I once watched a car dealership move 47 units of a model that had been sitting on the lot for three months. The product didn't change. The advertising didn't change. The price didn't change. What changed was a $500 per-unit spiff the manufacturer offered to every salesperson who closed a deal on that specific model before the end of the quarter. The cars were gone in eleven days.
That's the power of a spiff, and it tells you something important about how sales actually works at the point of contact. People respond to incentives. Especially immediate, tangible, clearly defined incentives.
A spiff (also written as SPIFF or SPIF) is a short-term, targeted sales incentive paid to individual salespeople or channel partners for selling specific products or achieving defined goals within a set timeframe. The acronym most commonly stands for Sales Performance Incentive Fund, though you'll also see it referenced as "Special Performance Incentive for Field Force."
Unlike standard sales commissions, which are baked into a rep's compensation plan as an ongoing percentage of sales, spiffs are temporary bonus opportunities layered on top of existing pay structures. They're designed to create urgency and focus around a specific product, promotion, or business objective.
Salesforce defines spiffs as one of the most effective tools in incentive compensation management. And they're right, but only when used correctly. The wrong spiff at the wrong time can distort your sales funnel, create channel conflict, and train your team to wait for bonuses before selling.
The structure is typically simple. A manufacturer, brand, or sales leader announces a bonus for hitting a specific target within a defined window. Here's how the typical spiff flows:
What makes spiffs different from other incentives is their specificity and time pressure. They're not about general performance. They're about moving a particular needle within a particular window.
Spiffs come in several flavors depending on the business context:
| Spiff Type | How It Works | Best Used For |
|---|---|---|
| Product-specific spiff | Bonus for selling a particular SKU or product line | New product launches, clearing aging inventory |
| Volume spiff | Bonus triggered at a unit threshold (e.g., sell 20+ units) | Driving quantity during promotional periods |
| Revenue spiff | Bonus based on total dollar value of sales | High-ticket items, enterprise deals |
| Activity spiff | Bonus for completing qualifying activities (demos, meetings, upsells) | Pipeline building, engagement with new segments |
| Channel partner spiff | Bonus paid to external dealer or reseller reps | Manufacturer-to-dealer push promotions |
Here's where I think most people get spiffs wrong. They treat them as a pure cost when they should be analyzed as a marketing investment with measurable ROI.
Research from the Incentive Research Foundation shows that non-cash rewards cost approximately $0.04 for every incremental sales dollar generated, compared to $0.12 for cash rewards. That means a well-designed merchandise or experience-based spiff can deliver 3x the return of a simple cash bonus.
But there's a catch. Everstage's 2025 guide to spiff incentives notes that spiff effectiveness declines sharply if they become predictable. When reps start expecting quarterly spiffs, they'll sandbagging deals in the weeks before, waiting for the bonus window to open. You've just created the opposite of what you intended.