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THE COMPENSATION EQUATION Compensation’s Impact on Profitability
PART THREE OF A THREE PART SERIES
Utilizing performance-based pay to incentivize each role is what will take your business to the next level and beyond. Here’s an example using the role of CSR:
If your company charges a service fee to go on calls, but you waive the service fee to book appointments when business is slow, there’s no incentive for CSRs to book the call with a fee. That policy negatively impacts profitability.
Valuable Incentives
When I ran my electrical services business, we added incentives for our CSRs that paid them on a per-booking call basis in addition to their base. We paid $1 for every booked call and $2 for a call with a fee. As a result, the fee call became more valuable. Additionally, I’d ask my CSR to make outbound calls during slower times, perhaps selling service agreements or putting an appointment on the board. For successful outbound calls, I paid $5 per. That’s when I could see my CSRs’ mindsets change. They learned they can earn more than just their salary based on their performance. As a result, more revenue was generated through their efforts than what it cost the business – a win/win for the company and team. Remember, the main goal of compensation is to change and motivate behavior through performance-based pay.
How you pay directly affects retention, performance, recruitment, and company culture.
There are multiple variations of this concept that The Blue-Collar Success Group® uses to help our members. The success we’ve had with the Compensation Equation has come from it being both customizable and scalable, based on both the market and the size of the operation. Change, even if it’s positive, can create disruption, so when it comes to implementation, we advise starting slow. If a business tries to change all the compensation plans at once, you’re asking for a lot of buy-ins. As an example, if I change the compensation plan in my call center, I can do it one of two ways.
Good Pay Equals Top Performance
The first way is to sell all team members at one time on the new compensation plan. The second would be to pick top performers as the test subjects and let them know you’re looking at allowing them to earn more income. Once that gets tested and you’ve evidenced that it works, they now become your cheerleaders in rolling out the compensation program to the entire department.
Once that is successfully in place it moves to another department, using the previous department as social proof, not just individuals. This is more of a global approach to the entire organization and helps keep your plan scalable.
Lastly, remember that it’s also a training opportunity. You’re training them to develop habits that not only make your company more profitable, but that give your team opportunity and a stronger sense of value. If you pay average, you get average. If you pay well, you get top-performing people. Therefore, the results are always going to be that you get what you pay for. And don’t think for a minute that this doesn’t trickle down to your customers and your reputation in the marketplace. This is the key to ongoing profitability.
Your team members all need to feel that no matter what role they have in the business, they matter. u www.thebluecollarsuccessgroup.com
After a journey in the HVAC industry that began when he was sixteen, Chris Crew went on to coach a large electrical company helping franchisees achieve success. Later, he shifted to owning an electrical business, growing it in a four-year span to 60 trucks, five locations, and generating $18 million. Ultimately, he sold his shares to join The Blue Collar Success Group® where he now serves as President. Chris Crew offers extensive knowledge about every facet of in-home services.