Quota Components

Quota components are where compensation plan complexity actually lives. When a plan moves beyond a single revenue quota to multi-measure design — revenue plus new logos, retention, and strategic product adoption — every additional component introduces weighting decisions, floor and ceiling thresholds, and interaction effects that can make or break plan effectiveness. A revenue quota alone is simple to administer and easy for reps to internalize, but it leaves critical behaviors unmanaged: reps close easy renewals while neglecting new logos, protect existing accounts while ignoring strategic products, or optimize deal size at the expense of customer retention. Multi-measure quota design forces the organization to answer hard questions: How much does each behavior matter relative to the others? What happens when a rep excels on revenue but misses new logos? Do component floors penalize reps or protect the company? Answering these questions well produces a plan that drives the full behavioral portfolio the business needs. Answering them poorly produces paralysis, confusion, and reps who game whichever measure is easiest to hit.

2.4

Avg quota measures per enterprise AE plan

60/25/15

Typical 3-measure revenue/logos/retention weighting

73%

Of enterprise orgs using multi-measure quota

Multi-Measure Quota Breakdown

Multi-MeasureQuotaRevenue 60%New Logos 25%Retention 15%Individual Measure AttainmentRevenue (60%)108%New Logos (25%)92%Retention (15%)115%Weighted Total105.1%

Plan Language

Single-Measure Revenue Quota

Each Participant assigned a Revenue Quota shall have their Quota Attainment calculated as the quotient of (a) Recognized Revenue credited to the Participant during the Measurement Period divided by (b) the Participant's Revenue Quota for the same Measurement Period, expressed as a percentage. Recognized Revenue shall be determined in accordance with the Company's Revenue Recognition Policy as then in effect. No other measure of performance shall be applied to calculate Quota Attainment for Participants assigned a single-measure Revenue Quota. Variable compensation under this plan shall be calculated solely with reference to the Participant's Revenue Quota Attainment.

Multi-Measure Weighted Quota with Floor Thresholds

Participants subject to a Multi-Measure Compensation Plan shall have their overall Quota Attainment calculated as the weighted sum of each Component Attainment multiplied by its assigned weight as set forth in the Participant's Plan Schedule. Each Component Attainment shall be calculated independently as Actual Component Result divided by Component Quota, expressed as a percentage. Prior to weighting, each Component Attainment shall be subject to a minimum floor of [FLOOR_PCT]% — attainment below this floor shall be treated as zero for weighting purposes — and a maximum ceiling of [CEIL_PCT]% — attainment above this ceiling shall be capped at [CEIL_PCT]% for weighting purposes. The sum of all component weights as set forth in the Plan Schedule shall equal 100%. Component weights shall remain fixed for the duration of the Measurement Period and may not be modified retroactively.

Component Independence and Interaction Rules

Each quota component shall be measured and credited independently. Overperformance on one Component Quota shall not be used to offset underperformance on another Component Quota unless the Plan Schedule explicitly provides for such offset. Where the Plan Schedule includes a gate or threshold condition — a minimum attainment level that must be reached on a designated Primary Component before any variable compensation is earned — failure to achieve the gate threshold shall reduce the Participant's earned variable compensation as specified in the Plan Schedule, regardless of attainment on other components. All interaction rules between components, including gates, offsets, and sequential unlocking provisions, shall be set forth explicitly in the Participant's Plan Schedule and shall not be implied by any prior plan or practice.

Formulas & Calculations

Weighted Attainment Calculation

// Multi-measure weighted attainment
// Each component is capped and floored before weighting

COMP_ATTAINMENT(actual, quota, floor, ceiling) =
  MAX(0, MIN(actual / quota, ceiling)) - floor) / (ceiling - floor)

// Example: 3-measure plan (Revenue 60%, Logos 25%, Retention 15%)
// Component caps: 150%  Component floors: 0%

REV_ATT    = MIN(108%, 150%) = 108%   → 108% × 0.60 = 64.80
LOGO_ATT   = MIN( 92%, 150%) =  92%   →  92% × 0.25 = 23.00
RETN_ATT   = MIN(115%, 150%) = 115%   → 115% × 0.15 = 17.25

WEIGHTED_TOTAL = 64.80 + 23.00 + 17.25 = 105.05%

Component Score with Floor/Ceiling Normalization

// Component Score formula when floors and ceilings are set
// Normalizes attainment within the allowed band

COMPONENT_SCORE =
  MAX(0, MIN(ATTAINMENT, CEILING) - FLOOR) / (CEILING - FLOOR)

// Example: Revenue component, floor=50%, ceiling=150%
// Rep at 108% attainment:
SCORE = MAX(0, MIN(108%, 150%) - 50%) / (150% - 50%)
      = MAX(0, 108% - 50%) / 100%
      = 58% / 100%
      = 0.58  (58% of available component credit earned)

// Without floor/ceiling normalization, use simple ratio:
SCORE = ATTAINMENT × WEIGHT
Quota Component Design — Enterprise AE
MeasureQuotaWeightAttainmentWeighted ScoreFloorCeiling
Revenue$1,200,00050%108%54.00%150%
New Logos12 logos20%92%18.450%150%
Retention94% GRR15%115%17.2580%120%
Strategic Products$180,00015%78%11.70%150%
Weighted Total100%101.35

Scenarios

Aligned Components Reinforce the Full Behavioral Portfolio

A B2B SaaS company redesigns its enterprise AE plan from a single revenue quota to a three-component structure: 60% revenue, 25% new logos, 15% retention. The weighting is set after analyzing historical data showing that reps who close two or more new logos per quarter produce 40% higher two-year revenue than reps of equal revenue attainment who concentrate on existing accounts. Component floors are set at 0% — no floor penalty — but ceilings are capped at 150% to prevent any single measure from dominating the composite. In the first plan year, average new logo attainment climbs from 71% to 94% without harming revenue attainment, which holds at 103%. Retention improves modestly from 91% to 93% gross revenue retention. Finance reports that comp cost as a percentage of revenue holds flat despite the behavioral shift.

Conflicting Components Paralyze Reps and Miss All Targets

An enterprise software company adds a retention floor to an existing multi-measure plan without modeling the interaction effects. Reps must achieve 85% gross revenue retention before any accelerators apply across all components. A mid-year product pricing change causes renewal friction, pulling average retention to 81%. Suddenly, accelerators are locked for 60% of the team regardless of new logo or revenue performance. Reps who were 130% attainment on revenue with no accelerators have no financial incentive to push deals past quota. Net new pipeline collapses in Q3 as reps conserve energy. End-of-year revenue attainment falls to 88%, the worst result in four years — not because quotas were wrong, but because the component interaction rules created a perverse incentive freeze at the exact moment the business needed growth.

Comparison

ApproachSimplicityBehavioral AlignmentAdmin EffortBest For
Single RevenueHighNarrowLowEarly-stage, SMB hunters
Dual Revenue + LogosMediumModerateMediumGrowth-stage AEs
Triple Weighted (Rev/Logos/Retention)MediumHighMediumEnterprise full-cycle AEs
Balanced Scorecard (4+ measures)LowVery HighHighStrategic accounts, overlays

Implementation Checklist

AI Prompt Template

Copy & paste into your AI assistant

Analyze our quota component structure for alignment with our go-to-market strategy. Our current plan has the following components: - Component 1: [MEASURE] — Weight: [WEIGHT]%, Floor: [FLOOR]%, Ceiling: [CEILING]% - Component 2: [MEASURE] — Weight: [WEIGHT]%, Floor: [FLOOR]%, Ceiling: [CEILING]% - Component 3: [MEASURE] — Weight: [WEIGHT]%, Floor: [FLOOR]%, Ceiling: [CEILING]% Our go-to-market priorities this year are: [LIST_PRIORITIES] Please: 1. Assess whether the component weights reflect our stated priorities — flag any misalignment 2. Identify interaction risks between components (gates, floors, ceilings that could create behavioral dead zones) 3. Model three attainment scenarios (all components hit, one component misses, one component far exceeds) and show the payout outcome for each 4. Recommend changes to weights, floors, or ceilings that would better align the plan with our priorities 5. Flag any components that are difficult to measure accurately or frequently enough to drive real-time behavior

Case Study

Enterprise Tech — Retention Component Reduces Customer Churn 18%

A 140-rep enterprise technology company carried a single-measure revenue quota for its renewal and expansion team for six years. Revenue attainment averaged 106% annually, but gross revenue retention had been quietly declining — from 94% to 87% over three years — as reps deprioritized at-risk accounts in favor of expansion deals with higher commission potential. Finance modeled the lifetime value impact: each percentage point of GRR decline cost $2.8M in annual recurring revenue over a three-year horizon. The compensation team redesigned the plan as a two-component structure: 75% revenue attainment, 25% gross revenue retention (target 93% GRR). A 50% floor was set on the retention component — reps who achieved at or above 93% GRR earned full retention credit; reps below 80% GRR earned nothing on the retention component. The plan included a 90-day transition quarter with side-by-side old and new reporting so reps could see the calculation before it affected pay.

In the first full plan year, gross revenue retention improved from 87% to 91% — an 18% reduction in churn measured by revenue lost. Revenue attainment held at 104%. Reps reported in the annual engagement survey that the retention component made their priorities clearer, not more complex. The plan was extended to the mid-market renewal team in Year 2 with a modified weighting of 80% revenue, 20% retention.