Module04sales Deployment
Module04sales Deployment
Centralization
The degree two which important decisions and tasks performed at higher levels in the management hierarchy. Centralized structures place authority and responsibility at higher management levels.
Generalists
All selling activities and all products to all customers
Specialists
Certain selling activities for certain products for certain customers
Span of Control
Management Levels
Span of Control
Staff Position
Salespeople Line Position
Selling Situations
Selling-Situation Factors & Organizational Options
Organizational Structure Specialization Environmental Characteristics Dynamic sales environment
Relatively stable sales environment
Centralization
Repetitive
Effectiveness
Salespeople (100)
Salespeople (100)
Salespeople (100)
Salespeople (100)
Field Sales Manager Regional Sales Managers (4) District Sales Managers (16) Salespeople (160)
Geographic
Product
Salespeople become experts High cost in product attr. & applications Geographic duplication Management control over Customer duplication selling effort
Market
Functional
Sales Force deployment decisions can be viewed as providing answers to three interrelated questions.
1. How much selling effort is needed to cover accounts and prospects adequately so that sales and profit objectives will be achieved? 2. How many salespeople are required to provide the desired amount of selling effort? 3. How should territories be designed to ensure proper coverage of accounts and to provide each salesperson with a reasonable opportunity for success?
How many salespeople are required to provide the desired amount of selling effort? How should territories be designed and salespeople assigned to territories to ensure proper coverage of accounts and to provide each salesperson with a reasonable opportunity for success?
Portfolio Models
A B C D
25 23 20 16
32 24 16 8
Portfolio Models
Accounts are grouped by specific criteria to determine their value to the firm ie.
Account (Growth) Opportunity - an accounts need for and ability to purchase the firms products Competitive (Advantage) Position - the strength of the relationship between the firm and an account
Decision Models
Simple Basic Concept - to allocate sales calls to accounts that promise the highest sales return from the sales calls Optimal number of calls in terms of sales or profit maximization
Key Considerations
Sales Volume Growth
Anticipated increases The ratio of sales to selling costs Should be anticipated
Is used to determine the number of salespeople needed to generate a forecasted level of sales. It is weak conceptually. The concept underlying the calculations is that sales determine the number of salespeople needed putting the cart before the horse.
Salesforce size = Forecasted sales / Average sales / person
Number of salespeople =
Its basic concept is to compare the marginal profits and marginal costs associated with each incremental salesperson. The major advantage of this approach is that it quantifies the important relationships between salesforce size, sales, and costs. However, the incremental method is difficult to develop, and it cannot be used for new sales forces where historical data and accurate judgments are not possible.
Designing Territories
Territories consist of whatever specific accounts are assigned to a specific salesperson. The territory can be viewed as the work unit for a salesperson. Territory Considerations Trading areas Present effort Recommended effort
DESIGNING TERRITORIES
EXTREMELY RARE Most often territories evolve with market development & volume, And are revised / adjusted on an ongoing basis.
DESIGN GOALS
EQUALITY OF SALES
WORKLOAD GROWTH POTENTIAL
STEP ONE
TERRITORIAL SIZE (miles covered) Boundaries (usually political or geographical):
BASED ON:
REGION (WESTERN CANADA) PROVINCE (BC) CITY / COUNTRY (PRINCE GEORGE / VANDERHOOF, QUESNEL, ETC.)
STEP TWO
Determine the location of potential customers from: phone book Mailing lists route riding
STEP THREE
TO DETERMINE BASIC TERRITORIES USE EITHER:
BUILD UP METHOD:
Establish individual performance parameters (workload capacity: # of calls per day x # of days), frequency / miles, account types a, b or c, length of call. Draw out individual territory boundaries Adjust as needed
STEP THREE
BREAKDOWN METHOD: Determine total market sales potential Establish individual territories: Can use a market index x total sales potential, should use hands on territory analysis as territories are rarely sufficiently uniform Estimate sales volume per person and draw boundaries. Adjust as needed
STEP FOUR
Assigning sales people to territories Need to match personality of the SR to the personality of the territory (ie. miles, account type, culture, etc.) Can be a management tool
Beginner territories Penal territories Plum territories
STEP FOUR
continued
Set performance norms that flag when the need becomes critical. Territory can boom & far out pace sales (Alberta) / can shrink / dry up (Nfld.) Claim jumping ~ territory / account overlap Consequence of revising territories
People dont like change: it means more work / less return. The change needs to be sold Compensation format may need adjustment
STEP FIVE
Territory coverage The plan of how the territory is to be serviced Call sequence / frequency, routing Sales management should only do the initial set up Assigned rep should submit modifications with as their territory knowledge develops. Managements role is to set performance standards e.G. Calls per day, etc. Need to factor in account merchandising, prospecting.
STEP SIX
Monitor sales Cost of sales on an ongoing basis.
A dynamic management undertaking that must be constantly assessed and fine tuned to ensure the ideal balance between profitability and the development of continued sales growth.