April 1  is right around the corner and I want all of you reading to avoid being this year's  fool.
		Recently,  during a consulting session with a client's president and sales manager, we discussed two points that I thought would be good items to  bring up in this week's blog.
		The first  point, which is not an unusual one, was to ensure both the president and  sales management were in agreement as to weekly priorities. Often, I find the  sales manger focused on important activities during a their hectic weekly  schedule -- putting out fires, solving administration issues, coaching/mentoring,  recruiting...oh, and trying to ensure  sales are being achieved. Meanwhile the president is frustrated that other key  objectives are not being completed. 
		While time management is a major topic for sales leaders, what I almost  always recommend is that on Friday afternoons, the president and sales manager  meet to agree on the priorities for the coming week and to discuss the  achievements/problems of the past week.  This is what I call "managing your  sales manager." The whitepaper "How to Manage Sales for Predictable Revenue," which you can download on my site, was created for this specific purpose. It defines the 40 top  actions that sales managers must work on to achieve predictable revenues. By  following this simple recommendation everyone is focused on the agreed-upon  priorities.
		The second  point is about summer. I don't mean vacations -- I mean being forward-thinking. In my discussions this past  week, it was obvious both the president and sales manager were thinking week-to-week. While that is important to attain revenue goals, it becomes a treadmill  that brings exhaustion, both mental and physical. I recommended the following actions:
		  - Know what your revenue  objectives are for the next five quarters and make sure you match your hiring  plans to achieve the goals. Know when you need to hire salespeople in time to  be trained to achieve your sales objectives.
 
 
- Prepare a planned  organizational chart that extends over 18 months. This will help in No. 1,  but also provide you an awareness of your resource needs.
 
 
- Create your sales dashboards  for a weekly, monthly, quarterly and even year-to-date analysis. By doing this  you will see a better trend analysis and you will be paying attention to both  short- and longer-term results.
 
 
- Plan and define your sales  training plans quarterly, with topics, dates/times and people responsible.
 
 
- What sales promotions,  contests and sales games do you have planned for the second quarter, and even  this summer, to maintain revenues and to create fun?
Advanced or  forward-looking planning will greatly reduce the stress and improve the  functionality of the sales manager. It will also reduce the natural stress that  is created when managing a sales organization and working with the executive  team within your company.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on March 29, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		During the past few months, the stock market has taken off and the  papers have started shouting about  positive economic indicators: Rents are heading up, monthly job creation rates hit 200,000, et cetera. What is your perception? More importantly, what are you doing to lead and  manage your organization and prepare for better times?
		In today's  economic times, the companies most likely to thrive are those that invest time  in scrutinizing their strategic sales-management plans. They review everything  from their forecasts to their pipelines, looking hard at important numbers such  as cost of sales, percentage of market share, salesperson-effectiveness ratios  and customer lifetime value.
		When  we see companies struggling, it's often because they lack such blueprints.  Effective plans require combining an organization's goals and individual  salespeople's business plans with a set of metrics designed to gauge everyone's  progress in meeting those objectives. 
		Following  are what we believe are the fundamental metrics that partners should include in  "dashboards" for measuring their sales teams' effectiveness: 
		  - Accuracy percentage for monthly       forecast by salesperson 
- Dollar value of pipeline by stage;       number of opportunities by stage 
- Dollar value of pipeline ratio to       future monthly quotas 
- Actual sales activity compared to a       defined set of standards 
- Average order value 
- Win/loss rate percentages by       salesperson 
				Beyond  the Basics 
				
  As you continue developing your company's dashboard, you may wish to build in  additional metrics such as the following: 
		  - Value of net new account sales as       percentage of total sales for month and year to date 
- Existing account sales as percentage       of total sales, month and year to date 
- Rev salesperson profitability to       sales volume 
- Revenue per current customer per       year as percentage of total sales 
- Cost per lead by source
- Sales-cycle time from initial       contact by salesperson to decision 
- Number of days with sales outstanding,       goal versus actual 
- Blended billing consultant rate, goal versus      actual 
- Realization consultant rate, goal versus       actual 
- Utilization consultant rate, goal       versus actual 
- Consultant backlog days, goal versus       actual 
- Direct sales expense as a percentage       of volume, margin and quota 
				Looking  Ahead: Leading Indicators
				
  In addition, smart sales leaders increasingly rely on what we call "leading  indicators." These are activities or ratios that can predict revenues at  least 60 days out. While simply looking at future pipeline values can provide a  similar forecast, growth-focused partners may find these indicators useful as  well. 
		In  most cases, sales events occurring early in the sales cycle are most likely to  lead to high-percentage sales opportunities. If these begin to fall, future  pipelines and revenues will probably follow the same pattern. Potential leading  indicators include the numbers of: 
		  - New-prospect calls made per week 
- Face-to-face sales calls made per       week 
- Subject-matter expert or presales       tech-support calls made per week 
- Discovery calls made per month 
- Demonstrations and executive       presentations made per month 
We  also recommend creating graphs comparing these numbers to dollars booked or  margins generated, which can help salespeople see the relationship between  indicators and results. 
		Finally, remember that the  ultimate goal is improving your ratios and results each month and each  quarter -- not simply tracking them. That's the real reason for developing a  dashboard, and the real route to success. 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on March 19, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		First of all,  the title of this blog is misleading. Second of all, even if it weren't, it wouldn't be a good thing.
		No matter how big their sales organizations are, sales leaders  who assume they are responsible for solving every problem  generally fail to achieve the ultimate objective.
		Generally, new sales managers want to make their sales teams feel they are delivering value and are determined to help salespeople on their various tasks, problems and complaints. These sales managers often attempt to become the main cog in their sales  organizations. Nothing can be further  from the primary goal.
		First,  sales managers must recognize that it is their job to make   salespeople independent of them, not dependent on them. Whenever I find that the sales manager is the  first and last person to leave the office, I sense an issue.
		Second, when I review  "to-do" lists for sales managers  and find topics that don't belong there, I again suspect a problem with lack of salespeople dependence.
		The ideal sales manager shows up on time, takes a nice lunch break and  leaves before his or her sales team. How  does this happen?
		  - As I've written before, focus on hiring only quality salespeople.
 
 
- Sales managers must recognize it is not their  job to make quota every month -- it is the salespersons'. Once this is clearly understood, the next  elements fall into place.
 
 
- Every six months, each salesperson must create a  personalized  business plan. This is more than a simple forecast,  but a plan on how they will achieve their quota. In fact, I like to suggest they forecast three times their quota.
 
 
- The 90-day sales training plans are prepared  each quarter, with dates, times and topics carefully designed. Salespeople or other individuals within the  firm are assigned the responsibility for delivering the training. The sales  manager only plans the training.
 
 
- Individual salesperson reviews are held once a  month, formally each quarter.
 
 
- The Monday morning sales meetings follow the  pre-planned agenda/format and are positive events.
 
 
- Sales contests are fun and are planned on a yearly  basis.
 
 
- Individual salesperson coaching on sales skills  occurs during regularly scheduled sales calls, not just whenever it happens.
 
 
- The sales manager has figured out the recipe for  the business. They know what metrics to  measure to comfortably predict revenue and each salesperson knows and measures  these metrics themselves.
The main theme is: Be under control. There are  systems  in place, the salespeople know the plans, they are held accountable  and fully understand that management is there to support them, not take care of  them. 
		 If you want a more complete list  and to help you develop a prescriptive approach to sales management, go to our  Web site  and download a free whitepaper "The Job of Sales Management."
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on March 12, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		I was at a sales  conference in Puerto Rico several years ago.  While I was waiting for my return flight, I started to converse with another flier. He was British and just finishing his  holiday. We discussed mutual occupations and experiences. When he learned that  I had just addressed a sales conference, he asked about the topic and purpose  of the event. After I explained, he said to me, "Take advantage of the opportunity of a lifetime, during the lifetime of  the opportunity!" I loved that comment and I have used quite often  ever since.
		As I approach  another birthday, that quote is even  more important to me. Each of us only has a  certain of number of "opportunities of a lifetime" to experience. These opportunities can be professional as  well as personal. The challenge I see is that too many individuals are simply moving through life rather than experiencing life. I am firmly convinced  that learning to impact the lives of others through service, trying new things,  being kind and simply having fun put more zest in your life and a bounce in  your step.
		Recently, a man named Jim whom I knew  only slightly passed away; the comments  everyone made about Jim were wonderful. One that I recall was that whenever Jim  met someone, he always asked them, "Now  tell me what you have been up to." What a nice way to express warmth. 
		In our sales  management workshops we spend time  coaching, mentoring and teaching communication  skills. The one idea I like to stress to  attendees  or during a consulting relationship is when working with your sales team and a salesperson calls you or walks into your office, the first thing you should  say is "How can I help you?" Make sure you express that warmth and demonstrate you care. It will go a long  way toward building a trusting relationship and a motivated team.
		Take advantage  of the opportunity, I have a short video for you on this concept here. 
		Have a great  March and finish the quarter strong!
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on March 06, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		While in the process of writing a  magazine column on the future  of sales and social media I interviewed three people and posed several  questions in order to get their views. I thought for this week's blog I  would also introduce you to my current thinking and I would really enjoy  hearing your thoughts on the direction of sales and the use of social media.
		In the traditional sense of a new product introduction, social media is  moving through various stages. It is my opinion we have obviously crossed the  chasm from Stage 1 into full-blown Stage 2 product acceptance and, in most cases,  salespeople and sales leadership have accepted and become comfortable in using  forms of social media for their personal lives as well as in a limited business  environments.
		It is also my belief that if you aren't actively using a variety of  social media applications in your sales process/organization it is critical you  begin to learn to use them and become comfortable with the current social media  tools. Lauren Carlson describes the top  five uses of social media in sales very clearly in her recent blog here.
		Individuals use social media -- Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, texting, et cetera -- for  their personal use, and corporations  use it in marketing and even building their internal social networks. The thinking is that  current clients and prospects will begin to accept social media more easily in  their sales relationships. 
		The question becomes, where do we go from here now that social media as  we know it has been generally accepted by individuals and corporations? The answer is Stage 3.
		Jay McBain, from Channel Eyes, a social media/network company focused  on the IT channel, commented that based on his research on the topic, "social  [media] would overtake Web sites as the No. 1 source of information and online engagement  in 2012." Jay believes there will be a split -- a movement to enhance  personal social media and the trend to create a "business social media"  set of software solutions.
		This is exactly what I believe to be the direction we will move. As CRM  applications improve and as more cloud-based applications are developed, there  will be a greater integration and utilization of business social media. Salespeople will uncover more prospects,  prospects will accept this kind of communication and both parties will interact  comfortably. As Peter Watts from Solutionize, a software business collaboration  services company, predicts, so-called sales collaboration networks (SCN)  will eventually be deployed. These are highly integrated applications that will easily  allow the salesperson to offer the right solutions with an interactive approach,  generating huge value to the buyer, rather than simply data sheets or a nice  Web site.  
		Leadership must focus on this changing sales  process. The business outcome must be beneficial to the  buyer, seller and vendor. It is my belief that this more highly communicative  process will make decision-making easier and faster by removing any heavy  lifting. SCN will allow salespeople to reach more prospects and work at a pace  commensurate with today's current demands and profit measures. 
		What changes do you believe will occur with more business social  media solutions? The world  continues to change -- are you? Is your sales process? Let know your thoughts below. 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on February 27, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		This week's  blog is a  review of a book titled  Executive  Toughness: The Mental-Training Program to Increase Your Leadership Performance by Dr. Jason Selk and published by McGraw Hill.  
		When it comes to reading, I like to switch between business books focused on some aspect of my profession and then another book for personal enjoyment. Why did this book catch my eye? After writing  four books myself, I found Executive Toughness to be a terrific read that  can reveal to  new managers or  experienced business leaders something new to improve upon.
		As each page flew by, I found myself underlining sentences,  circling ideas and folding over pages as concepts and tools were introduced. Selk introduces each new idea with a story of  a person that defines his message, nicely personalizing the concepts  in ways the reader could relate to. And at the conclusion of each section, he included tools so the reader could begin to build their own  personal "training" program. This allowed the reader not only to read and understand the topic, but  to put the information into their personalized action plan!
		(As an aside, Selk's conversations and stories with  famed  coach John Madden were terrific.)
		The topics of  the book that I particularly enjoyed were those on accountability (readers of this blog know my feelings on accountability,  discipline and control), self-evaluation, improving execution and consistency (in my sales leadership workshops, I frequently state that execution is the key element  in high-performance sales  organizations), mental work (this section pays for the book!), and optimism.
		And to make  the book even better, the last 12 pages gives you a handbook to move forward with your personalized program. 
		Selk hits a key point: You must be personally in  balance, know what you want and take action to achieve high  performance. Buy the book, read  it and take action -- you will be a better person because of it.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on February 14, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Hiring. It's the  No. 1 job of sales management but it's also the most difficult. 
		If you hire  effectively, the job of sales management becomes  much easier. But if you  hire the wrong salesperson, it may cost you four times what you  ended up paying that person while they were on your team.
		If you are serious about building a high-performance sales team I have something special for you; I will train you on the aspects of building a  recruiting process that will improve your odds of only hiring the best  salespeople -- not the best available. You can register for my webinar here. In this  webinar, I will teach you how to  remove emotion from the hiring process and improve your odds for hiring  salespeople who will produce. You will learn: 
		  -  Five techniques to increase interviewing effectiveness.
-  How to evaluate the traits of high-performers. 
-  How to create a sales recruiting scorecard that "takes the emotion"  out of hiring decisions. 
-  How to use and create a sales case study specifically designed for your  business. 
-  How to build an interviewing process to hire the best, not just the best  available. 
-  How to separate the average from top performers.
This  webinar, which takes place on Feb. 28 at 1 p.m. EST, is perfect for sales managers, executives, business owners, HR  professionals and anyone who is involved in the sales hiring process.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on February 06, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		After giving a keynote program called "Gourmet Living" recently, an attendee came up  to me  and discussed her challenges as a sales manager.  The last three years have been tough and she  was looking for new ideas for 2012 to excite her team and also to simply change  up the routine.
		Since my keynote program had been about  creating a "menu for your life" and used many cooking metaphors, I started  thinking about what her sales management recipe should be. If 2011 left a bad taste in your mouth, use  the following ingredients to create a new recipe to make 2012 your best year  ever.
		
				Become a Detective 
				
In sales management workshops, we always talk about "inspect  what you expect." Once a week,  review your sales team's CRM system to ensure they are using it properly and  casually ask each team member about their certain activities within their key  accounts. Once they know you are  actually reviewing their accounts they will be more precise and begin to be  more accurate. Next, make two extra sales calls per month with each sales rep. Confirm that hey can sell your firm and they are  using the proper sales tools. These actions are not micro-management -- they are  designed to provide you greater opportunities to coach and grow your team.
		
				Reduce Fatigue
				
Recognize your  sales team might be tired or somewhat challenged based upon the last three  years of tight budgets and stress. Fire  them up with new products or packaging/pricing, change the game with new times  for sales and sales training meetings, or even rearrange the sales offices.  Once a month, take your sales team on a field  trip to visit a customer and let the customer "sell" your team on  your products/services.
		
				Find Creative Dust 
				
Read a book on  creativity and share it with your team. The truly great salespeople are the most creative and it is true that creativity  can be learned. As a sales manager,  creative sales strategies will push you over your quota. Get your entire team  into a creativity fix.
		
				Become an  SOB (Student of Business)
				
Invest in sales management training, books and DVDs. Create your own network of  other sales managers where you can discuss ideas, learn what is working for  others and explore new sales management concepts. Push yourself to become a  professional in 2012. Consider visiting other offices and view how their sales  managers run their sales teams. At our Web site you will find free videos on "hiring  and training salespeople" and other articles I have written on sales  management. You might also go back and skim through the blog to look for other  ideas.
		While these are just  a few ideas, I would enjoy reading your reactions or other recipes for success  below. As a team of readers, let's build  up a complete recipe for each as we work to make 2012 a feast we will always remember.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on January 24, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		As a sales leadership consultant, I think this article by Lauren Carlson, "SFA 15 Years Later: Now Every Rep's Best Friend,"   hits on many valid points. The cloud and CRM usability are key elements in the  acceptance of CRM, as is the price/cost issue, especially for the SMB market.  The marketing campaign features are extremely important and the interface to  accounting/ERP systems greatly improves the customer service aspect, as well as  gives a more 360-degree view. They make CRM  more than a salesperson's tool.
		One other element that should be recognized is the "tech  savvy" nature of reps today versus even 10 years ago. This has made CRM acceptance  so much easier.
		However, what is interesting is that forecasting accuracy is  still a challenge for the reps/sales managers. Also, training and implementation  of CRM is still greatly under-emphasized, and I find many organizations with  salespeople using the same CRM system differently and not following a sales  process properly. Third, this lack of discipline leads to inaccurate pipeline and activity  reporting.  
		These few issues are the direct result of sales leadership  and are training and management functions. The mistake I see in many CRM  systems and vendors is that they focus on the salesperson, not on the needs of the  sales manager or organization. Sales leadership requires a more forward-looking approach to build predictable revenue. With a greater proactive  approach and sales management focus, the three topics I mentioned above would help  the sales manager take greater charge of the CRM tool and it would be more of a  useful tool for sales leadership.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on January 17, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Strategic sales management is  often a weak link in solution provider companies. For the past 14 years, I have  been working all across North America and  internationally, meeting, speaking and consulting with organizations of all  sizes and areas of focus. While every client engagement is unique, some  problems are common to many corporate cultures and tend to prevent a company  from reaching its business potential. 
		This month, let's take a walk  through a hypothetical client site that illustrates many of the problems I've  encountered over the years. We'll use "Law and Order" rules: "Although inspired in part by true incidents,  the following story is fictional and does not depict any actual person or  event."
		Walking into the front office,  there are a few chairs and a few outdated vendor awards on the walls, and employees  pass  visitors without offering a greeting or showing much expression or  enthusiasm. This is not a good indicator for the type of reaction the office  evokes from prospects who visit. 
		
				President
				
  I ask for Bill, the president. I  am warmly greeted and taken to the back office, where we begin to chat about  his business, his vision, his frustrations and the lack of business  profitability. My experienced ears hear: "They" just don't get it, "they" really don't work hard  enough, "they" really don't know how to sell what we do and "they"  don't seem to care about the business like I do. Bill is also concerned  that his sales manager is focused on functions that have nothing to do with  sales. 
		
				Vice President
				
  Bill introduces me to his vice president of professional services: During the  first 10 minutes of a 45-minute interview I hear a lot about how much time the  sales engineers have to take to help the salespeople in every engagement and  that the sales teams get all the credit. "They never take the time to learn the products. If it wasn't for my  team and their expertise we would have no sales." When I ask when   the  VP last held a training session for the sales team, I get a shrug. 
		
				Salespeople
				
  As I conduct interviews with each member of the sales team, either face-to-face  or on the phone, I begin to connect the dots between what they're saying and my  meetings with the president and the vice president. The salespeople say things  like: "Management always seems to dominate  every opportunity; they're always micro-managing what I do; the sales meetings  are brutal, everything seems so disorganized; proposals are a joke; management  seems to change what we do every 90 days; and they never seem to know what is  going on." 
		Something else emerges from my recordings of each salesperson.  Every representative tells a different story when asked, "Why do people  buy from you?" 
		
				Assessing Your Own Company
				
  While these scenarios are exaggerated, these are conversations that sadly take  place among many clients we have served. Does anything here ring a bell  about your company? As you read this in January 2012, it is an excellent time  to assess the morale within your current organization and create a plan for the  remaining portion of the year to fix elements in your company that need to  operate more effectively. 
		A few concrete steps can go a long  way. Create an ongoing sales training program; run monthly company meetings for  all employees to bring teams together, increase communication and recognize  achievement; make sure management meetings are organized to improve the focus  on achieving corporate objectives; and make "soft" cultural  improvements to increase morale and teamwork. In some cases, the list of projects can be  quite long. Take a few each quarter and focus on those topics. 
		Creating a great organization  takes time, vision, energy and a commitment to continuous improvement -- which,  by the way, is the definition of leadership.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on January 10, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		It's a little late to begin planning your 2012 sales plan,  but in a conversation last week with a reader of this blog, I realized there  may be others who have not formalized their 2012 plan. Here are some questions you should consider when you start:
		  - What went well in the past year? 
- What did not go well? 
- What are the key drivers? 
- What are the key metrics? 
- What are the risks? 
- What are the opportunities? 
- What are some of the specific factors you will  be facing in 2012? 
- What assumptions are you making about the market  in 2012? 
- What assumptions did you make about your offerings in 2011? Still true? 
- What assumptions did you make about your company capability in 2011? Still true?
Posted by Ken Thoreson on January 03, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		At the end of each year, I  write down my personal and business  goals for the new year in seven  different categories. The challenging  part of that exercise is I have to review the goals that I had set from the  past year and grade my performance. I have saved these sheets from the previous  20-plus years and it's a telling  experience: I have found there are always good goals, but sometimes  unrealistic timeframes.
		Review  your performance over the past 12 months. Ask yourself, "Have I changed or improved my organization?" If you are a new reader make sure you review  all of my previous blogs for ideas and tips to improve your personal or  professional performance.
		As I look ahead into 2012 and think  about potential blog topics, it occurred to me that asking you to evaluate your current status on a few  basic sales management categories might be a great was to get ready for the new year. Rate each category below on a scale of 1 to 5, with 5 being the highest:
		  - How comfortable are you that you know what    percentage of the pipeline in the current category is required to ensure the     sales budget is exceeded?
- How comfortable are you that you have enough    pipeline potential in the 30, 60 and 90 categories to exceed future    monthly quotas?
- Can you visually see all of your top 10 dollar    potential forecasted accounts from your desk? 
- How well are all key accounts targeted? Rate your plan to attack them. 
- How high well does your interviewing process  ensure the best candidate -- not the best available candidate -- is selected?  
- Rate the quality of your three-month sales training program. (Is it defined and implemented? Do you have a salesperson    development plan  to improve the professionalism of your team?)
- Rate the quality of your CRM/SFA system. (Is it being used effectively? Is it up to date? Is it backed-up?)
- Rate how your compensation plan works. (Are your    company's goals aligned with the compensation/quota programs?)           
- How well are your sales leading    indictors defined? (Are they measured, posted, graphed, analyzed?)
- Do you have regular scheduled and unscheduled "coaching" sessions with each of your salespeople?
- Rate the effectiveness of your sales    contests and business games. (Are    they planned to promote revenue and build teamwork?)
A score of 45-55 means minor tuning  may be required.
		A score of 35-44 means you should consider  several projects.
		A score of 25-34 means you need to take multiple actions.
		A score of 0-24 means major  assistance is required now.
		Many of  these topics are critical for building  a high-performance sales team as well as increasing the predictability of your revenue. It's critical that a sales manager  or owner know a few basic ratios of their business,  such as the ratio of potential  revenues in the pipeline to the defined  sales quota versus actual attainment. If you track this information for six to nine months,   you will find your closing ratios, the value of how much potential revenue  must be generated each month to enter your pipeline,  and what you need at the beginning of each month to attain  your sales quota.
		I also  like the idea of "out of sight, out of mind."  If you have major accounts, you must have a written plan of action, for each  account, for at least three months. If you have major sales opportunities to  sell each month, you must have their name and action plans visibly defined on your wall or desk. This will ensure you are  consistently aware of your important prospects.
		Since recruiting  and interviewing  are the  most important aspects, making  sure you do them right becomes critical!  
		Stay tuned to this blog as  we move into 2012. I will be touching on many of these topics and others in greater detail as the year moves along.  If you would like to suggest specific topics  for me to cover in one or over  several columns, please send me your ideas!
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on December 29, 20110 comments