| How “Intervention”
Can Improve Sales Management for Smaller Firms by
James T. Berger, 12 September 2005
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When it comes to sales management, there is a forgotten
market segment crying out for professional help.
This forgotten market segment are companies and organizations
with sales/revenues in the $1 million to $25 million range. This
includes manufacturing companies, distribution organizations and
service firms. All of these companies depend on sales or some form
of business development for their new relationships. The
problem is that these companies can not afford a dedicated sales
manager.
Typical of companies in this category is the manufacturer,
fabricator or professional services firm. Such a company may very
well have inside sales people, one or more outside people calling
on customers or prospects as well as doing missionary work. Added
to this mix might very well be a network of independent manufacturer’s
reps.
Because the company is relatively small by today’s
standards, there usually is no budget for a dedicated sales manager
to direct and supervise all these internal and external sales people
and organizations. In the absence of such a dedicated manager, the
owner or CEO is saddled with the responsibility of sales management.
However, that owner is saddled with many other responsibilities
— like running the business, managing operations, hiring,
working with attorneys and accountants. In most cases, any or all
of these tasks take precedent over sales management.
Moreover, many entrepreneurial business owners have
their roots in the scientific or technology areas and have very
little experience in sales and marketing. Given all their other
responsibilities, sales management is low on the priority list.
Also, because this is foreign to the owner/CEO he probably wishes
to regard sales management as a problem that will hopefully go away
by itself.
As a marketing/sales consultant who specializes in
small-to-mid-market companies, I often am brought in when the level
of “pain” or frustration reaching the boiling point.
At this point the owner/CEO when faced with underachieving performance
realizes that simply firing those involved will not solve the problem.
That owner/CEO is not ready to incur the overhead of a company-employed
sales manager and yet has neither the time, ability or inclination
to do it him/herself.
Case #1 — Service Organization
One situation where I was brought in was a service
organization owned by two partners. The firm was experiencing extremely
poor sales. One partner was the “systems guy.” He, in
effect, ran the business. The other partner was charged with business
development. Unfortunately, the latter was totaling lacking in basic
sales skills because he never received sales training and has no
concept of sales management. While aggressive in his approach to
prospects, he lacked telephone sills, time management skills, the
proper sales literature and information and didn’t know how
to approach decision-makers. As in addiction situations, the two
partners agreed that “intervention” was needed. A sales
consultant, me, was retained who functioned essentially as an external
sales manager.
I coached the sales partner, worked with him to implement
a sales contact control system, taught him basic telephone skills,
helped him develop contemporary leave-behind literature. In six
months the situation turned dramatically. The under-producing sales
partner started bringing in meaningful business. By gaining confidence
in his own abilities, this sales partner was able to transform his
already-powerful energy into accomplishment. In one year, the business
base of the company doubled.
Case #2 — Value Added Manufacturer of Commodity
Products
Another situation where I became involved was a manufacturing
company that took metal in a raw form and fabricated it into a variety
of products that were sold in the business-to-business environment.
The owner was largely absentee and he left the management of the
company to his highly capable vice president. The sales function
was handled by two skilled inside sales people, a pleasant but underachieving
outside sales rep. and manufacturer’s rep. network that contributed
virtually nothing to the sales and profits of the company.
To make matters worse, the company was involved in
a highly price-sensitive industry where there was an excess in capacity
and rather cut-throat competition. The products being sold were
commodity-type offerings where customers perceived little difference
in quality and brought primarily on price.
This vice president charged with running the company
simply had too much on his plate to effectively manage the sales.
While his inside sales group performed brilliantly, they essentially
were order takers. The outside sales representative was supposed
to be the business maker but he wasn’t performing. The manufacturer’s
rep organization was totally alienated from the company.
The vice president/manager also decided that “intervention”
was needed. He hired a consultant, me, who immediately began chairing
a sales meeting once a month and started working closely with the
under-achieving outside rep. The key was to initiate time-management
disciplines. Quotas for outside meetings were established. Given
this rep.’s pleasing personality and knowledge of the business,
it was only a matter of time before he started bringing in business.
I also created a monthly electronic newsletter that
improved communication with the manufacturer’s rep. organization.
These reps were able to articulate their problems with the company
and new procedures and incentives were put into place. New sales
started flowing in from the rep. organization.
My most significant accomplishment was my observation
that what was believed to be a pure commodity marketing in reality
was not such a marketplace. The company was able to differentiate
itself from competitors through value-added services, better and
quicker deliveries and product features and benefits that were superior
to competitors. Thus, the company was able to justify higher prices
because of the value-added products and services it was providing.
In neither case was it necessary to hire a full-time
dedicated sales manager. In both cases, the company was able to
hire a consultant for a reasonably monthly fee. And, in both cases,
the results were dramatic!
_____
Author
James T. Berger, Managing Editor of The Wiglaf Journal, is chairman
and partner of Power Sales Management, Inc., a sales management
consulting firm that offers clients sales management services on
an out-sourced basis (www.powersalesmanagement.com)
For additional information, you may contact
Jim at (847) 328-963 or e-mail him at jberger@WiglafJournal.com.)
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