Sales Management: How Does March Look?
    
		 In magazine columns and other blog postings I have written  about being a proactive strategic sales manager rather than a reactive,  fire-drill crazy, un-organized sales manager. As we close down 2010 and your  thoughts about January are nestled in your head, its March that you should be  considering.
 If you have already built your first quarter sales training  programs, have your management systems in place to analyze pipeline values and  your recruiting plans are activated then you have some of the systems in place.  Just to check, you might like to take a few minutes and take the Sales  Management Assessment on our website: www.AcumenManagement.com.
 One of the concepts that I truly believe in is developing "leading  indicator" analysis. These statistics are activities that can assist you  in either forecasting pipeline values or sales opportunities well in advance of the current month.  This view is why you now should be considering March’s sales potential. If you  have created these key indicators, you may have the time to adjust your  forecasts or sales/marketing activities to counteract negative potentials or, more  importantly, if they are showing all "green" light indications, you  can focus on improving your operations and closing sales opportunities.
 I was reading the WSJ the other day and came across an article titled "New Ways to Read the  Economy." It described how economists read leading indicators.  Here are just a just a few examples: 1)  Broadway ticket sales=future tourist revenue, 2) diesel-fuel sales=industrial  production, and 3) subway-passenger traffic near Union Station in San Francisco=sales tax  revenue. These kinds of related activity that can predict future results are  the kinds of analysis you must determine for your sales organization.
 Depending upon your sales/marketing environment you need to  consider several pre-sales activities and measure them for a minimum of six  months before considering them reliable.   These kinds of activities should be the same for each salesperson and  your entire sales organization. What else? You need to know the length of your  sales cycle and the correlations of activity to results.  In a typical B2B sales environment, consider  1) the number of monthly sales calls that require a pre-sale technical  Engineer=future number of proposals/quotes, 2) the number of  opportunities/pipeline values in Stage two as compared to Stage  seven (assuming seven is your final stage) or  3) the number of new prospect face-to-face sales calls/month.
 What kinds of leading indicator activities make sense for  your firm? Leave a comment and let me know.
 As a strategic sales manager with a good perspective or view  on managing what is  happening today and  knowing its correlation to future   results or revenues you will not only produce greater results but you will  sleep better too!
  Ken Thoreson, president of Acumen provides Keynotes,  consulting services and products designed to improve business performance.          
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on December 21, 2010