Ch. 13: Personal Selling and Sales Promotion
variable amount
often in the form of commissions or bonuses based on sales performance, rewards the salesperson for greater efforts and success a sales force compensation plan can both motivate salespeople and direct their activities
Sales force size
once a company has set its structure, it is ready to consider sales force size since salespeople make up one of the company's most productive - and most expensive - assets. Therefore, increasing their numbers will increase both sales and costs
business promotions
sales promotion tools used to generate business leads, stimulate purchases, reward customers, and motivate salespeople
Product sales force structure
A sales force organization in which salespeople specialize in selling only a portion of the company's products or lines.
Territorial sales force structure
A sales force organization that assigns each salesperson to an exclusive geographic territory in which that salesperson sells the company's full line
sales quota
A standard that states the amount a salesperson should sell and how sales should be divided among the company's products.
complex sales force structure
a wide variety of products is sold to many types of customers over a broad geographic area and combines several types of sales force structures
recruitment steps
1) company should analyze the sales job itself and the characterisitics of its most successful salespeople to identify the traits needed by a successful salesperson in their industry. 2) recruit the right salespeople. HR dept looks for applicants by getting names from current salespeople, via employment agencies, internet and social media, working through colelge placement services, and attracting top salespeople from other companies. 3) selecting the best applicants via a single formal interview or lengthy interviewing/testing
developing the sales promotion program
1) determine size of incentive 2) set conditions for participation 3) determine how to promote and distribute the promotion program itself 4) length of the promotion 5) evaluate promotion
Training salespeople
American firms spend roughly $15billion on sales training/year training programs have several goals: 1) salespeople need to know about customers and how to build relationships with them 2) therefore, must teach salespeople about different types of customers and their needs, buying motives, and buying habits 3) teach them how to sell effectively and train them in the basics of the selling process 3) salespeople need to know and identify with company, its products, and its competitors. Thus, an effective training program teaches salespeople about the company's objectives, organization, products, and the strategies of major competitors.
salesperson
An individual who represents a company to customers by performing one or more of the following activities: prospecting, communicating, selling, servicing, information gathering, and relationship building link btween a compnay and itscustomers (2 ways) 1. they represent the company to customers 2. represent customers to the company
value selling
Demonstrating and delivering superior customer value and capturing a return on that value that is fair for both the customer and the company
time-and-duty analysis
Helps show salespersons the time the salesperson spends selling, traveling, waiting, taking breaks, and doing administrative chores in hopes of determining ways they could be more productive/efficient.
consumer promotion
Sales promotion tools used to boost short-term customer buying and engagement or enhance long-term customer relationships.
inside sales force
Salespeople who conduct business from their offices via telephone, online and social media interactions, or visits from prospective buyers
sales promotion
Short-term incentives to encourage the purchase or sale of a product or service
organizational climate
The feeling that employees have about their opportunities, value, and rewards for good performance within the business.
closing
The sales step in which a salesperson asks the customer for an order
follow-up
The sales step in which a salesperson follows up after the sale to ensure customer satisfaction and repeat business
preapproach
The sales step in which a salesperson learns as much as possible about a prospective customer before making a sales call
approach
The sales step in which a salesperson meets the customer for the first time
Prospecting and qualifying
The sales step in which a salesperson or company identifies qualified potential customers, need to know how to qualify leads (Identify good ones and screen poor ones)
handling objections
The sales step in which a salesperson seeks out, clarifies, and overcomes any customer objections to buying
selling process
The steps that salespeople follow when selling, which include prospecting and qualifying, preapproach, approach, presentation and demonstration, handling objections, closing, and follow-up. transaction oriented- their aim is to help salespeople close a specific sale with a customer
team selling
Using teams of people from sales, marketing, engineering, finance, technical support, and even upper management to service large, complex accounts.
sales force management
analyzing, planning, implementing, and controlling sales force activities includes designing sales force strategy and structure, recruiting, selecting, training, compensating, supervising, and evaluating the firm's salespeople
supervising salespeople: the tools
call plan time-and-duty analysis sales force automation systems
Workload approach
company first groups accounts into different classes according to size, account status, or other factors related to the amount of effort required to maintain the account. Then determines the number of salespeople needed to call on each class of accounts the desired number of times
sales force automation systems
computerized, digitized sales force operations that let salespeople work more effectively anytime, anywhere
major sales promotion tools
consumer promotions include a wide-range of tools trade promotions business promotions
4 key talents possessed by the best salespeople
intrinsic motivation, disciplined work style, the ability to close a sale, and the ability to build relationships with customers
motivating salespeople
management can boost sales force morale and performance through its organizational climate, sales quotas, and positive incentives
evaluating salespeople and sales force performance
mangement get information about its salespeople in several ways: sales reports -most important source call reports expense reports
Personal selling
personal presentations by the firm's sales force for the purpose of engaging customers, making sales, and building customer relationships personal selling if the interpersonal arm of the promotion mix. It involves interpersonal interactions and engagement between salespeople and individual customers
salesperson-omened loyalty
quality of customers' relationships with salesperson will result in quality of relationships with the company and its products
the sales force structure
territorial sales force structure product sales force structure customer (or market) sales force structure
the goal of Supervision
the help the salespeople "work smart" by doing the right things in the right way
fixed amount
usually a salary, gives the salesperson some stable income
presentation
The sales step in which a salesperson tells the "value story" to the buyer, showing how the company's offer solves the customer's problems
Compensating salespeople (4 elements of compensation)
fixed amount variable amount expenses fringe benefits
Supervising and motivating salespeople
new salespeople need more than a territory, compensation, and training - they need supervision and motivation
Other sales force strategy and strucuture issues
outside and inside sales forces team selling
consumer promotion tools
samples coupons rebates (or cash refunds) price packs (or cents-off deals) premiums advertising specialties point-of-purchase (POP) promotions contests sweepstakes games event marketing (or event sponsorships)
call plan
shows which customers and prospects to call on and which activities to carry out
Customer (or market) sales force structure
a sales force organization in which salespeople specialize in selling only to certain customers or industries
positive incentives
sales meeting provide social occasions, breaks from routine, chances to meet and talk with "company brass", and opportunities to air feelings and identify witha l arger group. sales contests to spur the sales force to make a selling effort above and beyond what is normally expected honors, merchandise and cash awards, trips, profit-sharing plans
Trade promotions
sales promotion tools used to persuade resellers to carry a brand, give it shelf space, promote it in advertising, and push it to customers
outside sales force (or field sales force)
salespeople who travel to call on customers in the field
the goal of motivation
to encourage salespeople to "work hard" and energetically toward sales force goals
social selling
using online, mobile, and social media to engage customers, build stronger customer relationships, and augment sales performance