Three structural flaws appear in nearly every broken compensation plan: team-based metrics that sever individual accountability, working-capital-style metrics most reps can't define, and inadvertent rewards for bad behavior — like extending payment terms to avoid past-due flags.
At a global manufacturer, one region's incentive plan penalized past-due receivables, but measured them incorrectly. Salespeople responded rationally: they extended payment terms to shift balances from “past due” into “current.” Bad metrics drive smart people toward bad behavior. The fix was replacing the receivables metric with Days Sales Outstanding tied to individual accounts. Now salespeople were incentivized to reduce payment terms and collect faster — not just reclassify debt.
In most companies, the comp plan was designed by someone who understood the finance objective but not the front-line behavior it would produce. That is the fundamental design error.