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How should RevOps structure sales compensation plans in 2027?

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A sales compensation plan that works in 2027 is built on a simple rule: pay reps for the behavior you can measure, can defend, and actually want repeated. The plans that hold up share four traits — a clear base-to-variable split matched to the role, a single primary metric per role rather than a cluttered scorecard, accelerators that reward overachievement without capping it, and mechanics simple enough that a rep can calculate their own check.

For a quota-carrying account executive, the 2027 standard remains a 50/50 base-to-variable split with commission on bookings and accelerators past 100 percent of quota; for SDRs, a 70/30 split weighted toward meetings or pipeline accepted by sales; for customer success and account managers, a shift toward net revenue retention and expansion rather than gross renewal.

The single biggest mistake is overcomplicating the plan — when reps cannot predict their own payout, they stop trusting it and start gaming it. The second biggest is misaligning the metric: paying on bookings when the business needs retention, or on activity when it needs revenue.

Design the plan around the one or two outcomes the company most needs this year, keep it legible, and revisit it annually — not mid-year, which destroys trust.

1. Start With the Role, Not the Number

Compensation design fails when leaders pick a payout structure before defining what the role is supposed to produce. Every plan starts with the role's primary outcome.

Get this mapping right and the rest of the plan follows. Get it wrong — paying an SDR on closed revenue they do not control, or a CSM on logos rather than retention — and you create frustration and the wrong behavior.

flowchart TD ROLE[Define Role Outcome] --> AE[AE: New Bookings] ROLE --> SDR[SDR: Qualified Pipeline] ROLE --> CSM[CSM: Net Revenue Retention] AE --> SPLIT[50/50 base-variable] SDR --> SPLIT2[70/30 base-variable] CSM --> SPLIT3[Retention + expansion bonus]

2. The Base-to-Variable Split

The split between base salary and variable commission should reflect how much control the rep has over the outcome and how much risk is appropriate.

The deeper into the deal cycle a role sits and the more it controls revenue, the more variable the plan.

3. One Primary Metric, Not Ten

The most common 2027 plan disease is the cluttered scorecard — paying on five weighted metrics so no single one drives behavior. Reps optimize for whatever is easiest, and the plan loses its steering power.

The fix: one primary metric per role, optionally one small secondary modifier. An AE is paid on bookings, perhaps with a small multi-year or margin modifier. An SDR is paid on accepted pipeline, perhaps with a small conversion-quality modifier. Resist the urge to pay for everything; a plan that points at one outcome moves that outcome.

4. Accelerators, Not Caps

High performers are the engine of a sales org, so the plan should reward overachievement, not punish it. The 2027 standard:

flowchart LR Q[Quota Attainment] --> B1[0-100%: base rate] B1 --> A1[100-125%: 1.5x accelerator] A1 --> A2[125%+: 2x accelerator] A2 --> UNCAP[No cap - keep selling]

5. Keep It Legible and Stable

A compensation plan only works if reps understand it and trust it. Two rules:

Tools like Salesforce, CaptivateIQ, Spiff (Salesforce Spiff), and QuotaPath automate calculation and give reps real-time visibility, which itself builds trust.

6. A Practical 2027 Build Sequence

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the standard base-to-variable split for an AE in 2027? About 50/50 — half guaranteed base, half variable commission against quota, since AEs directly control closing.

Should sales commissions ever be capped? No. Caps tell top reps to stop selling once they hit the ceiling. Use uncapped accelerators past 100 percent of quota instead.

How many metrics should a comp plan use? Ideally one primary metric per role, with at most one small modifier. Cluttered multi-metric plans dilute behavior.

Can I change the comp plan mid-year? Avoid it. Mid-year changes erode trust badly. Adjust with quotas or SPIFFs if needed, but lock the core plan annually.

What tools manage sales compensation? CaptivateIQ, Salesforce Spiff, QuotaPath, and similar tools automate calculation and give reps real-time payout visibility.

Sources

Sales compensation plan review / reviews / rating / review 2027 / review of RevOps comp plans

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