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Sales Team Uses Excel Trick to Beat Commission Cap on High-Demand Cars

by Sunny Nguyen
November 11, 2025
in Social Issues

In 2014, a group of Ford salespeople faced a frustrating reality: their commissions on the dealership’s hottest vehicles were suddenly capped.

The Mustang and F-150 were getting full redesigns for 2015, and Ford had announced no Shelby Mustangs or Raptor F-150s for that year. Demand surged, inventory tightened, and the market adjusted prices soared $10,000 to $20,000 above sticker.

One salesperson, Alex (29), had just sold a Raptor at $10,000 over sticker, expecting a $4,200 commission. Instead, management capped the payout retroactively at $2,500, citing how “easy” these deals were.

While the dealership pocketed windfall profits, the sales team saw red. What followed became a textbook example of malicious compliance and collective worker ingenuity.

Sales Team Uses Excel Trick to Beat Commission Cap on High-Demand Cars
Not the actual photo

Here’s the original post:

You're capping commissions on our most in-demand vehicles because "You're not doing any extra work, so you shouldn't get extra money"? Fine. Let's see how that works out for you?

I realize that this story could absolutely be current, but it's not. Another thread reminded me of it, and I think it absolutely fits here, so here goes. Back in...

Ford, specifically. For all those who aren't car buffs, both the Mustang and F-150 were getting ground-up redesigns for 2015,

and Ford had just announced that there would be no Shelby Mustangs or Raptor F-150's for 2015.

Instantly, we were fielding several calls a day about these vehicles, and almost overnight, the inventory we had came with a $10-20k "market adjustment," due to demand.

Our GM loved both vehicles, and traded for them whenever he could because he loved chatting about them with buyers,

so we had 21 Raptors and 6 Shelby's still on the lot when I sold a ruby red Raptor extended cab at $10k over sticker the last week of the...

Both are CRAZY numbers for the <200 new cars we sold/mo. With the trade, I was due about $4200 in commission, but my check was about $1700 light.

Come the first Saturday morning meeting after payday, we were told that commissions on such vehicles would be capped at $2500, retro to last month, per a previously ignored provision...

There was much grumbling, but management stood firm, citing how incredibly easy Raptor/Shelby deals were. They weren't wrong about that. There was no such thing as a test drive until...

You could absolutely drive the car before you bought it, but only after we had a signed buyer's order, credit app, and the deal had been submitted and approved.

They were generally in and out in under 45 minutes, if not half an hour. But still. Dealership gets free money and doesn't want to share? Cue malicious compliance.

I talked to several other salespeople, who to a man were pissed, and we colluded. I whipped up a little excel macro/widget that would take the invoice price/holdback,

add in pack and whatnot, and spit out a sales price that would produce an exactly $2500 commission. I sent it to every salesperson we had, and everyone used it.

It only took 3 signed buyer's orders with seemingly arbitrary numbers for the desk to figure out what we were doing and to call another meeting.

That meeting was basically management yelling at us, and the entire sales staff calmly saying, "remove the cap,

or you'll never see another signed buyer's order that exceeds it. F__k you." The cap was lifted 3 days later.

The dealership’s logic was simple: premium vehicles that practically sold themselves didn’t warrant full commissions. Test drives were optional, deals closed in under 45 minutes, and buyers lined up.

For management, this meant “minimal effort, minimal reward.” For Alex and colleagues, it was an arbitrary rule punishing performance. Retroactively.

Sales psychology research shows that performance-based incentives directly impact motivation.

According to a 2019 study by the Society for Human Resource Management, employees whose variable pay is perceived as unfair are 31% less likely to meet or exceed targets, while equitable incentive structures can increase productivity by up to 22%.

Retroactive pay caps violate perceived fairness, a key factor in engagement and retention.

Alex and several coworkers decided on a precise, calculated form of protest. Using Excel, they created a macro that calculated exactly $2,500 in commission per sale, adjusting deal prices subtly.

Each signed buyer’s order followed the new “formula.” Management soon noticed a pattern, sales numbers were technically hitting expectations, but payouts were maxed at the capped amount.

A meeting ensued. Management yelled; the sales team calmly stated: remove the cap, or they would refuse to submit any deal exceeding it. In three days, the cap was lifted.

Alex’s actions were classic malicious compliance: following the rules in a way that exposes their flaws, forcing a fair outcome.

The story mirrors broader trends in sales incentives. Data from the National Automobile Dealers Association suggests that top-performing sales staff, especially in high-demand segments, can generate over $1 million in gross profit annually.

Capping commissions undermines this, potentially costing dealerships more than the intended “savings.” Employees who directly influence revenue often outperform expectations when rewards align with effort.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

Many applauded Alex and the team for turning a frustrating situation into a teachable moment for management. 

ma33a − I had a friend who worked in a office supply store that sold the full fit out for offices and schools (tables, chairs, whiteboards etc).

He was given a cap to his commissions so he used to just work up until he hit it and then stop.

Now some work would naturally fall in his lap just from repeat customers and walk ins, so he started saving up sales until the next month.

By that I mean he would deliberately hold off on completing a customers order until the next month so the commission wouldn't be wasted. Used to take him a bit...

He could have easily made the company hundreds of thousands more in sales, but he didn't see the point. As he hit his cap each month his matrix scores were...

Bluebird-True − I've never understood capping commissions like that. So dumb. I had a friend back in the day who's boss got pissed

that the top salespeople were earning more than he did, so he capped commissions, so they left and started their own business.

adamcordo − I think the shittiest part is the retroactive nature. You want to cap my commission, I'm not happy. But you change the rules after the fact, get f*cked....

Others shared similar stories of commission caps leading to delayed sales, withheld effort, or employees leaving to start their own businesses. 

CoffeeTownSteve − When management does that, you tell them that you want it in writing that when the market cycles downward, and demand drops, they'll protect your pay on the...

It's really the exact same logic: If management wants to pay sales reps less than they've earned when it's really easy to sell, then they should agree to pay them...

mysteresc − r/WorkersStrikeBack would salivate over this.

rcapina − Sales is not my strong point but I love any story that involves an Excel macro or function.

Kineth − and the entire sales staff calmly saying, "remove the cap, or you'll never see another signed buyer's order that exceeds it. F__k you. " Stop, stop! I can...

technos − I used to work with a guy that turned down business because his assistants, the folks that did most of the work on any deal, wouldn't make anything...

What he could do in January took most people six months, and we had people who couldn't meet Bob's January numbers even given an entire year. It's not that the...

Even the weakest one made at least a million a year for the company. Anyway, the company announces that they've got a new, better bonus structure! 'Associates' and 'Assistants' would...

They're gonna get an extra fractional percentage of any deal! But they would now be capped at $10K a quarter. Bob didn't like that. Bob got zero deals signed that...

The new rules meant the deals he'd already had in the pipeline exceeded the amount needed to get his people paid, so why look for more?

When the company reversed the cap, Bob suddenly had $30 million bucks in deals, and his people made $40K.

Several commenters noted the irony of capping rewards on deals that generated significant profits for the company, highlighting how misaligned incentives often backfire.

[Reddit User] − I'm a controller at a Chevy/Buick store and our sales staff is on flats. Average 20 units working the pay plan will generally result in 120k a...

That being said, we do share gross with the sales staff on Corvettes, which are the only units we sell over MSRP.

If sales holds the 10k markup on a Vette they get a $3,500 spiff in addition to their unit flat. It's one of the most fair pay plans I've seen...

ElvisT − I remember the first time I heard our CEO talking about the pay of the sales guys and got they made more than him. I was surprised and...

He looked at me and said something along the lines “those guys directly affect the bottom line. I don’t care how much they get paid every month as long as...

He said he wished he could write each of them million dollar paychecks every other week and that the sales guys are often the highest paid employees of the business.

It made a lot of sense. The more they make, the more the company makes.

This episode highlights a clear lesson for management and employees alike. Arbitrary or retroactive restrictions on pay risk demotivating the most productive workers.

Fair and transparent incentive structures are essential not only for morale but for overall profitability.

Equally, employees who understand policy loopholes can leverage them to assert fairness without breaking rules, reminding organizations that workers are partners in profit, not passive cogs.

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen writes for DailyHighlight.com, focusing on social issues and the stories that matter most to everyday people. She’s passionate about uncovering voices and experiences that often go unheard, blending empathy with insight in every article. Outside of work, Sunny can be found wandering galleries, sipping coffee while people-watching, or snapping photos of everyday life - always chasing moments that reveal the world in a new light.

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