that allow competition between programmatic and direct-sold campaigns, will give publishers opportunities to manage direct and programmatic campaigns more efficiently and transparently.

With more than 80% of U.S households now owning at least one internet-connected TV device, hardware manufacturers, or OEMs, are a critical bridge between content and viewers — and they will play a growing role in CTV advertising. We’ve already seen them taking a stronger stance on negotiating carriage agreements. In 2022, they’ll pay more attention to the viewer experience and fine-tune their advertising and data strategies.

Chris Kelly, CEO, Upwave:

First, RIP to gross rating points. With automatic content recognition technology tracking impressions on devices and multichannel video programming distributors counting impressions on set-top boxes, why should we force marketers to complicate performance assessment by measuring traffic in gross rating points for one channel and impressions for another?

Second, with CTV ad spending projected to outpace both OOH and newspaper spending in 2022, the stage is set for CTV-centric agencies to emerge. For years, TV and digital agencies have fought over brands’ emerging CTV budgets. But it takes the best of both disciplines — the granular targeting of digital, and the full-screen storytelling of TV — to do CTV right. Enter a new breed of experts: agencies that specialize in marrying the two skillsets. 

Peter Docherty, CTO, ThinkAnalytics:

I’ve been predicting “super-aggregation” for four years, but it’s actually started to happen in the past 12 months. Tata Sky implemented universal search across 11 apps in one deployment, and another operator is now offering subscribers personalized content discovery, including voice search, across multiple streaming services, linear, VOD, catch-up and recorded content, in 15 languages across seven countries.

Those are massive leaps over “aggregation light,” where viewers can access multiple apps through the electronic programming guide/EPG, but must launch individual apps to search for something to watch. In 2022, we’ll see more video service providers supersizing their aggregation services with silo-free universal search. 

Data-driven streaming — fast-flowing, dynamic data streams from devices, platforms, metadata and consumer behavior harnessed for ultra-dynamic, rapid decision-making — will increasingly supplant stagnant data lakes and outdated ways of evolving the UX, like surveys.

Next year, video service providers who work their data hard to optimize the customer journey and proactively adapt to viewers’ needs will boost audience engagement and consumer satisfaction and open up monetization opportunities.

Targeted advertising is also set to break through in 2022. Recent consumer profiling advancements mean that TV advertisers can now reach highly segmented audience niches that they recognize, value and can measure, including those important but elusive “light” TV viewer categories.

We expect to see the adoption of the Internet Advertising Bureau taxonomy for addressable TV advertising. This will remove the friction involved in buying and running cross-media campaigns that include targeted TV ads.

We also expect breakthroughs in predictive behavioral analysis to enable predicting viewers’ purchase intent, as well as dynamically capturing and building audience segments that reveal an enhanced interest in a particular purchasing category at a particular time.

Shafi Mustafa, VP of product marketing, ElementalTV:

We’re in the first phase of CTV ad tech, working out the growing pains of connecting the pipes and understanding the medium. The next phase will focus on how advertisers can leverage digital tools to connect the screen and audience. We expect to see tremendous innovation in large-scale personalization of ads to create relevance for the audience and enable new types of interactions with the screen. Advanced ad formats will allow brands to personalize CTV ads seamlessly at scale, reduce ad repetition, deliver personalized experiences in the optimal context for dynamic brand storytelling, enable new types of audience interactions with the screen, and generally deliver a superior viewing experience.  

John Ross, director of product strategy, DoubleVerify:

While linear TV provides show, episode and time slot information for buyers, advertisers are forced to run CTV campaigns with minimal information. In some cases, they don’t even know what app they're serving into. This black box is not only a measurement and targeting problem, but a brand suitability problem.

As advertisers continue to move ad spend to CTV in 2022, we’ll see increased demand for transparency and industry standardization across CTV buys — and stepped-up efforts by publishers in response. Publishers on CTV have first-party data ranging from user-based data to programming information, and we’ll start to see them package this data anonymously through contextual targeting to achieve genre-level transparency for buyers.

Advertisers will also become more aware of another growing issue in CTV: ad campaigns that continue to run when the TV screen is turned off, because a third-party CTV device like Google Chromecast or Amazon Fire Stick is still on. Our tests with popular streaming apps confirmed that in many cases, the apps continue to play — and generate ad impressions — for minutes, hours or even days. That can have a dramatic effect on campaign performance, spend and measurement. This isn’t ad fraud or anything nefarious; it’s just a common technological problem across CTV.

Social media ad spend is expected to exceed $56 billion by 2023,  and a significant amount of that will go to social video. But social media can be a minefield for brand safety and suitability. Ads are often mixed into feeds filled largely with user-generated content that can contain misinformation or present myriad other issues. In 2022, marketers will look for comprehensive ways to measure walled gardens so that they can effectively target the most appropriate and impactful content, maximize campaign engagement, and safeguard their dollars. Performance optimization, third-party auditing and verification will be increasingly critical.

Automaker National TV Spending Up 20% YTD

 

AUTOMOTIVE

Automaker National TV Spending Up 20% YTD

Automakers spent an estimated $2.67 billion on national television in 2021 through Nov. 30, a 20% increase year-over-year, according to iSpot. tv.

But TV ad impressions were down just slightly to 301.6 billion YTD compared to 302.1 billion for the same period in 2020.

The top 10 brands by spending for the first 11 months of the year were: Ford ($264.7 million), Toyota ($261.1 million), Chevrolet ($179.7 million), Nissan ($179.2 million), Hyundai ($174.9 million), Jeep ($153.6 million), Subaru ($150.6 million), Lexus ($138.6 million), GMC ($133.9 million) and Ram Trucks ($131.6 million).

The most-seen automaker ads, 2021 were Jeep, Wildly Civilized (3.80 billion TV ad impressions); Lexus, Fearless Leader (2.93 billion); Nissan, The New Nissan (2.85 billion); GMC, Made To Be Used (2.70 billion); Nissan, Return to Rugged (2.60 billion); Lincoln, Where Does the Stress Go (2.50 billion); Chevrolet,  Anywhere (2.49 billion); GMC,  Ready. Set. Go. (2.20 billion); Jeep, The Best Things (2.16 billion) and Lincoln, Comfort In the Extreme - Cold (2.13 billion).

Automakers accounted for 6.6% of national TV ad spend in 2021, and 4.3% of TV ad impressions, per iSpot. For the year, 57% of auto brand ad impressions were attributable to adults aged 25 to 54. And 24.2% of automaker ad impressions were local (slightly lower than last year’s rate of 25%).

The top 10 brands by TV ad impressions share of voice for the 11 months were Toyota (9.08%), Ford (8.00%), Nissan (7.90%), Lexus (7.67%) Hyundai (7.52%), Chevrolet (7.00%), Subaru (6.31%), Jeep (4.82%), Kia (4.41%) and Ram Trucks (4.38%).

The biggest spending increases among top 20 brands by estimated national TV ad spend, 2021 vs. 2020 were: Buick (151.4%), GMC (79.6%), Jeep (63.4%), Mercedes-Benz (58.2%) and Acura (47.4%).

Of the top 20 brands by spend in 2021, 18 increased national TV ad spend compared in 2020, and 13 increased by at least 10% compared to the previous year. 

For Buick, in particular, the jump was fueled by the return of the NCAA Tournament. Nearly 64% of Buick’s 2021 spend came from college basketball – versus just 3% in 2020.

The top programs for automakers by TV ad impressions SOV, 2021 were NFL (6.5%), college football (3.1%), college basketball (2.0%), NBA (1.9%) and Tokyo Olympics (1.6%).

Sports were clearly the top programs for automakers, as eight of the top 10 by impressions in 2021 were sports or sports-related. Notably, reality TV also accounted for 12.1% of all automaker TV ad impressions, while drama & action shows made up 9.2% and televised movies were 8.2%.

The top networks for automaker TV ad impressions SOV, 2021 were NBC (9.0%), CBS (8.3%), FOX (5.2%), ABC (5.1%) and ESPN (4.8%).

A sports emphasis, and a specific emphasis on football, obviously leads to the big four networks plus ESPN accounting for a large share of automakers’ TV ads, per iSpot.

For NBC, Sunday Night Football and the Olympics combined for 35% of auto brand impressions on the network. For CBS, the NFL (including the Super Bowl) and college basketball (including the NCAA Tournament) alone combined for almost 32% of automaker impressions on the year.

After 2020, automakers were eager to get back to “normal” TV ad approaches this year, says Stuart Schwartzapfel, senior vice president, media partnerships at iSpot.

“The return of tentpole events like the NCAA Tournament and Olympics afforded opportunities to get in front of large audiences, while also paying more to do so,” Schwartzapfel tells Marketing Daily

While the cost of national TV advertising is climbing as linear audiences shrink, spots during major sporting events have become the last remaining premium ad inventory, he says.

“Auto brands and other large advertisers have responded accordingly, keeping themselves top-of-mind despite the price tag associated with appearing alongside this programming,” Schwartzapfel says.

Broadcast-to-web attribution adds new currency to local TV advertising

 



SPONSORED BY VERITONE

Broadcast-to-web attribution adds new currency to local TV advertising

Armed with real-time data on how TV campaigns drive web traffic for advertisers, stations are winning new clients, reducing churn and increasing market share at a time when marketers place increasing emphasis on tracking return on investment. An AI-powered solution from a Colorado-based company provides broadcasters with an established partner focused on the future. 

Long known for building brands and driving traffic into stores, local TV advertising has never had trouble convincing advertisers of its effectiveness.

It has, however, been challenged with measuring that strength. For stations, proving with clear, compelling data how well their ads generate ROI has become a significant priority.

Digital media, with its clickable ads, paid search campaigns and e-commerce pages, has its tracking mechanisms built into the format. That’s in part why digital advertising gets more credit than it perhaps deserves. Broadcasters need to demonstrate that the commercials they run are driving the same amount of (if not more) customers to go online and shop.

Their best bet for proving their case lies in broadcast-to-web attribution. This method tracks,  minute by minute, how a linear TV campaign is driving potential customers to the advertiser’s website.

Veritone Attribute shows, within minutes, how much a TV commercial boosts an advertiser’s website traffic

An attribution platform tracks the playout logs generated by a TV station’s traffic software and compares them to the Google Analytics data constantly flowing from an advertiser’s website. This allows a salesperson to see if there’s been a bump in the client’s web traffic within minutes of a commercial’s broadcast.  

BRAND CONNECTIONS

Real-Time Data in a Dashboard 

“Within minutes after an ad airs, we can see how many new users and new pageviews have occurred on an advertiser’s website,” said Paul Cramer, Managing Director of Broadcast Solutions at Veritone, an eight-year-old artificial intelligence company headquartered in Denver.

Veritone tracks an average of 15 million ad occurrences a month and provides services for more than 1,000 TV and radio stations, as well as advertising and media agencies.

The company’s Veritone Attribute solution can break down the number of visits a participating advertiser’s website gets daily, weekly, or over the life of a TV campaign. It can also zero in on visits generated by station, daypart or show, and ad creative, and chart geographically the origin of the response. 

This lets reps and their advertisers test the effectiveness of different creative approaches, commercial lengths and regional targeting. 

The Road to Increased Market Share 

By using attribution data, sales professionals can “take more of a consultancy approach with the advertiser, showing them which ads work best and which daypart works best to optimize the campaign,” Cramer said. 

Broadcasters access Veritone Attribute through a cloud-based dashboard that they can use to generate reports in real-time on a laptop or tablet while calling on clients. 

By getting in the habit of meeting regularly with prospects and clients and showing them how much web traffic their TV ads are generating, stations can cut down on churn and build strong relationships with advertisers. 

They can also show clients the difference in their web traffic when they are running campaigns and when they are dark. And they can demonstrate the effectiveness of using TV and digital advertising together. 

Attribution data “lets the seller go for more share at renewal time,” Cramer concluded.

Lean-In Moments With Clients

Sales reps can pull reports showing web traffic bumps daily, weekly or monthly

Using attribution data can also help reps win new customers. “When a prospect says they aren’t sure if TV advertising works, we can pull up some reports and show them this is how we measure television,” said the sales manager at one TV station using Veritone Attribute. “We get that lean-in moment when we can tell them what we’ve got.”

To put Veritone Attribute into action, a station needs “read-only” access to the advertiser’s Google Analytics data. A rep can set this up by sending an email to the client, who clicks on a button to establish the connection. 

Some stations sign non-disclosure agreements with clients to reassure them that their audience data is kept strictly confidential.

New Currency for a Winning Medium 

Cramer calls attribution “a new currency” that empowers local TV sales professionals at a time when marketers are scrutinizing the ROI of every dollar they invest. 

The metrics also bolster a medium already known for broad reach and brand safety. 

Linear programming, for example, continues to earn high scores in Nielsen’s Total Audience Report, despite the proliferation of streaming options. The most recent report shows that live and time-shifted TV shows reach 80% of U.S. viewers aged 18 and up each week. TV and radio also still command the highest share of collective trust in advertising. In fact, 59% of people 35-49 consider TV spots very or somewhat trustworthy.

Broadcasters looking for more data on how to build ROI for their advertisers can access the Veritone Uplift Study, which shares best practices to help generate maximum lift in broadcast advertising in general.

The year-long study analyzed 250 ad campaigns at the local advertiser level, which aired on nearly 100 stations, with the goal of identifying what works and what doesn’t work in ad campaigns overall and individual markets.

Performance-Based TV Metrics

By turning their medium into a performance-based channel, TV stations can quantify and prove campaign success while underscoring their long-time status as one of the most effective advertising mediums.. 

With deep roots in artificial intelligence and experience in media and advertising, Veritone represents a stable partner to broadcasters. It works with stations from Hearst Television, Hubbard Broadcasting, Bell Media, and Bonneville International, among nearly 2,000 other television and radio stations in six countries. 

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Broadcast-to-web attribution adds new currency to local TV advertising

 

Broadcast-to-web attribution adds new currency to local TV advertising

Armed with real-time data on how TV campaigns drive web traffic for advertisers, stations are winning new clients, reducing churn and increasing market share at a time when marketers place increasing emphasis on tracking return on investment. An AI-powered solution from a Colorado-based company provides broadcasters with an established partner focused on the future. 

Long known for building brands and driving traffic into stores, local TV advertising has never had trouble convincing advertisers of its effectiveness.

It has, however, been challenged with measuring that strength. For stations, proving with clear, compelling data how well their ads generate ROI has become a significant priority.

Digital media, with its clickable ads, paid search campaigns and e-commerce pages, has its tracking mechanisms built into the format. That’s in part why digital advertising gets more credit than it perhaps deserves. Broadcasters need to demonstrate that the commercials they run are driving the same amount of (if not more) customers to go online and shop.

Their best bet for proving their case lies in broadcast-to-web attribution. This method tracks,  minute by minute, how a linear TV campaign is driving potential customers to the advertiser’s website.

Veritone Attribute shows, within minutes, how much a TV commercial boosts an advertiser’s website traffic

An attribution platform tracks the playout logs generated by a TV station’s traffic software and compares them to the Google Analytics data constantly flowing from an advertiser’s website. This allows a salesperson to see if there’s been a bump in the client’s web traffic within minutes of a commercial’s broadcast.  

BRAND CONNECTIONS

Real-Time Data in a Dashboard 

“Within minutes after an ad airs, we can see how many new users and new pageviews have occurred on an advertiser’s website,” said Paul Cramer, Managing Director of Broadcast Solutions at Veritone, an eight-year-old artificial intelligence company headquartered in Denver.

Veritone tracks an average of 15 million ad occurrences a month and provides services for more than 1,000 TV and radio stations, as well as advertising and media agencies.

The company’s Veritone Attribute solution can break down the number of visits a participating advertiser’s website gets daily, weekly, or over the life of a TV campaign. It can also zero in on visits generated by station, daypart or show, and ad creative, and chart geographically the origin of the response. 

This lets reps and their advertisers test the effectiveness of different creative approaches, commercial lengths and regional targeting. 

The Road to Increased Market Share 

By using attribution data, sales professionals can “take more of a consultancy approach with the advertiser, showing them which ads work best and which daypart works best to optimize the campaign,” Cramer said. 

Broadcasters access Veritone Attribute through a cloud-based dashboard that they can use to generate reports in real-time on a laptop or tablet while calling on clients. 

By getting in the habit of meeting regularly with prospects and clients and showing them how much web traffic their TV ads are generating, stations can cut down on churn and build strong relationships with advertisers. 

They can also show clients the difference in their web traffic when they are running campaigns and when they are dark. And they can demonstrate the effectiveness of using TV and digital advertising together. 

Attribution data “lets the seller go for more share at renewal time,” Cramer concluded.

Lean-In Moments With Clients

Sales reps can pull reports showing web traffic bumps daily, weekly or monthly

Using attribution data can also help reps win new customers. “When a prospect says they aren’t sure if TV advertising works, we can pull up some reports and show them this is how we measure television,” said the sales manager at one TV station using Veritone Attribute. “We get that lean-in moment when we can tell them what we’ve got.”

To put Veritone Attribute into action, a station needs “read-only” access to the advertiser’s Google Analytics data. A rep can set this up by sending an email to the client, who clicks on a button to establish the connection. 

Some stations sign non-disclosure agreements with clients to reassure them that their audience data is kept strictly confidential.

New Currency for a Winning Medium 

Cramer calls attribution “a new currency” that empowers local TV sales professionals at a time when marketers are scrutinizing the ROI of every dollar they invest. 

The metrics also bolster a medium already known for broad reach and brand safety. 

Linear programming, for example, continues to earn high scores in Nielsen’s Total Audience Report, despite the proliferation of streaming options. The most recent report shows that live and time-shifted TV shows reach 80% of U.S. viewers aged 18 and up each week. TV and radio also still command the highest share of collective trust in advertising. In fact, 59% of people 35-49 consider TV spots very or somewhat trustworthy.

Broadcasters looking for more data on how to build ROI for their advertisers can access the Veritone Uplift Study, which shares best practices to help generate maximum lift in broadcast advertising in general.

The year-long study analyzed 250 ad campaigns at the local advertiser level, which aired on nearly 100 stations, with the goal of identifying what works and what doesn’t work in ad campaigns overall and individual markets.

Performance-Based TV Metrics

By turning their medium into a performance-based channel, TV stations can quantify and prove campaign success while underscoring their long-time status as one of the most effective advertising mediums.. 

End-Of-Year-Reflections: What I've Learned From Handling Marketing Challenges

 

COMMENTARY

End-Of-Year-Reflections: What I've Learned From Handling Marketing Challenges

Most of us are ending this year the same way we began it: reflecting on our personal and professional journeys to date. As a company founder, I empathize with the challenges businesses have faced over the past 18 months. As an experienced marketer, I know this kind of change brings new opportunities -- and also some old concerns.

In fact, the recurring issues I’ve seen over two decades underscore universal truths about trust, control and working to a vision. The specifics may change, but the overarching themes do not:

Talent. The right mix of marketing experience is critical for success. You need strategists who can address each of a company’s growth stages, along with tacticians who can execute to plan. Impactful marketing operates like an ecosystem, with each skill set inspiring and enhancing the other.

Strategy. Inordinate focus on metrics often relegates marketing to tactical, short-term thinking instead of a long-term strategic business driver. When leaders believe marketing can be turned on and off without effect or don’t recognize the value of executive visibility and employer branding, they’re missing out on marketing’s full potential.

Value. The true value of marketing is its ability to serve as both an external and internal brand ambassador. Too many times, internal communications adopt a “need-to-know” approach, which hinders scalability. Marketing can bridge company goals and in-market reality.

Money. Everyone from private business consultants to the U.S. Small Business Administration recommends you spend 7%-12% of your total revenue on marketing. Yet founders (and sometimes even experienced executives) fail to budget appropriately for marketing, leaving teams scrambling to deliver.

Power. If they’re going to move the needle on expectations and company momentum, marketers must engage directly with other executives and board members, which means a marketing leader should be part of any senior executive strategy session.

Partnerships. Often, particularly in tech companies, the CEO establishes a sales- or product-driven focus. Marketing is an asset to establishing relationships that drive every function in the company and can help shape a culture mirroring the personality a brand’s audience and potential employees have come to expect.

Content. Content is king, particularly in modern marketing when consumers want to interact with a brand on their own terms. Content done right -- having evolved from pushing an agenda into an engagement tool and growth driver -- offers an opportunity to break through the clutter and make meaningful connections.

Flexibility. The right people with the right financial resources will help you deftly navigate the ever-growing martech landscape, best practices for intergenerational engagement -- and, in the wake of 2020, the new world order defined by changing consumer behaviors.

Marketing will never be a one-size-fits-all proposition. Taking time to reflect and reframe who we are makes us stronger in our priorities and convictions. And it’s that strength -- even in the face of these persistent challenges to effective marketing -- that make us better able to deliver innovations and results that drive our clients (and our industry) ever forward.

Expect Political Awareness, Viewer Engagement To Rise In 2022

 While political dollars may be important for share, political ads should never be allowed to pre-empt local-direct annual revenue as local-direct is your controllable mainstream revenue that is most profitable to corporate! Philip Jay LeNoble, PhD


COMMENTARY

Expect Political Awareness, Viewer Engagement To Rise In 2022

TV news networks -- following the trend of political advertising -- should see a notable rise in viewership in 2022, in conjunction with the midterm elections.

But will they tally stronger-than-expected results, given the politically hyped news stories and calls for action? Ultimately, engagement means voter activity at the polls.

Political advertising is predicted to break more records next year, all of which will bolster TV -- especially local TV stations -- in terms of ad dollars, which have been a growing business lifeline.

Consider that national political advertisers have already ramped up exposure.

MSNBC recently ran TV commercials supporting the Biden Administration’s proposed “Build Back Better” bill -- a nearly $2 trillion proposed social spending bill.

In addition, there are political ads promoting the need for national voting rights legislation. Other political messaging is aimed at stopping antitrust bills that “can hurt our most innovative companies.”

Kantar estimates that local TV stations could see another eye-popping $3.8 billion in political advertising in 2022 (up from $3.1 billion in 2018); with local pay TV (cable/satellite/telco) getting $1.4 billion ($1.2 billion in 2018); digital media (primarily Facebook and Google) at $1.2 billion ( $900 million in 2018); radio at $215 million, and OTT/CTV at$1.2 billion.

Kantar estimates overall midterms will see $7.8 billion in media ad spend.

Although few can predict news viewership data, expect numbers to climb for national TV news networks and local TV news programs in 2022. This is largely due to 2021 being an off-year politically.

2021 -- especially after the January 6 insurrection -- has seen 20% to 30% declines in viewing versus a year ago during the presidential election, as well as pressing pandemic reports, across all national TV networks.

While the on-off year political advertising trend has been a constant, analysts wonder whether we can ever break out of this yo-yo movement.

Both sides of the media spectrum -- liberal and conservative media -- have been touting key news moments for their version of voting rights, social program spending and immigration.

Your favorite opinionated prime-time news hosts have their work cut out for them.

Fact-checking and proper sourcing are not optional. They are the definition of truthful reporting.

Cracking the Sales Compensation Code

 


Cracking the Sales Compensation Code

A competitive salary is ‘table stakes’ for creating an effective pay package

When we spoke with Henry Glickel, president of Sales Recruiters Inc. in Salem, New Hampshire, he said he had recently fielded a call from an HR executive at a large shipping company that was looking to expand and wanted to hire several hundred new salespeople. Glickel’s company helps B2B companies nationwide across a diverse range of industries fill open sales positions. Filling such a large number of positions would mean over $1 million in revenue for Sales Recruiters, Glickel said, yet he turned down the business.

“They have other issues they have to acknowledge and resolve before talking about recruiting,” he explained. Among them, the company didn’t have a competitive pay plan with strong benefits. Glickel said his company has a stellar record of placing sales professionals with companies long term and he didn’t want to mess with that, even if it meant passing on such a significant amount of business.
“They don’t have a good process to get the right funnel of people into those positions,” he said. “I told them, ‘When you guys decide to address these other issues, we’ll decide to help you.’ ”

Salary Strategies Can’t Be Stagnant

Glickel’s reluctance to take on such a lucrative contract until the client has the right compensation plan in place speaks volumes about the importance of salary in today’s highly competitive sales world. “Wages are table stakes,” he said. “If you’re not competitive on wages, you can forget about all the other stuff.”

To be sure, “all the other stuff” — a strong corporate culture, flexible work schedules, remote work opportunities, ongoing skills training and more — are critical to recruiting top talent today. The recruitment experts we spoke with for this report emphasized that companies with low turnover rates are led by executives who understand that money alone is no longer an effective retention tool. However, companies must start at a point of paying competitively or they won’t get a sniff from top sales talent. That requires comprehensive and accurate knowledge of compensation data in your industry.

“Accurate and timely compensation data hold even greater value this year as a new post-pandemic normalcy begins to take shape,” states a Mercer blog post. Just as most everything else in work environments has shifted since the COVID-19 pandemic changed the world, economic factors have affected pay, sometimes dramatically, but not uniformly across industries, Mercer reports.

“Significant changes in job skills and performance have led to changes in compensation strategy as well. Some jobs have changed so dramatically at a skills level that they may not even resemble the same position as in prior years,” the Mercer blog states. “Many jobs will now need to be evaluated and remapped to survey data and the compensation plan
re-evaluated.”

The 2020 Mercer Benchmark Database median base salary increases year over year were relatively homogenous across will likely struggle to retain top talent, the salary consultants we spoke with said.

How should base salary and commission be divided? “You want them to be able to eat hamburger, not steak” from the base salary portion of their compensation, said Mark Thacker, president and co-founder of Sales Xceleration, which provides sales leadership consultants to small businesses and mid-sized corporations that are looking to drive revenue industries, with most showing 3.0%. In 2021, the salary survey shows a range of median year-over-year salary increases, from a high of 3.3% in life sciences to a low of 0% in services (non- financial). Even within industries, some jobs are experiencing salary rate increases that are much higher than others.

Settling On a Compensation Structure

The salary structure for sales professionals has long been a combination of a base salary plus commission. Companies that pay 100% commission or provide a draw against future sales growth or repair problems that have halted sales growth.

Thacker is a proponent of setting an on-track earnings (OTE) target — the total amount a salesperson should earn if they hit quota — and split that number 50-50 between base salary and commission. In a Sales Xceleration survey, 15% of companies paid straight commission, 25% set too high a base salary, and 21% had a base salary below 50%. (See chart below.)

Before setting a salary range for sales reps and determining how base salary and commission will be split, a company must first determine its target for gross sales profit and what percentage of sales revenue you’re willing to allocate to sales compensation, said Rene Zamora, president of Sales Manager Now, a provider of outsourced sales management to small businesses. In addition, factors affecting compensation include:

  • Local market benchmarks
  • Who is expected to generate the lion’s share of leads
  • What level of industry experience or knowledge is required to be successful sales process and the length of the average sales cycle
  • How many opportunities can be worked at one time
  • What percentage of post- sales support the salesperson is expected to provide

Aligning Salary with Desired Outcomes

Once you have a thorough understanding of compensation benchmarks in your industry, it’s imperative to structure your compensation package to suit the outcomes that you desire. Every company has different revenue goals, and those goals may shift as new products come online or new client needs emerge.

Thacker says many companies reach out for his company’s services when reps are not doing what company leaders want. Many of his clients do not have an individual in a sales leadership position. An owner or president wears multiple hats, including leading the sales team.

Often, sales problems exist because leadership lacks an understanding of how to align compensation with the most important company goals. Where one company may focus on retaining existing customers, another may seek explosive growth in new customers or increased sales of a new product or vertical. Objectives also may change within the same company from one year to the next. A business may want to drive more revenue from certain high-margin products during one period, but later need to focus on not being reliant on a handful of big customers. If company leaders don’t tweak the salary structure to align with those goals, they can’t realistically expect significant change from the sales team, Thacker said.

“It’s amazing how compensation plans stay the same from year to year even when owners or leaders want something to change in terms of revenue generation. A good salesperson will figure out how to exploit a compensation plan to make the most money possible. We want them to exploit it in a way that benefits them and the company at the same time.”
A recent Sales Xceleration survey showed that only 30% of companies make annual compensation plan updates.

Corporate Culture Is Part of Your Comp Plan You’ve read it a thousand times because that’s how important it is: Your corporate culture is a key recruitment and retention tool. Job candidates have multiple means of examining a prospective employer as much as they are being examined.

Candidates come to job interviews with challenging questions that help them assess how much a company is invested in its employees. If managers are not prepared to answer — thoroughly and honestly — they’ll have a tough time making the hire.

“While compensation is always going to be the No. 1 thing that matters to people, what comes second is enjoying what you’re doing and who you’re doing it with,” said Brooke Hamrick, head of growth at Pequity, provider of a compensa- tion software platform. “There is a lot of camaraderie that happens on a sales team that connects all the team members together. You can share the wins as well as the losses and learn together. I’ve seen some creative compensation plans in which, in addition to individual sales goals and rewards, the team aggregated goal is something that is rewarded if it’s reached.

This fosters cooperation and helping each other out.” Getting more creative about work perks is essential. Project44, a Chicago-based provider of freight-tracking software, launched a program in which employees can use a company-subsidized van — equipped with WiFi as well as a bed, toilet and shower — to combine work with family road trips. The company reports that when it opened up spots through the end of this year, dates were booked within five minutes.

Clearly Communicate the Comp Plan

Making sure sales reps understand how they are compensated and gaining their buy-in is possibly the most important part of making a pay package work, said Thacker. Simplicity and clarity are key.

Managers need to ask reps if they understand the compensation plan and have them sign a statement to that effect. That should eliminate difficult conversations six months down the road if they claim the compensation structure was misrepresented. Monitoring how reps spend their time should provide an indication whether they understand the comp plan. If their actions aren’t matching up with how they can maximize their income, review the comp plan to make sure they understand it.

“Keep in mind that sales compensation plan communication shouldn’t just take place once the plan is designed. Communi- cate with sales reps beforehand to understand their challenges and ideas,” Thacker stated in a blog post on common compensation plan mistakes. “If you know what matters to them and their families, you’ll be able to adapt your plan to enhance motivation. When complete, communicate your plan team-wide and with each individual rep. Answer questions and make adjustments as necessary — to the plan, to your communication process, or both.”

A competitive pay plan will always be a key factor in being able to land and keep high-performing salespeople. Older executives who are making the decisions about compensation packages must accept the shifts that are occurring. Someone who may have started decades ago in a commission-only job may struggle to understand why it could cause reputational risk and put their company at a disadvantage. The cost of high turnover can cripple a business.

“You need to speak to what matters to them. That goes back to the job design approach of marrying what excites and inspires them with the business needs,” said Rikka Brandon, founder and CEO of Recruit Retain Rock. An experienced recruiter herself, Brandon started her own business during the pandemic that helps companies learn how to recruit top talent on their own.

“Smart companies and smart leaders are going to get ahead by really learning how to connect with what truly motivates a person and figuring out how to build that into their reward system,” she said. “If you have engagement, challenge and reward — if people are interested in the work they’re doing and in helping the customers, and they feel challenged — you have a 95% chance of keeping them.”

Cracking the Sales Compensation Code

A competitive salary is ‘table stakes’ for creating an effective pay package

When we spoke with Henry Glickel, president of Sales Recruiters Inc. in Salem, New Hampshire, he said he had recently fielded a call from an HR executive at a large shipping company that was looking to expand and wanted to hire several hundred new salespeople. Glickel’s company helps B2B companies nationwide across a diverse range of industries fill open sales positions. Filling such a large number of positions would mean over $1 million in revenue for Sales Recruiters, Glickel said, yet he turned down the business.

“They have other issues they have to acknowledge and resolve before talking about recruiting,” he explained. Among them, the company didn’t have a competitive pay plan with strong benefits. Glickel said his company has a stellar record of placing sales professionals with companies long term and he didn’t want to mess with that, even if it meant passing on such a significant amount of business.
“They don’t have a good process to get the right funnel of people into those positions,” he said. “I told them, ‘When you guys decide to address these other issues, we’ll decide to help you.’ ”

Salary Strategies Can’t Be Stagnant

Glickel’s reluctance to take on such a lucrative contract until the client has the right compensation plan in place speaks volumes about the importance of salary in today’s highly competitive sales world. “Wages are table stakes,” he said. “If you’re not competitive on wages, you can forget about all the other stuff.”

To be sure, “all the other stuff” — a strong corporate culture, flexible work schedules, remote work opportunities, ongoing skills training and more — are critical to recruiting top talent today. The recruitment experts we spoke with for this report emphasized that companies with low turnover rates are led by executives who understand that money alone is no longer an effective retention tool. However, companies must start at a point of paying competitively or they won’t get a sniff from top sales talent. That requires comprehensive and accurate knowledge of compensation data in your industry.

“Accurate and timely compensation data hold even greater value this year as a new post-pandemic normalcy begins to take shape,” states a Mercer blog post. Just as most everything else in work environments has shifted since the COVID-19 pandemic changed the world, economic factors have affected pay, sometimes dramatically, but not uniformly across industries, Mercer reports.

“Significant changes in job skills and performance have led to changes in compensation strategy as well. Some jobs have changed so dramatically at a skills level that they may not even resemble the same position as in prior years,” the Mercer blog states. “Many jobs will now need to be evaluated and remapped to survey data and the compensation plan
re-evaluated.”

The 2020 Mercer Benchmark Database median base salary increases year over year were relatively homogenous across will likely struggle to retain top talent, the salary consultants we spoke with said.

How should base salary and commission be divided? “You want them to be able to eat hamburger, not steak” from the base salary portion of their compensation, said Mark Thacker, president and co-founder of Sales Xceleration, which provides sales leadership consultants to small businesses and mid-sized corporations that are looking to drive revenue industries, with most showing 3.0%. In 2021, the salary survey shows a range of median year-over-year salary increases, from a high of 3.3% in life sciences to a low of 0% in services (non- financial). Even within industries, some jobs are experiencing salary rate increases that are much higher than others.

Settling On a Compensation Structure

The salary structure for sales professionals has long been a combination of a base salary plus commission. Companies that pay 100% commission or provide a draw against future sales growth or repair problems that have halted sales growth.

Thacker is a proponent of setting an on-track earnings (OTE) target — the total amount a salesperson should earn if they hit quota — and split that number 50-50 between base salary and commission. In a Sales Xceleration survey, 15% of companies paid straight commission, 25% set too high a base salary, and 21% had a base salary below 50%. (See chart below.)

Before setting a salary range for sales reps and determining how base salary and commission will be split, a company must first determine its target for gross sales profit and what percentage of sales revenue you’re willing to allocate to sales compensation, said Rene Zamora, president of Sales Manager Now, a provider of outsourced sales management to small businesses. In addition, factors affecting compensation include:

  • Local market benchmarks
  • Who is expected to generate the lion’s share of leads
  • What level of industry experience or knowledge is required to be successful sales process and the length of the average sales cycle
  • How many opportunities can be worked at one time
  • What percentage of post- sales support the salesperson is expected to provide

Aligning Salary with Desired Outcomes

Once you have a thorough understanding of compensation benchmarks in your industry, it’s imperative to structure your compensation package to suit the outcomes that you desire. Every company has different revenue goals, and those goals may shift as new products come online or new client needs emerge.

Thacker says many companies reach out for his company’s services when reps are not doing what company leaders want. Many of his clients do not have an individual in a sales leadership position. An owner or president wears multiple hats, including leading the sales team.

Often, sales problems exist because leadership lacks an understanding of how to align compensation with the most important company goals. Where one company may focus on retaining existing customers, another may seek explosive growth in new customers or increased sales of a new product or vertical. Objectives also may change within the same company from one year to the next. A business may want to drive more revenue from certain high-margin products during one period, but later need to focus on not being reliant on a handful of big customers. If company leaders don’t tweak the salary structure to align with those goals, they can’t realistically expect significant change from the sales team, Thacker said.

“It’s amazing how compensation plans stay the same from year to year even when owners or leaders want something to change in terms of revenue generation. A good salesperson will figure out how to exploit a compensation plan to make the most money possible. We want them to exploit it in a way that benefits them and the company at the same time.”
A recent Sales Xceleration survey showed that only 30% of companies make annual compensation plan updates.

Corporate Culture Is Part of Your Comp Plan You’ve read it a thousand times because that’s how important it is: Your corporate culture is a key recruitment and retention tool. Job candidates have multiple means of examining a prospective employer as much as they are being examined.

Candidates come to job interviews with challenging questions that help them assess how much a company is invested in its employees. If managers are not prepared to answer — thoroughly and honestly — they’ll have a tough time making the hire.

“While compensation is always going to be the No. 1 thing that matters to people, what comes second is enjoying what you’re doing and who you’re doing it with,” said Brooke Hamrick, head of growth at Pequity, provider of a compensa- tion software platform. “There is a lot of camaraderie that happens on a sales team that connects all the team members together. You can share the wins as well as the losses and learn together. I’ve seen some creative compensation plans in which, in addition to individual sales goals and rewards, the team aggregated goal is something that is rewarded if it’s reached.

This fosters cooperation and helping each other out.” Getting more creative about work perks is essential. Project44, a Chicago-based provider of freight-tracking software, launched a program in which employees can use a company-subsidized van — equipped with WiFi as well as a bed, toilet and shower — to combine work with family road trips. The company reports that when it opened up spots through the end of this year, dates were booked within five minutes.

Clearly Communicate the Comp Plan

Making sure sales reps understand how they are compensated and gaining their buy-in is possibly the most important part of making a pay package work, said Thacker. Simplicity and clarity are key.

Managers need to ask reps if they understand the compensation plan and have them sign a statement to that effect. That should eliminate difficult conversations six months down the road if they claim the compensation structure was misrepresented. Monitoring how reps spend their time should provide an indication whether they understand the comp plan. If their actions aren’t matching up with how they can maximize their income, review the comp plan to make sure they understand it.

“Keep in mind that sales compensation plan communication shouldn’t just take place once the plan is designed. Communi- cate with sales reps beforehand to understand their challenges and ideas,” Thacker stated in a blog post on common compensation plan mistakes. “If you know what matters to them and their families, you’ll be able to adapt your plan to enhance motivation. When complete, communicate your plan team-wide and with each individual rep. Answer questions and make adjustments as necessary — to the plan, to your communication process, or both.”

A competitive pay plan will always be a key factor in being able to land and keep high-performing salespeople. Older executives who are making the decisions about compensation packages must accept the shifts that are occurring. Someone who may have started decades ago in a commission-only job may struggle to understand why it could cause reputational risk and put their company at a disadvantage. The cost of high turnover can cripple a business.

“You need to speak to what matters to them. That goes back to the job design approach of marrying what excites and inspires them with the business needs,” said Rikka Brandon, founder and CEO of Recruit Retain Rock. An experienced recruiter herself, Brandon started her own business during the pandemic that helps companies learn how to recruit top talent on their own.

“Smart companies and smart leaders are going to get ahead by really learning how to connect with what truly motivates a person and figuring out how to build that into their reward system,” she said. “If you have engagement, challenge and reward — if people are interested in the work they’re doing and in helping the customers, and they feel challenged — you have a 95% chance of keeping them.”

Cracking the Sales Compensation Code

A competitive salary is ‘table stakes’ for creating an effective pay package

When we spoke with Henry Glickel, president of Sales Recruiters Inc. in Salem, New Hampshire, he said he had recently fielded a call from an HR executive at a large shipping company that was looking to expand and wanted to hire several hundred new salespeople. Glickel’s company helps B2B companies nationwide across a diverse range of industries fill open sales positions. Filling such a large number of positions would mean over $1 million in revenue for Sales Recruiters, Glickel said, yet he turned down the business.

“They have other issues they have to acknowledge and resolve before talking about recruiting,” he explained. Among them, the company didn’t have a competitive pay plan with strong benefits. Glickel said his company has a stellar record of placing sales professionals with companies long term and he didn’t want to mess with that, even if it meant passing on such a significant amount of business.
“They don’t have a good process to get the right funnel of people into those positions,” he said. “I told them, ‘When you guys decide to address these other issues, we’ll decide to help you.’ ”

Salary Strategies Can’t Be Stagnant

Glickel’s reluctance to take on such a lucrative contract until the client has the right compensation plan in place speaks volumes about the importance of salary in today’s highly competitive sales world. “Wages are table stakes,” he said. “If you’re not competitive on wages, you can forget about all the other stuff.”

To be sure, “all the other stuff” — a strong corporate culture, flexible work schedules, remote work opportunities, ongoing skills training and more — are critical to recruiting top talent today. The recruitment experts we spoke with for this report emphasized that companies with low turnover rates are led by executives who understand that money alone is no longer an effective retention tool. However, companies must start at a point of paying competitively or they won’t get a sniff from top sales talent. That requires comprehensive and accurate knowledge of compensation data in your industry.

“Accurate and timely compensation data hold even greater value this year as a new post-pandemic normalcy begins to take shape,” states a Mercer blog post. Just as most everything else in work environments has shifted since the COVID-19 pandemic changed the world, economic factors have affected pay, sometimes dramatically, but not uniformly across industries, Mercer reports.

“Significant changes in job skills and performance have led to changes in compensation strategy as well. Some jobs have changed so dramatically at a skills level that they may not even resemble the same position as in prior years,” the Mercer blog states. “Many jobs will now need to be evaluated and remapped to survey data and the compensation plan
re-evaluated.”

The 2020 Mercer Benchmark Database median base salary increases year over year were relatively homogenous across will likely struggle to retain top talent, the salary consultants we spoke with said.

How should base salary and commission be divided? “You want them to be able to eat hamburger, not steak” from the base salary portion of their compensation, said Mark Thacker, president and co-founder of Sales Xceleration, which provides sales leadership consultants to small businesses and mid-sized corporations that are looking to drive revenue industries, with most showing 3.0%. In 2021, the salary survey shows a range of median year-over-year salary increases, from a high of 3.3% in life sciences to a low of 0% in services (non- financial). Even within industries, some jobs are experiencing salary rate increases that are much higher than others.

Settling On a Compensation Structure

The salary structure for sales professionals has long been a combination of a base salary plus commission. Companies that pay 100% commission or provide a draw against future sales growth or repair problems that have halted sales growth.

Thacker is a proponent of setting an on-track earnings (OTE) target — the total amount a salesperson should earn if they hit quota — and split that number 50-50 between base salary and commission. In a Sales Xceleration survey, 15% of companies paid straight commission, 25% set too high a base salary, and 21% had a base salary below 50%. (See chart below.)

Before setting a salary range for sales reps and determining how base salary and commission will be split, a company must first determine its target for gross sales profit and what percentage of sales revenue you’re willing to allocate to sales compensation, said Rene Zamora, president of Sales Manager Now, a provider of outsourced sales management to small businesses. In addition, factors affecting compensation include:

  • Local market benchmarks
  • Who is expected to generate the lion’s share of leads
  • What level of industry experience or knowledge is required to be successful sales process and the length of the average sales cycle
  • How many opportunities can be worked at one time
  • What percentage of post- sales support the salesperson is expected to provide

Aligning Salary with Desired Outcomes

Once you have a thorough understanding of compensation benchmarks in your industry, it’s imperative to structure your compensation package to suit the outcomes that you desire. Every company has different revenue goals, and those goals may shift as new products come online or new client needs emerge.

Thacker says many companies reach out for his company’s services when reps are not doing what company leaders want. Many of his clients do not have an individual in a sales leadership position. An owner or president wears multiple hats, including leading the sales team.

Often, sales problems exist because leadership lacks an understanding of how to align compensation with the most important company goals. Where one company may focus on retaining existing customers, another may seek explosive growth in new customers or increased sales of a new product or vertical. Objectives also may change within the same company from one year to the next. A business may want to drive more revenue from certain high-margin products during one period, but later need to focus on not being reliant on a handful of big customers. If company leaders don’t tweak the salary structure to align with those goals, they can’t realistically expect significant change from the sales team, Thacker said.

“It’s amazing how compensation plans stay the same from year to year even when owners or leaders want something to change in terms of revenue generation. A good salesperson will figure out how to exploit a compensation plan to make the most money possible. We want them to exploit it in a way that benefits them and the company at the same time.”
A recent Sales Xceleration survey showed that only 30% of companies make annual compensation plan updates.

Corporate Culture Is Part of Your Comp Plan You’ve read it a thousand times because that’s how important it is: Your corporate culture is a key recruitment and retention tool. Job candidates have multiple means of examining a prospective employer as much as they are being examined.

Candidates come to job interviews with challenging questions that help them assess how much a company is invested in its employees. If managers are not prepared to answer — thoroughly and honestly — they’ll have a tough time making the hire.

“While compensation is always going to be the No. 1 thing that matters to people, what comes second is enjoying what you’re doing and who you’re doing it with,” said Brooke Hamrick, head of growth at Pequity, provider of a compensa- tion software platform. “There is a lot of camaraderie that happens on a sales team that connects all the team members together. You can share the wins as well as the losses and learn together. I’ve seen some creative compensation plans in which, in addition to individual sales goals and rewards, the team aggregated goal is something that is rewarded if it’s reached.

This fosters cooperation and helping each other out.” Getting more creative about work perks is essential. Project44, a Chicago-based provider of freight-tracking software, launched a program in which employees can use a company-subsidized van — equipped with WiFi as well as a bed, toilet and shower — to combine work with family road trips. The company reports that when it opened up spots through the end of this year, dates were booked within five minutes.

Clearly Communicate the Comp Plan

Making sure sales reps understand how they are compensated and gaining their buy-in is possibly the most important part of making a pay package work, said Thacker. Simplicity and clarity are key.

Managers need to ask reps if they understand the compensation plan and have them sign a statement to that effect. That should eliminate difficult conversations six months down the road if they claim the compensation structure was misrepresented. Monitoring how reps spend their time should provide an indication whether they understand the comp plan. If their actions aren’t matching up with how they can maximize their income, review the comp plan to make sure they understand it.

“Keep in mind that sales compensation plan communication shouldn’t just take place once the plan is designed. Communi- cate with sales reps beforehand to understand their challenges and ideas,” Thacker stated in a blog post on common compensation plan mistakes. “If you know what matters to them and their families, you’ll be able to adapt your plan to enhance motivation. When complete, communicate your plan team-wide and with each individual rep. Answer questions and make adjustments as necessary — to the plan, to your communication process, or both.”

A competitive pay plan will always be a key factor in being able to land and keep high-performing salespeople. Older executives who are making the decisions about compensation packages must accept the shifts that are occurring. Someone who may have started decades ago in a commission-only job may struggle to understand why it could cause reputational risk and put their company at a disadvantage. The cost of high turnover can cripple a business.

“You need to speak to what matters to them. That goes back to the job design approach of marrying what excites and inspires them with the business needs,” said Rikka Brandon, founder and CEO of Recruit Retain Rock. An experienced recruiter herself, Brandon started her own business during the pandemic that helps companies learn how to recruit top talent on their own.

“Smart companies and smart leaders are going to get ahead by really learning how to connect with what truly motivates a person and figuring out how to build that into their reward system,” she said. “If you have engagement, challenge and reward — if people are interested in the work they’re doing and in helping the customers, and they feel challenged — you have a 95% chance of keeping them.”