Gain share advisory enables Workday customers to negotiate with zero upfront engagement risk. Advisor compensation is a percentage of verified savings; if savings are not produced, advisor compensation is zero. The model removes the customer's traditional engagement risk — paying for advisory that may not produce results — and aligns advisor incentives entirely with customer savings outcomes. For customers with limited upfront budget or skepticism about advisory value, gain share is the engagement structure that eliminates the leap of faith.
This article documents how gain share advisory enables no-risk Workday negotiation. The focus is the structural mechanics: how zero-upfront-cost engagements work, how savings are verified, how advisor compensation is calculated, and what customer protections are inherent to the model. Customers frequently misunderstand gain share as a discount on fixed-fee advisory; in reality, gain share is a fundamentally different risk-sharing structure with different economics and customer protections.
Traditional fixed-fee advisory creates customer engagement risk that gain share eliminates.
Traditional advisory requires upfront fee payment regardless of engagement outcome. Customer pays advisor whether savings are achieved or not.
Engagement outcome uncertainty — will savings be produced, how much, how will engagement contribute — creates risk that customer absorbs through upfront fee payment.
Fixed-fee advisor compensation does not vary with savings outcome. Advisor incentive to maximize savings is professional reputation rather than economic alignment.
Upfront fee approval creates budget approval friction that delays engagement. Approval friction frequently delays advisory engagement past optimal timing window.
Customer skepticism about advisory value — particularly first-time advisory customers — produces hesitancy to commit upfront fee. Skepticism frequently produces no-engagement default that leaves customer without advisory support.
Gain share structure eliminates traditional advisory risk through specific mechanics.
Gain share engagements have zero upfront cost. Customer commits no money before engagement begins.
Advisor compensation is calculated as percentage of verified savings achieved. If savings are zero, advisor compensation is zero.
Advisor compensation directly correlates with savings outcome. Advisor incentive to maximize savings is economic alignment, not just professional reputation.
If engagement produces no savings, customer pays nothing. Customer downside is engagement time investment, not financial loss.
Zero upfront cost simplifies budget approval. Approval can proceed without upfront budget allocation that requires finance team coordination.
Savings verification is the foundation of gain share economics.
Baseline is established at engagement initiation. Baseline includes initial vendor proposal, current contract terms, and quantified opportunity. Baseline is documented before engagement begins.
Engagement outcome is documented through final contract or modification. Outcome documentation enables specific savings calculation.
Savings are calculated as quantified difference between baseline and outcome. Calculation methodology is documented at engagement initiation to prevent post-engagement dispute.
Calculation uses customer contract documentation that is independent of advisor. Customer can verify savings calculation independently.
Multi-year contracts produce savings over time. Calculation methodology addresses multi-year savings — typically through net present value or annual savings calculations.
Gain share compensation structure follows specific patterns.
Compensation is typically calculated as percentage of verified savings. Percentage varies based on engagement complexity, customer size, and savings magnitude.
Tiered structures vary compensation percentage based on savings achievement. Higher savings produce higher percentage; lower savings produce lower percentage.
Compensation is typically paid upon savings verification or at defined intervals. Multi-year savings may produce compensation paid over time corresponding to savings realization.
Some gain share structures include compensation caps limiting maximum advisor compensation. Caps may be appropriate for engagements with very high savings potential.
Gain share advisory eliminates customer engagement risk: zero upfront cost, compensation paid only from verified savings, advisor incentives aligned with customer outcomes. For customers with limited upfront budget or first-time advisory experience, gain share removes the leap of faith required for traditional engagements.
Gain share eliminates most customer engagement risk but specific risks remain.
Engagement requires customer time investment. Customer absorbs time investment whether savings are produced or not. Time investment is non-financial risk.
Engagement produces internal coordination overhead. Coordination time is customer absorbed regardless of outcome.
Engagement opportunity cost relative to alternative approaches — internal negotiation, alternative advisor — is customer absorbed regardless of outcome.
Active negotiation engagement produces internal disruption. Disruption is engagement-inherent rather than gain-share-specific.
Gain share structurally aligns advisor incentives with customer outcomes.
Advisor compensation is tied directly to savings results. Advisor economic outcome depends on producing savings; advisor incentive to maximize savings is direct.
Advisor incentive to maintain engagement intensity through completion is direct. Advisor cannot disengage early without sacrificing compensation; engagement intensity is structurally supported.
Advisor selectivity in engagement acceptance is structurally supported. Advisor accepts engagements with reasonable savings potential; engagements without savings potential are declined.
Advisor incentive to produce customer success that supports future engagement is direct. Future renewals, expansion engagements, and referrals depend on demonstrated savings outcomes.
Gain share is optimal under specific customer conditions.
Customers without upfront advisory budget benefit directly from gain share. Engagement proceeds without budget allocation constraint.
Customers averse to engagement risk benefit from gain share. Risk is transferred to advisor; customer engagement risk is structurally minimized.
Customers preferring maximum advisor alignment with savings outcomes benefit from gain share. Alignment is economic rather than reputation-based.
Customers with significant savings potential benefit from gain share. Larger savings opportunity supports compensation structure while leaving substantial savings with customer.
First-time advisory customers benefit from gain share. Engagement structure removes the leap of faith required for traditional advisory commitment.
What if no savings are produced? Customer pays nothing. Customer absorbs engagement time investment but no financial loss occurs.
How is the savings percentage determined? Percentage varies based on engagement complexity, customer size, and savings magnitude. Specific percentage is documented at engagement initiation.
How are multi-year savings handled? Multi-year savings are typically calculated through net present value or annual savings basis. Methodology is documented at engagement initiation.
Can we cap advisor compensation? Compensation caps can be negotiated for engagements with very high savings potential. Cap structure should be defined at engagement initiation.
Is gain share always better than fixed-fee? Not necessarily. Customers with well-defined scope and predictable budget preference may prefer fixed-fee. Choice depends on customer-specific circumstances.
Independent Workday-only advisory. 500+ engagements, $28M+ saved, 34% average reduction across 14 modules. Two engagement models — choose whichever fits your risk posture.
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Zero upfront cost. Our fee is a percentage of verified savings against your baseline. If we don't save you money, you don't pay.
Predictable scope or pay-only-on-savings. Whichever model fits your risk posture.
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