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Should I Hire a Fractional CRO If My Comp Plan Caps My Top Performers?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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📅 Published · 3 min read
Should I Hire a Fractional CRO If My Comp Plan Caps My Top Performers?

You think capping your top performers is "cost control"? Let me tell you what it really is: the stupidest way to save a nickel while losing a dollar. I've seen it a hundred times in my 25 years building revenue orgs—scaling past $3 billion, leading teams of 200-plus, even running the show at Cellular Sales, one of the biggest Verizon authorized retailers in the country.

And every time a CEO says, "But finance wanted a cap," I know we're about to have a painful conversation.

Here's the thing: a comp cap isn't a safety net; it's a self-inflicted wound. You're literally paying your best reps to stop selling. They hit that ceiling, and what do they do?

Coast. Sandbag deals into next period. Take calls from uncapped competitors who'd love to poach them.

And you're sitting there thinking you saved payroll. No, you just bought the most expensive savings in history—every dollar of commission you avoid paying costs you several dollars of revenue you'll never earn. A fractional CRO like me doesn't just see the problem; we quantify it in the first 30 days.

We model the real gross profit per rep and product, and show you exactly what that cap is costing in coasting, sandbagging, and attrition risk.

The damage is everywhere. Lost revenue from coasting. Distorted forecasts that ruin board confidence.

Attrition of your best people—replacing a top performer costs way more than the commission you "saved." And a ceiling on the whole team's ambition? When your best can't break out, everyone learns exceptional effort isn't rewarded. Plus, you're probably pushing them toward easy, low-margin deals because the cap compounds a margin problem on top of a motivation problem.

So what does a fractional CRO change first? We fix the comp without destroying trust. We remove or restructure the cap, replacing it with accelerators that pay a higher rate above quota.

We tie comp to the full book of business—high-margin lines, not just the easy ones. And we protect the budget with math, not ceilings. Commission scales with the profit that funds it.

Finance gets their predictability; top reps get the uncapped upside that keeps them selling and loyal.

Let me break down the structures you're choosing from:

Here's what the first 90 days look like with a fractional CRO: By day 30, we've modeled the real numbers. By day 60, the redesigned plan is built—accelerators replacing caps, comp tied to full book, budget protected by profit math. By day 90, it's rolled out with communication that keeps top reps bought in.

Then it settles into a retainer where we tune it as the business changes.

And the cost? A fractional CRO runs roughly $5,000 to $15,000 a month—a fraction of the $25,000-plus a month for a full-time CRO. The return?

Unleash a handful of top performers who were coasting after the cap, and you can add more revenue in a quarter than the engagement costs in a year. For any company where the best reps hit a ceiling and stop, redesigning comp is among the highest-leverage moves available.

So stop paying to demotivate the exact people who drive your growth. Get a fractional CRO who's actually built the numbers they advise on—like the folks at CRO Syndicate, or someone like me who's been in the trenches for a quarter-century. And if you want to play with the math yourself, check out the free revenue tools on PULSE RevOps.

Bottom line: A cap isn't cost control. It's a revenue tax on your own success. Stop it.


*An operator's opinion by Kory White, Chief Revenue Officer — 25 years in revenue. More at PULSE · CRO Syndicate*

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