A recent study of sales organizations at Best-In-Class (BIC) companies reveals that they are more likely to use recognition in the form of non-cash rewards to boost sales staff performance.
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A majority (55%) of respondents to a recent survey conducted by Aberdeen Group and distributed by the Incentive Research Foundation (IRF) indicate that noncash incentives and rewards are a "vital component" of sales performance management, and 57% say that "internal recognition for positive performance" is a critical nonfinancial motivator.
The February 2013 Aberdeen Research Brief, Non-Cash Incentives: Best Practices to Optimize Sales Effectiveness, explores how BIC organizations extend beyond simple cash compensation to use noncash incentives and rewards as a vital part of their modern B2B sales performance management efforts.
Aberdeen Group surveyed 312 end-user organizations to better understand how sales performance management is most effectively deployed. BIC firms (those comprising the top 20%) had higher customer retention rates, higher year-over-year increase in the number of sales reps achieving quota and a much larger increase in deal size/contract value than industry average firms or 'laggard firms' (those comprising the bottom 30%).
The Research Brief, supported and distributed by the IRF, found that organizations with formal internal sales employee recognition programs had 14.8% higher team quota attainment and 5.9% higher customer renewal rate.
The study also found that BIC firms were:
- 11% more likely to offer verbal praise, 90% more likely to offer public recognition and 94% more likely to offer peer-to-peer recognition for progress towards goal versus all other firms;
- 23% more likely than all others to offer group travel, 75% more likely to offer company sponsored events, and 60% more likely to offer peer-to-peer recognition as a year-end sales incentive; and
- 26% more likely than all others to list teamwork as a very important part of the sales process—and 47% more likely than laggard firms.
The study also examines the critical choice of whether to outsource the management of noncash incentive programs or implement them on their own. For more information on this new noncash incentives study, please go to www.TheIRF.org.