Chapter 1
Chapter 1
Strategic Planning
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Sales Management: Shaping Future Sales Leaders
Introduction to
Sales Management
Chapter 1
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Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall.
Learning Objectives
Define strategy hierarchy and understand how sales and
marketing strategies affect overall strategy
Identify different types of selling strategies and how the
selling process varies
Describe the sales management process and
responsibilities and activities of sales managers
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The Future for sales and sales force
management is pretty bright.
Many consumer believe the sales profession not a noble endeavor.
Business customers have a better appreciation for selling profession,
because these buyers rely on salespeople to bring them solutions to the
business problems that challenge them.
Product knowledge, technical expertise, and business acumen are all
required to satisfy customers' needs.
Sales positions are hardest to fill.
Sales consumes >20% of a firms revenue.
as a career opportunity, starting in sales is an excellent choice.
Many CEOs got their start in sales.
Sales mangers tends to earn more than their counterparts in other areas,
moreover, sales jobs will grow at much faster rate than other professions.
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From Sales Rep to Sales Manager
Manager of people
Sales success is poor
predictor of success as
sales manager
Most successful sales
reps are eventually
pressured to make the
transition to sales mgmt
This is a decision that
must be carefully
analyzed because its not
an easy transition to go
from being a player to a
coach.
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What Being a Sales Manager Means
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What is Sales Management ?
It is a set of objectives.
- If your objective is to arrive at time to your 8 Oclock class, then what will be your
strategy to achieve this mission ( objective) ?
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Establishing the Parameters of the
Firms Strategy: The Mission Statement
Inspire the members of an organization
Give purpose to their actions
Guide their decision-making
Serve as a standard against which decisions
can be weighed
Once the missions objectives are set, strategy
can be created
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Sample Mission Statements
Everything we do is inspired by our
enduring mission:
Coca-Cola To Refresh the World . . . in body, mind, and spirit
To Inspire Moments of Optimism . . . through our
brands and our actions
To Create Value and Make a Difference . . .
everywhere we engage
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The Strategy Hierarchy
Corporate Strategy encompasses plans and goals for
the entire organization
Address questions in a general sense, such as what
markets and sourcing options company should engage
Ex: hire sales force vs. use distributors
Ex: outsource mfg and focus internally on marketing
Business units create their plans to support corporate
strategy.
The flow of the strategy from the organizational level to
the units is called the Strategy Hierarchy.
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The Strategy Hierarchy
Corporate
Strategy
Marketing Strategy
Sales Strategy
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At the marketing level, planners have to answer the following
questions.
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What Markets Do We Serve with
What Products?
Find a sustainable competitive advantage
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Product-Market Grid: achieving growth via
products and markets.
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Product-Market Grid: achieving growth
via products and markets.
Note: the risk associated with diversification are far greater
than with other market expansion approaches, why?
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What Types of Relationships Do We
Form and with Whom?
Strategic plan considers network of
relationships
Investors, potential investors, bankers
Suppliers
Personnel sources
Regulatory agencies
Relationship with customers is most
important.
Customers lifetime value is worth
more than the average single
purchase. (try to extend the
relationship as much as you can.)
A service advantage is often a
function of the quality of relationships
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Customer Relationship Management
(CRM): Key Terms
CRM: identifying and grouping customers to best acquire, retain, and grow
customers
Sales and marketing teams are responsible for CRM
Customer acquisition strategy: plan to obtain new customers.
- can include marketing activities such as telephone prospecting and
attending trade shows to identify potential customers.
Customer retention strategy: plan designed to keep customers.
- might include making quarterly visits to current customers or inviting them
to technology shows to see the firms newest products.
Growth strategy: plan designed to increase sales to the same customers.
- these might include offering special discounts to customers when they
make larger purchases.
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Global Sales Management:
Going Global to Achieve Growth
QuadReps expanding customers wanted local
Ellesmere Island Severnaya Zemlya
Arctic Ocean Arctic Ocean Franz Josef Land
Arctic Ocean
New Siberian Islands
Greenland (Den.) Svalbard (Nor.)
Banks Island Jan Mayen (Nor.) Novaya Zemlya Wrangel Island
Victoria Island Baffin Island
support in Singapore
U.S.A.
Canada
Iceland
Faroe Is. (Den.) Norway
Ireland
United Kingdom
Den.
Neth.
Sweden
Poland
Finland
Estonia
Latvia
Lithuania
Belarus
Russia 60
Aleutian Islands (USA)
Bel. Germany
Island of Newfoundland Czech. Ukraine Kuril Islands
Slovak.
Aus. Hung. Kazakhstan
Oman Laos
U. S. A. Jam.
Mauritania Mali
Belize Haiti Puerto Rico (US) Dominica
Niger Eritrea
Honduras Senegal Sudan Yemen Thailand Philippines
Guatemala Chad Vietnam
Barbados The Gambia Burkina Faso
El Salvador Nicaragua Cambodia
Andaman Islands (India)
Tasmania
Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas) (adm. by UK, claimed by Argentina)
purchasing to AsiaU.S.A.
Canada
Iceland
Faroe Is. (Den.) Norway
United Kingdom
Den.
Sweden
Finland
Estonia
Latvia
Lithuania
Russia 60
Aleutian Islands (USA)
Ireland Neth. Belarus
Germany Poland
Bel.
Oman Laos
U. S. A. Jam.
Mauritania Mali
Belize Haiti Puerto Rico (US) Dominica
Niger Eritrea
Honduras Senegal Sudan Yemen Thailand Philippines
Guatemala Chad Vietnam
Barbados The Gambia Burkina Faso
El Salvador Nicaragua Cambodia
Guinea-Bissau Guinea Benin Djibouti Andaman Islands (India)
Trinidad and Tobago Marshall Islands
Costa Rica Cte DIvoire Nigeria Sri Lanka Federated States of Micronesia
Venezuela Guyana Sierra Leone Ethiopia
Panama Suriname C. A. R. Brunei Guam (USA)
house, controlling manufacturing of complete Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas) (adm. by UK, claimed by Argentina)
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What Level of Investment Will Be Required,
and How Will We Allocate the Needed
Resources?
Social capital: refers to the ties that a firm has with others, which can
also be drawn upon as a resource.
In other word, social capital is who owes you favor or who can be
asked a favor.
Look at the example on page 10.
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What Are the Detailed Objectives and
Action Plans?
Remember that mission statements do not answer questions about
what to produce or markets we should serve.
Nor they answer questions about the firms objectives and plans.
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What Are the Detailed Objectives and
Action Plans?
SMART format for establishing objectives
S pecific
Measurable
A chievable, yet challenging
R ealistic
T ime-based
-Milestones are important short-term objectives, can help mark a
companies progress toward achieving its objectives.
-They also can be used to also determine when the plan is off course so
that adjustments can be made.
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What Are the Detailed Objectives and
Action Plans?
Moreover, a good strategic plan has a detailed action plans, or
steps, that will be taken in order to accomplish those objectives.
- who will undertake each activity?
- when the activity will occur?
At this point the firms strategy begins to involve salespeople and
sales process.
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Self-Assessment Library
Go to http://www.prenhall.com/sal/
Access code came with your book
Click the following
Assessments
I. What About Me
C. Motivation Insights
5. What Are My Course Performance Goals?
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Selling Approaches: grouping buyers
by how they make decisions.
Finish sale as quickly and as easily as possible
Key to success is making as many calls as possible to as
Transactional many people as possible.
Little thought is given to the lifetime value of customers.
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The Selling Approach: 8 Steps
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Prospecting
Prospecting involves identifying potential
customers for a particular product or service
A prospect is a MAD buyer
the Money to spend
the Authority to buy
the Desire to buy it
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Pre-Approach
During Pre-Approach, the salesperson tries to
learn everything he can about the account
Can take a significant amount of time
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Approach
Approach: salesperson asks buyer to commit to
a meeting
Opening statement must get buyers attention
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Needs Identification
Needs identification: salesperson confirms
prospect is MAD (Money, Authority, Desire)
Comprised of 3 elements
1
Questioning
2
Identification
3
Pre-commitment
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Presentation
Presentation: salesperson describes product
and how it meets buyers needs
Feature Evidence
Benefit Agreement
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Handling Objections
Objections: reasons a buyer offers to not buy
your product
Can occur at any time
Salesperson should find out root
of concern and resolve it
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Closing the Sale
Close: when salesperson asks buyer for the sale
Good close
Reinforce decision to buy
Confirm implementation schedule
Thank the buyer
Ask for referral
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Implementation/Follow-Up
Follow-Up: After delivery, ensure that the
customer has good experience with product
Training, service, policies and procedures
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Selling Process vs. Selling Approach
Selling Approach Selling Process
Transactional Prospecting
Affiliative
Consultative
Closing Presenting
Enterprise
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Sales Leaders
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Sales Executive
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Field Sales Manager
Plans, organizes, implements, and monitors for
specific sales team
Salespeople report to Field Sales Manager
Primary responsibility is sales quota
Responsible for training and motivating
salespeople
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Sales Executive vs.
Sales Manager Duties
Activity Sales Executive Sales Manager
Set overall sales targets for Set quotas for each
Plan each product salesperson for each product
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Ethics in Sales Management:
Maintaining NCRs Ethical Sales Culture
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Role Play: T&G Supply
Opportunity 1: T&G Supply
Provides maintenance, repair, and operations items to
manufacturers
Janitorial products, hardware products to fix machines,
and other common maintenance products
Opportunity 2: Columbia Leasing
Car rental and leasing company
Your job is to sell corporate contracts
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Role Play (continued): Action Steps
Break into pairs
Each person picks 1 company to play sales mgr
Think about issues that reflect a service-
dominant logic in each situation
Using other concepts discussed in the chapter,
identify three characteristics that you would want
each new salesperson to have
Take turns interviewing your partner for a sales
position
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Caselet 1.1:
Killebrew Manufacturing
Makes plastic patio products
Widow Francine took over company
Annual growth rate ~5% for past 20 years
Trying to grow company
10% introductory discount
Makes prices same as biggest competitor
Killebrew quality is much better
Problem: Few new accounts are reordering
Are salespeople too quick to sell price, not quality?
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Caselet 1.1 (continued):
What Would You Do?
Quality must be demonstrated and sold
What sales process or approach should Francine
consider?
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Caselet 1.2:
Mortons Ice House
Grill and microbrewery
Owner Sherry Morton hired Trey Denton to sell
franchises
Trey sold 12 franchises in 1 year
Corporate goal is to sell 200 franchises in next 2
yrs
Hired 5 salespeople for Trey to manage
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Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall.
Caselet 1.2 (continued):
What Would You Do?
Problems
Salespeople calling on same prospects
Other prospects not being called on
Sold only 22 franchises in 6 months
2 salespeople quit
10 franchises want out of contracts
What should Sherry do?
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