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Does your company need a sales turnaround? As we enter the new year, it's a
great time for us to take a fresh look at our sales performance in our
companies and take action to turn around those aspects that we're not satisfied
with or which are lagging behind our expectations. Putting together a sales
turnaround plan for your company can be done fairly quickly and fairly easily.
The first thing is to pull together key opinion leaders in the company, not just
from sales and marketing, but are from outside and other departments, such as
finance, operations, product development, etc. and to ask yourself, "What is it
that we can do to improve our sales? How can we rally the whole company around
making those improvements? What are the easiest and most rewarding
opportunities that we have? What are the complacencies that have set in to our
sales team that we need to eliminate? Are there territories that are
underserved? Where are our best opportunities and how are our sales teams
aligned to capitalize on those? What is the individual performance of each of
our sales people and what are we doing to take corrective action with a poor
performers or move them out of the company if they're not capable of stepping
up to our expectations."
Now is a great time for you to start thinking about a turnaround plan for your
company's sales if they are lagging behind expectations. If your company is in
a rapidly expanding market and you're showing growth that's slower than the
market, it means that you're losing market share to your competition. If your
company is in a flat market but you have outstanding opportunities in segment
or niches of that market, a sales turnaround could mean refocusing your
resources on those market segments where your best opportunities are. If your
company's in a declining market, a sales turnaround could mean refocusing your
company on new market segments or with new products that will allow you to
boost your opportunities and get back on the path to growth. These are all
things that you should think about as you think about a turnaround plan for
your company's sales efforts.
Sales opportunity management is the key to improving results. A lot of companies
struggle with identifying and prioritizing the best opportunities for them
amongst their prospects and amongst the deals they're working on. Best in class
companies do a great job at sales opportunity management by spending regular
time analyzing their pipeline, analyzing each customer opportunity, and
prioritizing the allocation of resources to make sure that those best
opportunities can be focused on and converted into sales. A quick way to get
organized is to have a top ten opportunity list for each of your sales reps, to
bring that list to every sales meeting, and to get a regular update on what's
being done to advance each of the sales on those top ten accounts. Many
companies fail to do this, but it's a very easy tactic that can be used in
order to bring greater visibility to the key accounts that are going to drive
your business, and make sure that your sales reps are focusing their top
attention on them.
A simple spreadsheet which is updated once a week by your sales reps and
discussed at the sales meeting is a great way for you to do a top ten account
review. Have your reps focus on those ten accounts every week and make sure
that each week you're holding them accountable for showing some advancement on
each of those accounts, and also planning what the next steps are to continue
to advance the sales at those companies. By maintaining a top ten list for each
of your sales reps, you'll show them that it's important for you to get
visibility on the accounts that they're working on that are going to drive
revenue and help them to achieve their sales quotas.
It will also get them into the mindset that they need to be focusing their time
and energy on the best opportunities, as opposed to just turning out the sales
activity. Lots of sales reps get overwhelmed by the volume of activity that
they need to generate in order to do their jobs effectively. They get lost in
activity and start to equate activity with productivity. Being productive in
sales means being able to quickly qualify your best opportunities and focus
your time and attention on moving those opportunities forward. By using an
opportunity management system, such as the one we've suggested here, you can
quickly make sure that your sales reps are giving primary focus to what's going
to produce the sales that your company needs in order to accelerate its revenue
growth.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Andrew_Rowe
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