Fixed-fee Workday advisory is the model where engagement scope, deliverables, and price are defined up front. The customer knows exactly what will be delivered and what it will cost. The advisor knows exactly what is being committed. The model removes ambiguity from the engagement and creates clear accountability on both sides. Fixed-fee advisory is the right choice for customers who value predictability, have well-defined scope, and prefer to keep all of the savings produced by the engagement.
This explainer covers how fixed-fee Workday advisory engagements work: scope definition, deliverable structure, pricing methodology, timeline expectations, and the conditions where fixed-fee produces better outcomes than gain share. Customers evaluating advisory models frequently default to one option without rigorous comparison; understanding the fixed-fee model in detail enables informed choice.
Fixed-fee Workday advisory is an engagement structured around defined scope at a known price.
Engagement scope is documented before contract signature. Scope includes deliverables, activities, timeline, and exclusions. Scope documentation prevents ambiguity that produces engagement friction.
Engagement price is fixed at contract signature. Price does not vary based on savings achieved, hours worked, or engagement extension. Price clarity enables straightforward budget management.
Engagement timeline is documented with milestone dates and final delivery. Timeline definition enables coordinated planning with internal customer activities including Workday renewal dates, board reviews, and budget cycles.
Engagement deliverables are documented in detail. Deliverables typically include benchmarking analysis, contract redline, negotiation strategy memo, supporting tools, and on-call negotiation support.
Fixed-fee engagements vary in scope based on customer need.
New contract engagement scope includes baseline analysis, benchmarking, vendor evaluation support, contract redline, negotiation strategy, and on-call negotiation support through signature. Engagement typically spans 8-16 weeks.
Renewal engagement scope includes current contract analysis, utilization assessment, license optimization, renewal benchmarking, contract redline, negotiation strategy, and on-call negotiation support through renewal signature. Engagement typically spans 12-20 weeks.
License optimization engagement scope includes utilization analysis, shelfware identification, right-sizing recommendations, and contract modification support. Engagement typically spans 6-10 weeks.
Strategic advisory engagement scope is customized to customer-specific need. Typical scope includes ad-hoc advisory support, specific deliverables, and defined commitment.
Fixed-fee pricing reflects engagement scope, complexity, and effort required.
Pricing reflects defined scope — deliverables, activities, and timeline. Larger scope produces higher pricing; narrower scope produces lower pricing.
Pricing reflects engagement complexity — organization size, module count, global footprint, multi-tenant configuration. Higher complexity produces higher pricing.
Pricing reflects estimated effort — advisor hours, analyst hours, deliverable production. Effort estimation is internal to the advisor; customer sees fixed price rather than hourly rate calculation.
Fixed-fee pricing includes risk premium reflecting the scope risk transferred to the advisor. Risk premium varies based on scope ambiguity and engagement complexity.
Fixed-fee engagement deliverables produce specific customer value.
Benchmarking analysis documents customer's current and proposed Workday pricing against peer benchmark. Benchmarking produces quantified negotiation targets and supports business case for negotiation.
Contract redline documents specific contract language changes addressing pricing, expansion, true-up, renewal, termination, and other negotiation surfaces. Redline produces actionable negotiation positions.
Negotiation strategy memo documents sequenced negotiation approach including target outcomes, fallback positions, timing strategy, and stakeholder coordination. Strategy memo produces structured negotiation guidance.
Supporting tools include cost models, utilization analysis, savings tracking, and decision frameworks. Tools produce capability for ongoing customer management.
On-call support through signature includes ad-hoc advisor consultation during active negotiation. Support produces real-time guidance on negotiation tactics, vendor responses, and decision points.
Fixed-fee advisory produces predictable engagement cost with defined scope and known deliverables. The model is optimal for customers with well-defined scope, predictable budget preference, and high savings potential — customers who want to capture all savings rather than share them with an advisor.
Fixed-fee is optimal under specific customer conditions.
Customers with well-defined engagement scope benefit from fixed-fee predictability. Scope definition enables accurate fixed-fee pricing and clear deliverable expectations.
Customers preferring budget predictability over variable cost benefit from fixed-fee structure. Budget predictability supports finance team coordination and reduces budgeting variance.
Customers preferring to capture all savings benefit from fixed-fee. Gain share produces variable advisor compensation based on savings; fixed-fee produces known advisor compensation regardless of savings, leaving all savings with customer.
Customers with defined engagement timeline — specific renewal dates, board review windows, budget cycles — benefit from fixed-fee timeline commitment.
Customers with relatively predictable savings potential benefit from fixed-fee. If savings potential is highly uncertain, gain share may better align advisor incentives.
Gain share is optimal under conditions where fixed-fee is suboptimal.
Customers without upfront advisory budget benefit from gain share structure. Gain share has zero upfront cost; advisor compensation is paid from savings achieved.
Customers seeking maximum advisor alignment with savings outcomes benefit from gain share. Advisor compensation directly correlates with savings achieved, producing strong incentive alignment.
Customers with uncertain savings potential benefit from gain share. If actual savings are lower than expected, advisor compensation is correspondingly lower; if higher than expected, advisor and customer both benefit.
Customers preferring to transfer engagement risk to advisor benefit from gain share. Gain share advisor bears risk of producing savings; fixed-fee customer bears risk that savings may not exceed fee.
Choosing between fixed-fee and gain share follows a decision framework.
High scope clarity favors fixed-fee. Low scope clarity favors gain share (or hybrid).
Predictable budget preference favors fixed-fee. Zero-upfront-cost preference favors gain share.
High savings predictability favors fixed-fee. Low savings predictability favors gain share.
Predictable engagement favors fixed-fee. Maximum alignment with savings outcomes favors gain share.
Hybrid models combining fixed base fee with gain share component align incentives while providing partial budget predictability. Hybrid models are appropriate for engagements between pure fixed-fee and pure gain share scenarios.
How is fixed-fee pricing determined? Pricing reflects engagement scope, complexity, and estimated effort with risk-adjusted premium. Pricing is documented before contract signature.
What if engagement extends beyond planned scope? Out-of-scope work is handled through change order with separate pricing. Original fixed-fee covers original scope.
Can we move from fixed-fee to gain share? Conversion mid-engagement is uncommon. Engagement structure should be selected before signature based on customer needs.
What happens if savings are higher than fee? Customer captures all savings beyond fixed fee. This is the primary value proposition of fixed-fee for customers with high savings potential.
What happens if savings are lower than fee? Customer absorbs fee against lower savings. This is the primary risk of fixed-fee that gain share avoids.
Independent Workday-only advisory. 500+ engagements, $28M+ saved, 34% average reduction across 14 modules. Two engagement models — choose whichever fits your risk posture.
Scoped advisory with a known price. Benchmarks, contract redlines, and on-call negotiation support through signature.
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.
Compare →Benchmarks, tactics, and contract language for Workday buyers.
Fixed fee or gain share — strategy memo within 48 hours.
Contact Us →One email per week. Benchmarks, contract language, and tactics.