What to do About a Long Sales Cycle
Providing purposeful compensation plans for long sales cycles.

If you’ve spent any time on this blog at all, you’ll know my belief that there’s no one-size-fits-all approach to sales compensation. Creating a comp plan that is motivating and fulfilling for your sales team while at the same time achieving your organizational goals takes consideration of many factors, including the goals of the company, the place of the organization in its life cycle, the culture, the behaviors you want to incentivize, etc.
However, one of the most important factors in how you design your sales compensation program is the length of your sales cycle. For organizations with very long sales cycles, comp design isn’t as easy as offering a percentage commission on final closing. It will require a bit more thoughtfulness.
What is a “long” sales cycle?
For the purpose of this article, I’m defining a long sales cycle as any average sales process that extends beyond one year. And I’m not including the lead generation or initial discovery stages into that average – as we all know, it can sometimes take years to make progress with an organization or contacts before engagement in the initial phases of the selling process. Products or solutions in engineering, development, and construction services, government sales, and health system business development are good examples of offerings that take a long time to come to fruition.
However, the key thing to take away from identifying roles with long sales cycle length is the experience of the salesperson - the longer the wait time between beginning the sales process and deal closure, the more challenging it is to connect the actions with the reward.
How to Provide Compensation During Long Sales Cycles
The goal when you have a long sales cycle, is to compress long-term actions into short-term incentives. Obviously, this is complicated by the fact that your organization doesn’t receive a payout until after the close of the deal—and depending on the contract, it may still be very far off from then. Some contracts come with payment terms where the full monetary benefit of the transaction isn’t seen for years.
So, how do you keep your salesperson engaged during the long process? What does a reward program look like when it is five years from the time the salesperson starts to engage with the customer and the company receives initial payments? Here are a couple of things to consider.
• Pay Mix: The split between base pay compensation and variable pay compensation should be commensurate with the risk (and corresponding reward) that the individual takes on in the role – meaning that generally, existing client sales carries less risk than new business sales. The size and scope of the job (e.g., Field Sales vs. Inside Sales) also come into play with the final equation. Generally, the split on pay for new business sits at around 50/50 to 60/40 (base to variable). Existing Client sales generally start around 60/40 and may go to 75/25 depending on the specifics of the role.
- Base Salary: With a long sales cycle, there needs to be financial coverage while they’re doing the work of moving a sale forward. It also means making sure their compensation doesn’t rely solely on the close of a sale—because the win rate is rarely 100%. Enterprise salespeople have very high base pay. And for good reason. Ideally, we want the sales incentives to be the star attraction, but too much pay at risk can prompt desperation (and potentially other side effects) rather than motivation and engagement.
- Creating Milestones: During long sales cycles, there are usually milestone moments or phases in the deal progression that increase the likelihood of the transaction getting to contract. One way to design a short-term incentive program is to identify these important milestones and build financial rewards associated with deal progression. If that isn’t feasible, putting more emphasis on recognition and praise at each of these milestones is considerably beneficial to morale during the long slog towards the deal win.
- Pay Curve: Thresholds and Accelerators are important components of the way variable pay is delivered. Much of this is related to the accuracy of the target (quota) and performance management as well. With the greater risk of these long-term transactions, the upside potential should be commensurate with the postponement of short-term incentives. The most common accelerators are in the 2x to 3x (times) base rate of pay. Ultimately, the performance levels for long-term transactions need to be modeled for the best fit and affordability specific to your organization’s financial sustainability.
In short, you have to think about rewarding the process more than the outcome in order to improve the retention and motivation of your sales team.
To learn more about the many complexities and nuances of creating a sales comp plan that attracts, retains, and motivates talent, sign up for my biweekly newsletter.



