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Innovation & Entrepreneurship Institute. Sales Inflection Points in Your Business Hiring and Building a Successful Sales Force Presented by Lisa Peskin - CEO Business Development University. Objectives:. Outline sales stages of a company Go over the 3 major areas of sales success
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Innovation & Entrepreneurship Institute Sales Inflection Points in Your Business Hiring and Building a Successful Sales Force Presented by Lisa Peskin - CEO Business Development University
Objectives: Outline sales stages of a company Go over the 3 major areas of sales success Review top must dos in sales and sales management Discuss obstacles and challenges to entrepreneurs Provide 2-3 ideas that you can implement immediately that can help you be more effective and purposeful
What Should Entrepreneurs Focus On During a Tough Economy?INCREASING SALES REVENUES!!!
Depends on your role Business Owner responsible for all sales? Business Owner responsible for sales and manages sales associates? Business Owner manages sales associates? Business Owner that manages Sales Manager
Stage 1 Business Starts Stage 2 Owner = Sales Stages of a Business Stage 6 Hire Vice President of Sales Stage 3 Hire 1 or 2 Sales Associates Stage 5 Hire Multiple Sales Managers Stage 4 Hire First Sales Manager
Stage 1 Business Starts Stages of a Business
Stage 2 Owner = Sales Stages of a Business
Owner = Sales Only X % time focused on sales Owner may be responsible for fulfillment/ operations Owner may not have sales background/ training Limited track record Resources limited
Stages of a Business Stage 3 Hire 1 or 2 Sales Associates
Ready to Hire Sales Associates • Inside sales vs outside? • How many should I hire? • Who should I hire? • How can I find them? • What is the best way to on-board them? • What is the best way to maximize their performance?
Stages of a Business Stage 4 Hire First Sales Manager
Ready to Hire Sales Manager • When are you ready to hire your first Sales Manager? • What is the ideal span of control? • What is the best way to manage the sales manager? • How do we structure the sales force?
Stages of a Business Stage 5 Hire Multiple Sales Managers
Stages of a Business Stage 6 Hire Vice President of Sales
Stage 1 Business Starts Stage 2 Owner = Sales Stages of a Business Stage 6 Hire Vice President of Sales Stage 3 Hire 1 or 2 Sales Associates Stage 5 Hire Multiple Sales Managers Stage 4 Hire First Sales Manager
New business vs. repeat business • Source of new business • Characteristics of new clients • ROI on marketing efforts • Forecast vs. Actual • Progress against goals
Key Metrics to Measure • Activity and result goals • Calls, contacts, appointments • Close ratios • Average sale • % of quota • % of forecast • Months over quota
Annual Goal less Less YTD sales =Sales needed • Less forecasted business = $$ needed • Less Repeat business • Less Additional business = new business $$ needed • Divided by Average sale = # Sales needed • Close ratio = # Proposals needed • # Appointments/ proposal = # Appointments needed • # Contacts/ Appt = # Contacts needed Metrics – You Must Know Your Numbers!
Strategically Fill the Pipeline with qualified leads on a consistent basis
A rich pipeline makes you a lion PIPELINES A poor pipeline makes you a coward
Prospecting Solicited Referrals Unsolicited Referrals Marketing Efforts Sales Pipeline
30% 70% 70% 10% Prospecting Solicited Referrals Unsolicited Referrals Marketing Efforts Sales Pipeline
Networking Referral Sources Strategic Referral Sources Suspects Prospects
Maximize Opportunities with Current Clients and Past Prospects – Squeeze the Lemon! • Additional business • Additional contacts • Referrals • Reference letters • Can you use them as a reference • Referral sources • Stories about why they love you • An understanding about what they want you to improve
Formulate a Sales Plan • 30/60/90 day plans • Measuring progress • Accountability • Rewards and recognition
Set S.M.A.R.T. Goals for 2011 • Specific • Measurable • Alligned • Realistic • Timed
Sales Activities High pay-off activities Understanding the numbers Goal orientation Tracking
Effective Time Management • Time is valuable • Plan out time (daily, weekly, monthly) • Maximize opportunity costs • Make good decisions • Use to do lists • Take advantage of technology • Time Activated Priorities - TAP
Sales Process Build Business Rapport Set agendas and expectations Uncover needs – theirs and yours Present solutions Handle objections Close for next steps
Increase Close Ratios • Meet with decision makers • Consultative approach • Use stories • Multi-prong approach • Good follow-up systems
Sales Development Provide feedback effectively Triage areas Planning sessions Field rides Curbside critiques Training “Show” as well as “tell”? Knowledge and skills inventory Performance Improvement Plans