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The Quota-Setting Workshop — 90-Min Training

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The Quota-Setting Workshop — 90-Min Training

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The Quota-Setting Workshop is a 90-minute manager and leadership training that teaches front-line sales managers and revenue leaders how to build quotas from capacity math instead of a board-mandated growth number divided by headcount. Built on the Bridge Group SaaS AE Metrics report, the Winning by Design capacity-model framework, and ICONIQ Growth GTM benchmarks, this session walks a leadership team through four quota-setting methods, a verbatim capacity-model worksheet, a live build for a sample team, and a distribution-health debrief.

The output is a quota every manager can defend rep-by-rep, a ramp schedule that does not punish new hires, and a rollout script that communicates the number without crushing morale. Bad quotas are the single largest controllable driver of voluntary AE attrition, so this is a retention exercise as much as a planning one.


Section 1 — Why Bad Quotas Wreck Morale and Drive Attrition (10 min)

Open the room by naming the problem out loud. Most quotas are set by taking the company growth target, subtracting current run-rate, and dividing the gap across whatever heads exist. That is arithmetic, not planning. It ignores ramp state, territory quality, win rates, and how much pipeline marketing and SDRs can actually generate.

The cost shows up in attainment data and exit interviews. The Bridge Group has reported AE voluntary turnover near 25 percent annually, and unrealistic quotas are a top-three cited reason reps leave. When a rep concludes the number is unreachable in March, they stop trying in April and start interviewing in May.

Whiteboard frame — write these three failure signatures so the room recognizes them:

*A quota is a forecast of human behavior, not a wish. If you cannot show the math from capacity up, you have set a hope, not a quota.*


Section 2 — The Four Quota-Setting Methods (20 min)

Teach the four ways quotas get built, then commit to capacity-based as the default with top-down as the sanity check.

Top-down — leadership sets the company number, then cascades it down through segments and reps. Fast and aligned to the board, but blind to what the field can deliver. Use it as a ceiling check, never as the primary build.

Bottom-up — each rep or manager forecasts what they can close, then you sum it. Realistic and owned by the field, but reps sandbag and the total rarely meets the board target. Use it as a floor check.

Capacity-based — you model the revenue the team can actually produce from ramped selling capacity, then set quota as a multiple of that capacity. This is the method the workshop builds, because it reconciles top-down ambition with bottom-up reality.

Historical-trend — last year times a growth factor. Easy, but it bakes in last year's territory and ramp mistakes. Acceptable only for a stable, fully-ramped team.

The capacity formula — write it large on the board:

Team capacity = ramped reps x deals per rep per period x average sale price (ASP) x win rate

Then quota is set as a multiple of OTE so the comp plan and the capacity agree. Benchmarks to anchor the room, drawn from Bridge Group, ICONIQ Growth, and Winning by Design:

Coverage ratio — pipeline should run 3x to 4x of quota for a healthy team. If coverage is below 3x, the quota is a fantasy regardless of how the capacity math looks, because there is nothing to sell. Pull this number from Salesforce or Clari before you finalize anything.


Section 3 — The Capacity-Model Worksheet (15 min)

Hand each manager the worksheet and have them fill it for one rep, then for the team. This is the verbatim template managers run line by line. The numbers below are a worked SMB example; managers substitute their own.

Verbatim Capacity-Model Worksheet:

Step 1 — Selling capacity per rep Line A. Deals closed-won per fully-ramped rep per quarter: ____ (example: 12) Line B. Average sale price (ASP) in new ARR: $____ (example: $18,000) Line C. Win rate, closed-won / closed-total: ____% (example: 25%)

Step 2 — Raw capacity per rep Line D. Capacity = A x B = $____ (example: 12 x $18,000 = $216,000 per quarter)

Step 3 — Apply ramp state Line E. Ramp multiplier for this rep this period (0 / 0.25 / 0.50 / 0.75 / 1.00): ____ (example: 0.75, month-4 rep) Line F. Ramped capacity = D x E = $____ (example: $216,000 x 0.75 = $162,000)

Step 4 — Set the quota multiple Line G. Rep OTE (base + variable): $____ (example: $120,000) Line H. Segment quota multiple (SMB 6-8x / MM 5-6x / ENT 4-5x): ____ (example: 6x = $180,000 annual / $45,000 per quarter at full ramp)

Step 5 — Reconcile capacity to quota Line I. Does ramped capacity (F) cover the quota target (H) with 3-4x pipeline coverage? Yes / No Line J. If No, the constraint is one of: not enough ramped reps, ASP too low, win rate too low, or pipeline coverage under 3x. Name the constraint: ____

Step 6 — Team roll-up Line K. Sum ramped capacity (F) across all reps: $____ Line L. Team quota = K x target attainment factor (1.3 to 1.6, so 60-70% of reps can hit): $____

*Coach guidance: the target attainment factor in Line L is the lever that prevents the too-high failure mode. If you set team quota equal to summed capacity, only the top performers clear it. Setting quota at roughly 1.4x summed full-ramp capacity, with ramp discounts applied, lands most teams in the healthy 60-70 percent attainment band.*

flowchart TD A[Ramped reps] --> E[Raw capacity per rep<br/>deals x ASP] B[ASP in new ARR] --> E C[Win rate] --> E E --> F[Apply ramp multiplier<br/>0/25/50/75/100%] F --> K[Sum ramped capacity<br/>across team] K --> L[Team quota =<br/>capacity x attainment factor] L --> M{Coverage 3-4x<br/>in pipeline?} M -->|Yes| N[Lock quota] M -->|No| O[Fix constraint:<br/>heads, ASP, win rate, or pipeline] O --> E

Section 4 — Live Exercise: Build a Quota for a Sample Team (20 min)

Split the room into pairs. Each pair builds a full quota for the sample team below using the worksheet. Give them 14 minutes to build, then 6 minutes to present and defend.

Sample team data (write on board):

The instruction the manager reads aloud:

"Build the annual team quota from capacity up. Show me ramped capacity per rep, the team roll-up, and the attainment factor you chose. Then tell me: does your quota clear the $7.2M company target, and is the $20M pipeline enough coverage?

If the capacity number falls short of the company target, do not just inflate the quota. Tell me which constraint you would fix and how — hire earlier, raise ASP, improve win rate, or build more pipeline with the SDR team."

Do NOT let pairs do these three things:

Walk the room while they work. The teaching moment is almost always the ramp discount: a team of 6 looks like 6 x full capacity, but with two reps under 0.75 the real selling capacity this year is closer to 4.25 ramped equivalents.


Section 5 — Distribution, Ramp, and Attainment-Health Debrief (15 min)

Bring the room back together and grade the quotas they built against distribution-health rules.

flowchart TD Q[Proposed quota set] --> R{What % of team<br/>can realistically hit?} R -->|Under 40%| TH[Too high<br/>cut quota or fix capacity] R -->|40-60%| OK1[Slightly aggressive<br/>acceptable with strong comp] R -->|60-70%| HEALTHY[Healthy band<br/>lock it] R -->|Over 80%| TL[Too low<br/>leaving revenue on table] TH --> FIX[Re-run capacity model] TL --> FIX HEALTHY --> SHIP[Roll out] OK1 --> SHIP

The ramp schedule — new reps do not carry full quota on day one. Apply the standard SaaS ramp the Bridge Group documents: 0 percent in month 1, then 25 / 50 / 75 / 100 across months 2 through 5. A rep who is six months in should be at full quota; a rep at month 3 should carry roughly half.

Quota a new hire at 100 percent and you guarantee an early miss, a damaged comp check, and a flight risk before they ever had a chance.

The math — three numbers to check on every quota set:

Common objections from managers:


Section 6 — Commitments and Rollout Communication (10 min)

Close by converting the workshop into action and rehearsing the rollout conversation, because how a quota lands depends as much on the delivery as the number.

Each manager commits to three things before they leave:

The rollout script — what to say to a rep:

"Here is your quota and here is exactly how I built it. This is your ramped selling capacity based on your deals, ASP, and win rate, this is the multiple for your segment, and this is the pipeline coverage backing it. I set the team so that two-thirds of us hit.

If something in this math looks wrong for your territory, that is the conversation I want to have right now, not in Q3."

*The Pavilion and Bessemer operator communities both report that reps accept a hard number when they can see the logic, and reject an easy number they cannot. Transparency on the math beats a softer quota delivered as a decree.*

Lock the commitments, set the follow-up date, and end the session. A defensible quota set in 90 minutes saves a quarter of forecast churn and a year of avoidable attrition.


FAQ

How is quota different from on-target earnings? A: OTE is what a rep earns at 100 percent attainment; quota is the revenue target they must produce to earn it. The link is the quota multiple. A mid-market AE at $140,000 OTE on a 5x multiple carries a $700,000 annual quota. Setting quota without anchoring to OTE breaks the comp plan.

What attainment percentage means my quota is set correctly? A: Target 60 to 70 percent of the team hitting quota. Below 40 percent the quota is too high and you will see disengagement and attrition. Above 80 percent it is too low and you are leaving revenue and forecast credibility on the table.

How should I quota a rep who is still ramping? A: Apply a ramp multiplier of 0 / 25 / 50 / 75 / 100 percent across months 1 through 5. A new hire carries no quota in month 1 and reaches full quota around month 6. Quota a ramping rep at full load and you manufacture an early miss and a flight risk.

What pipeline coverage ratio do I need to support a quota? A: 3x to 4x of quota in open pipeline for a healthy team, measured in Salesforce or Clari. Below 3x the quota is unsupportable no matter how clean the capacity math looks, because there is nothing in the funnel to close.

Should I build quotas top-down or bottom-up? A: Neither as the primary method. Build capacity-based as the default, then use top-down as a ceiling sanity check and bottom-up rep forecasts as a floor check. Capacity modeling reconciles board ambition with field reality.


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