18.3 C
London
Sunday, May 3, 2026

Saleswoman at pest control firm wins tribunal over commission changes

A high-flying saleswoman known as the ‘royal rat catcher’ at the pest control firm she worked at has won a tribunal over changes that sabotaged her £105,000 commission.

Dawn Piper had to quit her job at RentoKil Initial Ltd after bosses refused to change a new scheme which threatened to take away her commissions which made up the vast majority of her income.

As a veteran sales manager, she personally netted her company up to £850,000 a year for three decades, an employment tribunal heard.

Ms Piper would usually make around £150,000 a year with her commissions, so she complained to her bosses that she would be left on her £45,000 salary without them, but the company refused to change.

After quitting, she took Rentokil Initial Ltd to an employment tribunal and has now won a claim for constructive unfair dismissal.

It found that the new scheme made employees at the firm jump through strict hoops in order to unlock their commission from August 2024.

Consultants had to fill out paperwork, reach certain quotas and complete monthly actions to claim their money. 

Failing to do these tasks – known as ‘Gateways’ – would mean commission would be docked.

Dawn Piper, the 'royal rat catcher', won a tribunal over her former employer Rentokil Initial Ltd after they changed the commission scheme, threatening the vast majority of her income

Dawn Piper, the ‘royal rat catcher’, won a tribunal over her former employer Rentokil Initial Ltd after they changed the commission scheme, threatening the vast majority of her income

Ms Piper complained three times to her boss about the changes, saying she could lose up to three quarters of her income.

But her boss, Mr McLuckie did not listen and instead offered her a £2,500 raise on her base salary.

A month after the new commission scheme was introduced in September, Ms Piper was already told that she had failed to complete all her monthly Gateways to access her commission.

This was because not all of her team had been to the monthly review meeting – despite the fact that the team member had not even been employed yet.

Mr McLuckie appealed on her behalf and upon reconsideration the company paid Ms Piper her August commissions, calling the incident ‘teething problems’.

However, she also discovered that £450 had been deducted from her July commissions because a single email had bounced back.

Mr McLuckie admitted that the calculations for wrong emails would ‘inflate’ single mistakes because Ms Piper had written over 100 emails that month. 

It was paid back, but it confirmed the sales manager’s suspicions that mistakes would arise from the new system and that she would have to spot them to get paid properly. 

She was also unable to directly access the commissions spreadsheets as she had previously which made this much harder, as well as having to juggle it with 60 hour weeks.

Rentokil had also incorrectly assessed her job band so she overpaid for a company car by around £1,320 and had to be reimbursed.

On September 20 Ms Piper tendered her resignation.

The tribunal heard: ‘[She] said she resigned because: her personal commission, approximately 70 per cent of her income, was placed at risk.

‘[Rentokill] insisted on retaining the gateways; [Rentokill’s] data systems were inaccurate and unreliable.

‘She had lost trust and confidence due to deductions, delayed payments and lack of transparency; and she faced the prospect of repeated monthly appeals while working 60-hour weeks.’

Rentokill maintained that she had quit voluntarily and not because of a breach.

Ms Piper took the company to London South Employment Tribunal in Croydon, alleging that breaches by it had forced her to resign.

Employment Judge Francesca Yardley ultimately agreed with the sales manager.

Judge Yardley said: ‘When viewed cumulatively, [Ms Piper] experienced the introduction of a commission scheme which fundamentally altered the financial basis of her employment and exposed approximately 70-75 per cent of her income to loss through criteria not wholly within her control.

‘Within weeks of the scheme’s introduction she was informed that she had failed the gateways and would not receive commission for August, a decision which was subsequently reversed after challenge.

‘At the same time [Ms Piper] encountered a substantial commission deduction from her July commission which she could not readily verify due to restricted data access, together with a prolonged delay in correcting an admitted payroll error relating to car deductions.

‘The Tribunal finds that [Ms Piper] resigned in response to the cumulative breach of the implied term identified above.

‘For those reasons, the Tribunal concludes that [Rentokill] committed a fundamental breach of the implied term of mutual trust and confidence.

‘The complaint of constructive unfair dismissal is accordingly well-founded.’

Hot this week

Diana’s ex-hairdresser condemns ‘evil’ comments about Kate’s hair

Princess Diana's former hairdresser has condemned 'nasty' comments made about the Princess of Wales 's hair - as she stepped out with her newly blonde tresses.

The unusual breakfast request Princess Lilibet asks Meghan Markle for

Meghan Markle revealed her children's favourite meals and that she 'doesn't like baking' on the second season of her lifestyle show With Love, Meghan.

Experts reveal how many tins of tuna is safe to eat a week

The NHS advises people to eat at least two portions of fish a week, yet a recent investigation revealed toxic metals, including mercury, could be lurking in cans of tinned tuna sold in the UK.

Some people DO see ghosts – and medics say there’s an explanation

An astonishing third of people in the UK and almost half of Americans say they believe in ghosts, spirits and other types of paranormal activity.

Prince Philip’s nickname only his nearest and dearest could call him

From 'Lillibet' to 'Grandpa Wales', members of the Royal Family are known to go by many nicknames.

Aston Villa vs Tottenham – Premier League LIVE: Score and updates

Follow Daily Mail Sport's live blog for the latest score, team news and updates as Aston Villa host Tottenham at Villa Park in the Premier League.

Lionel Messi and wife Antonella lead A-list stars at Miami Grand Prix

The F1 showpiece is set to take place three hours earlier than planned on Sunday, with race chiefs moving it forward from 4pm ET to 1pm amid the threat of a potential thunderstorm.

Bath out of Champions Cup after 38-26 semi-final defeat by Bordeaux

NIK SIMON: While the regulars here are used to watching fourth division football, this felt like the place had been taken over by Brazil.

SNL mocks the royal family in brutal gags about King Charles’s visit

The sketch show ridiculed Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's relationship in one of several risky takes on the King's trip to the US this week.

Saleswoman at pest control firm wins tribunal over commission changes

Dawn Piper had to quit her job at RentoKil Initial Ltd after bosses refused to change a new scheme which threatened to take away her commissions that were the vast majority of her income.

Heartbeat star Tricia Penrose gets married following split from ex

The actress, 56, took to her social media with a slew of loved-up snaps as she posed alongside her new husband Chris Hargreaves, who she declared was the 'love of her life'.

F1 driver’s car FLIPS OVER in horror Miami Grand Prix crash

As they approached a bend, Racing Bulls driver Liam Lawson locked up on the inside of Alpine's Pierre Gasly and accidentally clipped his car in the process, sending it flying into the wall.

Ex-BBC reporter claims he caught Banksy painting at a mural in 2018

Nick Bryant the BBC's former New York correspondent said he saw a man coming out of a coffee shop near a newly completed mural in 2018.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img