How To Run A Leaner Team Using The Incentive Simulator
Follow simple steps to test how incentives can maintain output with fewer people.
Who This Is For
This is for managers who want to maintain revenue with fewer people. Use this to test how incentives can improve efficiency and reduce labor needs.
This is about improving efficiency, not cutting your team immediately.
How It Will Help
- Set up a lean team scenario
- See if work can be done with fewer hours
- Check if the company improves margin
- Adjust your setup with simple changes
Start Here
-
Open the Summary tab.
-
Only change the yellow fields.
Do not edit anything else.
Step 1: Enter Starting Numbers
Do not overthink this.
Use these values:
- Productivity → 12%
- Revenue Conversion → 65%
- Bonus Split → slightly company-weighted (example: 60 / 10 / 30)
This setup assumes you will improve efficiency, not add more work.
This setup focuses on doing the same work with fewer hours, not adding more jobs.
Why These Numbers
These are starting values.
They assume:
- crews work more efficiently
- not all saved time becomes new work
- the company keeps more of the benefit
You will adjust from here.
Step 2: Scroll To Results
Scroll to the Incentive Program section.
Find these two numbers:
- Company Net Benefit
- Team Bonus Payout
Ignore everything else.
Step 3: Check If It Works
Ask two questions.
Question 1: Is the Company Net Benefit clearly higher than before?
- No → reduce crew share or lower productivity
- Yes → go to next question
Question 2: Would a crew still care about this bonus?
- No → increase crew share slightly
- Yes → you are close
If bonuses get too small, performance will drop.
Step 4: Check Your Workload Assumption
This step is important.
Ask yourself:
Are we trying to reduce labor instead of taking on more work?
- Yes → keep revenue conversion lower
- No → you may be using the wrong guide
Lower values (60–70%) are normal here.
If you are unsure, lower this number and test again.
Step 5: Improve Efficiency
Now test small changes.
Only change one thing at a time.
Try:
- Increase productivity from 12% → 14%
- Reduce crew share slightly
After each change:
- check the same two numbers again
Step 6: What You Are Looking For
You are trying to find this balance:
- maintain the same level of output
- fewer labor hours needed
- higher company margin
When all three are true:
👉 you have a strong starting setup
What This Means
If this works:
- you can do the same work with fewer people
- you reduce labor cost
- you improve profitability
These are estimates. Actual results depend on how efficiently work is scheduled and managed.
This only works if teams can consistently improve efficiency. This usually happens over time through better efficiency or slower hiring.
When To Stop
Stop when:
- profit improves
- bonuses still feel meaningful
- your inputs feel realistic
You are not locking anything in.
This is your starting point.
Common Mistakes
- Setting revenue conversion too high
- Making bonuses too small to motivate
- Changing too many inputs at once
- Expecting immediate labor reduction
Troubleshooting
Problem: Profit is not improving
→ Reduce crew share or lower revenue conversion
Problem: Bonuses are too small
→ Increase crew share slightly
Problem: Results feel unrealistic
→ Lower productivity or test smaller changes