Optimizing Sales Force Activities and Marketing Effectiveness
Motivation
Marketing is an underdeveloped science for most distributors. Few distributors seem to have a consistent, well thought out message that tells who they are and what makes them different from their competition. Most distributors rely heavily on their sales force to market their firm. Without common direction the message is often inconsistent and may, at times, be inaccurate. Here are some questions that merit consideration:
- What should marketing look like in a distributor’s operation?
- Who should be responsible for marketing?
- What should the message be?
- How should the message be delivered?
- How should the sales force be involved?
Simply put, the marketing message is the story of who we are and why our customers should want to do business with us. Once the story is created, there are different mechanisms for its delivery. One well-known vehicle is the brand. The brand conveys information to the customer about the quality of our products and services and past experiences they have shared with our firm. The brand is often supported by advertising (another delivery vehicle for the marketing story) which further defines our message. For wholesale distributors, the principle delivery mechanism is the sales force. A sales force without a powerful marketing message is, in many ways, unarmed when they try to convey our story to the customer.
A company’s sales force is one of its most significant assets. The value created by the sales force is key to the success of the firm. While most firms put a great deal of emphasis on total output from the sales force, most do not understand how to direct the sales force on a path optimal to the firm’s profitability. The sales force makes decisions on a regular basis as to what customers to approach, how to serve those customers, and how to maintain a positive relationship with customer firms. They do not, however, always know if their decisions are optimal for their firm and supply chain. Although most companies monitor and make efforts to control sales force activities, few companies have a formal means of optimizing sales force activities. Here are some questions that merit consideration:
- Which sales force activities provide the greatest return on time and dollars invested?
- Are the efforts of the sales force directed toward activities that provide the most value to present and future customers?
- Are the efforts of the sales force directed toward present and future customers that represent the greatest potential for maximizing revenues and gross margins?
- What are these activities, how can they be identified, how can they be presented to salespeople?
- How can the firm follow up and measure the effectiveness of these activities?
- What forms of compensation will motivate the sales force to pursue optimal profitability in customer relationships?
Deliverables
Consortium members will participate directly in the research and gain a better understanding of the findings. The full report will be issued to each consortium member with all analysis performed on the firm itself with the firm’s data. Direct recommendations will be made for each individual participant firm on:
- A marketing strategy for achieving the most profitable customer relationships.
- Application of best practices in sales force compensation.
- A customer stratification tool for the firm with recommendations on how to improve customer relationships and profitability.
- Analysis of current customer service for customer types and programs (Vendor Managed Inventory, Integrated Supply, etc) and their affect on profitability.
- Techniques for managing marketing and sales activities through the customer sales efforts.
- Twenty free seats in the education sessions to follow the consortium.
- All tools created to complete the study and analysis for the study.
All consortium member results and data shared with researchers will be kept confidential. Only general findings and best practices will be shared with other consortium members. Distributors will benefit from the research findings and from sharing best practices with other cutting edge firms in the consortium. Manufacturers will benefit from shared study with the distribution community.
Solution Approach
Complex relationships (customer, supplier, inventory) make up distributor success. The key to optimal success is determining how to blend the distributor’s offering to meet the market most profitably and help the sales force to drive the right kind of business to get us there.
Copyright 2019 Read Center.
The graphic depicts that business we want to do comes from our core customers and those customers most easily converted to the core. The sales forceís efforts should be directed at advancing the core customer business. The ìbusiness we have to doî is stressful and not very profitable but contributes greatly to sales. The sales force needs to direct the customer to behavioral changes that will drive them to the core. The ìbusiness we donít want to doî is the low volume, low profitability, high service type that the sales force should seek to convert to better business or eliminate.
The supplier plays an important role as well. While it is possible for the distributors to gain control over customers with products not controlled by suppliers (low brand equity, many competing offerings), as seen in the Distributor-Controlled area, it is rarely sustainable. The Vendor-Controlled area favors the supplier over the distributor and can best be described as ìbusiness we have to do.î The Out of Control zone does not benefit either. So the sales forceís activities and the distributorís marketing efforts should be directed at the Strategic Partner zone as clearly ìbusiness we want to do.î
Copyright 2019 Read Center.
The sales force has to be motivated correctly through the right training and compensation plans. The actions of the sales force in terms of deployment of effort, market selection, service deployment, etc has to be thoroughly planned and understood by all. The market must be thoroughly researched and the right marketing message designed for the sales force to deliver.
The process has obvious implications for information technology programs especially those in the Business Intelligence arena. Ultimately the analysis must deal with one of the most significant constraints faced by all firms: the time and mindshare of its sales force. Before companies can effectively direct the efforts of their sales forces toward activities that provide the greatest return on time and money invested, plus provide the most value to their customers, companies must first identify these ìhigh valueî activities. The identification of these activities, coupled with the importance of each of these activities respective to specific situations, is the key to Sales Force Optimization.
The consortium will address these classic sales and marketing issues but will address them in the context of how marketing supports and directs the sales forceís actions and how the sales force delivers and redefines the marketing message. The intent is to create a combination strategy that optimizes the activities of our overstressed sales force and supports that optimal approach with a marketing plan that provides a direction and support for their efforts.
Copyright 2019 Read Center.
Methodologies
Directing the activities of the sales force has traditionally been based on informal methods of identifying best practices and promoting these practices among members of the sales force. Examples of activities that are normally the focus of these traditional methods include: cold calls (which is not part of this program), appointments, proposals, reports, complaints, meetings, compensation, training and expenses. In an effort to develop and maintain a competitive advantage in todayís business environment, this is often not enough. However, it is important to understand and develop scientific sales force optimization models and strategies using multiple decision criteria/variables such as account analysis, best practice compensation models, customer needs assessment, analysis of the industry and environment, analysis of the competition, documentation of cost savings, and total cost of ownership (TCO).
Even though many distributors may be somewhat familiar with these concepts and may utilize them to some extent, understanding and implementing a holistic approach to sales force optimization has been achieved by only a select few. The development of tools that will enhance the scientific decision making capabilities of sales organizations and backing/directing those decisions through effective marketing is the most promising step toward Sales and Marketing Optimization.
The key project steps are:
- Conduct quantitative and qualitative research to identify those activities most commonly engaged in by distribution sales and marketing programs with a comparison to support from analysis programs.
- Conduct quantitative and qualitative research to identify and develop ìbest practiceî distribution sales force and supporting marketing activities.
- Quantify the impact of these sales force activities and marketing support identified above and develop methods to incorporate them into a Sales and Marketing Optimization model that can be driven through robust analysis programs based on data and information routinely absorbed by the firm.
- Develop a scientific model to determine the optimum combination of sales force and marketing activities given specific situations.
- Develop IT based tools that demonstrate the methods developed.
- Develop an analysis methodology to determine the return on time and dollars invested in sales and marketing force best practices.
- Develop an analysis methodology to determine the value to customers of the firmís sales force and marketing activities.
- Develop new Best Practices in Sales and Marketing Optimization.
- Develop metrics to monitor and improve sales force performance.
- Develop sales force compensation best practices and quantify their impact on sales and marketing success.
The Texas A&M research team will conduct a survey of current distribution sales and marketing activities across wholesale vertical marketing channels and conduct ad hoc research to determine best practices in distributor sales and marketing programs.
The first consortium meeting will bring together member firms to report initial results, share best practices, and engage member firms in the research findings and define final deliverables with counsel from the consortium members.
Through a series of research workshops with member firms and ad hoc research the research team will:
The final consortium meeting will share results and capture final feedback and thoughts from member firms.
Member firms will receive a final report detailing tools and methodologies personalized to their environment based on data and scenarios shared and created in the workshop sessions. These findings are confidential to the member firm.
Texas A&M University will present a series of education sessions on Sales and Marketing Optimization for which consortium members will receive up to 20 free seats.
Value to Members
The consortium members will receive results, methodology and tools developed during this pioneering research in Sales and Marketing Optimization.
- Competitive Advantage
The key advantage for distributors and manufactures would be to gain competitive advantage by implementing the scientific Sales and Marketing Optimization methods or using the tools developed to maximize the results of sales and marketing activity. - Knowledge
The key advantage to technology companies will be to gain the knowledge base, methods and tools that can be implemented in their systems. - Education
Apart from shaping the research focus and gaining valuable knowledge base, methodology and tools, each consortium member will be able to send up to a total of 20 people to three educational sessions that will be developed from this research. The educational sessions alone represent a $35,000 value.
What are the Benefits?
The consortium members will have the exclusive opportunity to:
- Actively participate in ground-breaking research on one of the most crucial and timely challenges facing the industry.
- Direct the scope of the research so that the results are actionable and sustainable.
- Send up to 20 people from their organization at no cost to the educational programs that will follow the research study**.
The membership fee is $25,000 per company in the consortium. This fee will cover attendance in consortium meetings, company-specific workshops, and up to 20 free seats** in the educational programs. All these meetings/conferences will be hosted by Texas A&M University at College Station, TX.
** Free seats valid for 3 educational sessions to be conducted within 1 year after the consortium study.