Sales Management
by RJ Calvin
Book Synopsis
by Tim Smith, PhD, July 22, 2002
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What questions should a business manager ask in the
interview process in selecting a sales person? How should she create
the sales force organization? What kind of training should the business
manager provide for the sales force? What principals should go into
constructing the sales force compensation plan? How does the sales
manager motivate, manage, and evaluate the sale’s team members
and their productivity?
Robert J. Calvin, president of Management Dimensions
and adjunct professor at the University of Chicago Graduate School
of Business, addresses these questions in Sales Management.
Sales Management is a tactics and strategy book for
managing a sales force primarily directed towards B2B industries.
Mr. Calvin’s management tactics are built upon the foundation
of determining the appropriate sales force strategy in alignment
with the corporate strategy, market dynamics, and competitive landscape.
Many of the tactics suggested are more appropriate for large corporations
than small and medium sized businesses, however the underlying principals
can be meaningfully applied to firms with revenues as low as $ 3
million.
“A sales force is no better than its
management.” Mr. Calvin squarely lays the blame for poor sales
performance on poor sales management throughout his text. Managers
must manage first. This echoes many of the statements made in other
management books regarding problems of mid-level managers that come
from the ranks of top-level-doers. With the perspective of top-level
doers, these mid-level managers instinctively desire to jump in
and do the work whenever they notice a problem. Mr. Calvin warns
against such actions. For him, “A sales manager’s job
is getting work done through people. His or her success depends
on the success of the sales people.”
Providing a walk-through of a litany of hands-on management
issues, Mr. Calvin covers hiring, training, compensation, promotion,
evaluation, and motivation of the sales force. In making hiring
and promotion decisions, Mr. Calvin suggests that sales managers
should strategically determine their objectives with the acquisition
of talent and tactically act to fulfill their needs with the best
qualified, spending more time on creating an appropriate pool of
candidates to review, and less time conducting interviews. Once
a salesperson is on the force, managers should address specific
behavioral, performance, reporting, and other problems through customized
training and staff-development programs. In conducting evaluations,
managers should remember that “(the sales person is) neither
angel nor devil and that both fear and love (are) needed to correct
the problem.”
Mr. Calvin notes that many sales managers would rather
avoid performance issues and delegate or postpone evaluations. He
warns strongly against such acts. A sales manager’s job is
to ”set standards, be critical, sit in judgment.” Rather
than letting a problem continue indefinitely, managers should first
take remedial steps. When those steps fail or when the corrective
action begins to require too much management time, the next step
is to “weed the garden and let the cream rise to the top.”
Appropriately, compensation and motivation are handled
in separate chapters.
For constructing a compensation plan, Mr. Calvin begins
with the concept that managers should “…first pay sales
people more than they are worth, then make them worth more than
what you pay them.” While the IT sector was not mentioned
specifically, he did report industry statistics from Sales and Marketing
Management, September 1999. These statistics revealed total compensation
for top-level Solution Sales and Value-Added Sales averaged at $90,200
and $98,800 respectively. While these numbers are half of what I
have seen in long, complex, multi-million dollar sales environments,
they do provide a data point for setting compensation levels.
In constructing compensation plans, Mr. Calvin suggests
that business decision makers begin with determining the total compensation
dollars, then break down this total compensation into base, at-risk,
expense accounts, cell-phone reimbursement, laptop provisions, and
other items that must be borne by the firm or the salesperson. In
constructing the at-risk portion of the compensation plan, mangers
will need to “reward actions and results … which are
most important to the company’s success.” Often, this
is not the total revenue generated by a single sales person. For
instance, a financial software firm compensated salespeople on the
number of demos, trials, and presentations while a management consultant
firm compensated salespeople for identifying decision makers, making
presentations, and obtaining requests for proposals.
In motivating sales people, Mr. Calvin reiterates
that monetary compensation represents an important motivator of
salespeople, but it is not the only determinant. Other issues, such
as the desire for promotion, recognition, team-membership, achievement,
esteem, and job security are also at the forefront of motivating
factors. Sales managers should keep notes on their employees, similar
to the profile salespeople are required to keep on clients. This
profile can be used to understand the motivating factors of individual
salespeople. “The sales people are the sales manager’s
internal customer.”
For business leaders and sales force managers, Sales
Management provides an in-depth checklist and get-to-work guideline
for performing the task of creating, managing, and improving a sales
force. If you are a salesperson having difficulty landing the next
position, Chapter 2, Hiring the Best, Terminating the Rest, is a
good survey of the hiring process from the manager’s perspective.
For other members of the business community, Mr. Calvin provides
excellent insight into the process of management, more specifically,
sales management.
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Tim Smith, PhD is a principal at Wiglaf, a Market Research and Sales
and Marketing Strategy consultancy serving tech-driven businesses
operating in business markets. Small and medium sized businesses
select Wiglaf for our quantitative and fact driven approach to intelligent
revenue growth. www.wiglaf.biz.
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Also Appearing in
Midnight Missive Newsletter, July 22, 2002
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