What Is A SPIF? A Guide to Short-Term Incentives

What is a SPIF?

SPIF stands for Sales Performance Incentive Fund. A SPIF is a temporary, targeted sales incentive designed to motivate sales reps to focus on a specific goal, such as selling a new product, closing deals faster or increasing activity in a priority segment. Important: SPIFs are add-ons, not replacements, to base commission plans.

Why should I use a SPIF?

Sales teams need to endure a lot of rejections and objections, every day. Commission is the number one driver for motivation that helps them to overcome those negative feelings. A SPIF works because it activates short-term motivation systems in the brain that long-term commissions don’t. It leverages urgency, salience, and immediate reward, which reliably change sales behavior fast.

When should I use a SPIF?

As mentioned above, with a SPIF you are sacrificing the long-term effect for a short-term reward. This of course needs to be used wisely. 

Here are situations where SPIFs make sense:

Product launches

A new product launches and needs to be pushed into the market. The “pull-effect” that marketing books often describe are only applicable to a handful of products, therefore a SPIF helps to “push”. Sometimes it even makes sense to incentivise product bundles to increase the average order volume while also pushing the new product into the market.

End-of-quarter pushes

For investor-backed companies the end of a quarter always means that the board meeting is around the corner and that the numbers are being thoroughly looked at. 

Now imagine you are not on track revenue-wise and there are only 4 more weeks to go. This is a good moment to launch a short-term incentive to make the sales team push hard to get to those numbers. Always keep in mind that Sales Performance Incentive Funds have a psychological and motivating effect that will show in the numbers, but a requirement is also that all supporting functions such as marketing, onboarding and technical support are in order. 

Clearing pipeline or inventory

Your pipeline is full with deals that don’t move. A SPIF can help to work through more of those deals to either disqualify or push the deal forward. It also works for inventory that you want to clear. A few units of the product are left and you want to sell them without having to massively discount them. You rather make your sales reps commission statements bigger.

Driving adoption of new pricing or features

When you roll out new pricing or new features you are asking reps to leave a proven path to commission, learn something new (cognitive cost), risk lower close rates and potentially hurt their forecast or quota.

From a psychological standpoint, rational reps avoid risk, even if leadership wants experimentation. A SPIF fixes this misalignment.

Testing new sales motions

Reps think: “If this fails, my number suffers and I pay the price.”

This could create a conservatism bias, under-reporting of failures and a passive resistance to change. Without incentives, reps will pretend to test while quietly reverting to old behaviors.

A SPIF solves this by converting this experiment into a game. It literally reframes “risk to my commission” into “short-term challenge with upside”.

Ultimately, this lowers emotional resistance and creates commitment to the challenge.

What examples of SPIFs are there?

I share with you three examples of SPIFs that actually worked wonders.

A weekend for the team sponsored by the company

You create a SPIF that rewards the best performing CSM and Sales team, depending on your set up. You can decide on the metrics that make sense for your business. What’s important to make the challenge effective, is to create full transparency. A live dashboard showing the ranking is important to really gamify the SPIF. 

The upside of a sponsored weekend by the company for the best performing CSM and Sales team is that the team grows closer during the challenge and they are bonding during the weekend as well.

Auction

Create a game that works in a way that you can win digital money such as “Monopoly-Money”.

Then have an auction every Friday where team members can bet with their hard earned money.

Have different categories such as travel, vouchers, tech, etc. 

This way, everyone can win something as some people like traveling more and some like to win a new pair of Apple Airpods. 

Premium equipment you use everyday

What always seems to work are Apple Airpods, a new Iphone or a Macbook. Apple is associated with premium products that you use everyday. Make the SPIF around that. 

Quick FAQ

Is a SPIF taxable?

Yes, SPIFs are usually treated as taxable income (rules vary by country).

Are SPIFs only for sales reps?

No, they’re also used for SDRs, channel partners, and even customer success teams.

Can SPIFs replace commissions?

No. SPIFs are temporary accelerators, not long-term compensation plans.

How long should a SPIF run?

Typically, a month or a quarter, but that comes down to your situation and can also be two weeks.