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8/6/2019 Companies Can Live and Die by the Quality of Their Sales Force Business
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/companies-can-live-and-die-by-the-quality-of-their-sales-force-business 1/68
Lok T. Simon
Companies can live and die by the quality of their sales force. A dazzling sales team
can generate tremendous sales for an average product or service, but a clumsy sales
team might not be able to do much with even a first-rate offering.
Hire in-house salespeople. You might be tempted to hire outside agents who
represent products from different sellers. But an in-house sales force offers you direct
control over your team, and lets you take an active role in planning and executing a
sales strategy. In addition, in-house salespeople work for you and only you — their
primary goal is to sell your company's goods or services. Outside agents, by contrast,
sell many products from various sellers, and have weaker ties to your firm.
Remember that you'll have to pay 100 percent of the expenses associated with an in-house sales force, so make sure your company's offerings will sell well enough to
support those costs.
Hire carefully. A lot of people think they can sell ice cubes to Eskimos — but truly great
salespeople are few and far between. look for salespeople with these characteristics:
1. Highly motivated by money
2. Eager to learn
3. Self-confident
4. Appreciative of a challenge
5. Persistent
6. Competitive
7. Able to cope with rejection
8. Great listening skills
9. Physically and mentally energetic.
Spell out your expectations. Be sure to discuss sales goals. It might help to draft a
contract that lists what your company will do for the salesperson, and vice versa.
Spell out your expectations. Be sure to discuss sales goals. It might help to draft a
contract that lists what your company will do for the salesperson, and vice versa.
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Train the more you train your salespeople, the better they'll be at answering customers'
questions and making sales. Your sales professionals should possess detailed
knowledge of your products, the competitors' products, and the market in which those
products are sold. They'll also need the training it takes to understand their customers'
needs, practices, and concerns. Hold regular training sessions, and encourage your
team to attend outside training classes, as well as sales and industry-related seminars.
Motivate your team with a strong compensation system. Design your company's
compensation plan before you hire anyone. A commission-based approach usually
works best, but it should include a base salary. That way, a salesperson is guaranteed a
minimum income — which can help morale during slow times. You can find
compensation standards by contacting your industry's trade association.
Make the most of nonfinancial motivators. Employees like to be recognized for good
work, and to feel that their supervisors listen to and act to solve problems. It's also
important to make your employees feel as though they're part of a team. And don't
forget the power of benefits — paid holidays, or a good maternity leave package, or
medical and dental benefits — can go a long way toward retaining the best people.
Management points
Managers come from different walks of life, possess various characteristics, and have
their own philosophies regarding how to manage a business and employees. In a broad
sense, there are common mistakes made by managers at different levels and in various
types of businesses. The following are 10 of the most common management mistakes.
1. Putting policies ahead of people. The smaller the organization, the larger the
mistake this is. Policies are made to be followed, within reason. Some flexibility
with employees, particularly in a small company, is important. An even bigger mistake is standing behind policies at the expense of losing loyal customers.
Weigh the significance of standing behind your policy in each situation. If it is a
matter of physical safety or security, policies must be upheld. However, in many
other instances, there are reasonable solutions that will not alienate the customer
or create a strained relationship with your employee(s).
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2. Lack of communication. In any industry, at any level, communication is the key
to being a successful manager. Employees need to know what is expected of
them and when specific projects or tasks need to be completed. Communication
needs to be clear, and any questions that arise need to be answered.
3. Failing to hear what your employees have to say. Managers make the
mistake of listening but not always hearing what their employees are saying. To
manage effectively, you need to understand the needs and concerns of your
employees.
4. Not acknowledging that you do not have all the answers. A good manager
does not make the mistake of trying to solve every problem. Seeking help from
individuals with expertise in specific areas is a sign of strength, not weakness. In
addition, a good manager must understand that his or her way is not the only
way to do the job.
5. The glass is always half empty. Manager who continually focus on the
negatives, without recognizing positive achievements or employee
accomplishments, end up with employees who are not motivated and often have
one foot out the door looking for a more positive work environment.
6. Not accepting responsibility. A common mistake made by managers is to
either delegate blame or simply not accept responsibility for that which happens
under their guidance. Eventually, avoiding responsibility will catch up with a
manager and usually not bode well for his or her future. Being in charge means
taking responsibility for whatever happens.
7. Favoritism. Once a manager has obvious favorites, he or she loses credibility
and the respect of the rest of the team.
8. Just do it. The Nike slogan does not work when employees are trying to gain an
understanding of the process or project. Rather than expecting your team to
simply work blindly on tasks they do not understand, a good manager takes the
time to explain what the project is all about and how the team's work is
incorporated into the plan. Remember, the more the team is invested in a project,
the better the results will be.
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9. Too much technology. New breed of managers are more tech-sense than they
are comfortable handling and managing people. Embracing technology is a key
to success in the modern office environment, but not at the risk of embracing
people skills. Do not hide behind e-mails and other technology.
10.Never change. In a rapidly changing business environment, not being open to
change can be a major mistake. While you may stick to tried-and-true methods in
some areas, you should consider and weigh the value of change in others.
Above all, be flexible.
Managing Large companies effective
Watching your company grow can be both exhilarating and terrifying. You enjoy therevenue, but also worry about keeping up with the demand. And what about your staff,
especially when it grows so large that you’re in danger of forgetting people's names?
How can you be certain your people are getting what they need to do their jobs well?
Follow these surefire tips for effectively managing a large staff:
• Pay attention. It’s easy to focus on your own work when you have a large and able
staff supporting you. But if you neglect your people for too long, you could be in
trouble. It’s important to pay attention to how your people are doing. Are theyovertaxed — consistently working long hours and/or taking work home? Are you
articulating the company’s direction in a way they understand?
• Learn how to tolerate growing pains. Before you can withstand the pangs of
growth, you must ask yourself questions like, “Is my company ready for
expansion?” “How can I prepare my employees for growth?” “What kinds of
problems do I foresee, and do I have adequate resources to handle them properly?”
Accommodating growth doesn’t occur overnight; you must become comfortable with
the process of managing your growth.
• Implement a solid system for performance appraisals. No matter how skillful
your staff may be, you must always provide a mechanism for employee evaluations.
With a small staff it’s easier to conduct informal reviews, but as you add more
people, this task becomes more challenging. Do yourself and your employees a
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favor by putting into practice an appraisal system that’s right for your company —
one that truly facilitates understanding between you and your employees. Consider
adding peer reviews and self-reviews to your mix.
• Match people with projects. With a large staff, it is easy (even tempting) to
assume people are doing their appropriate tasks adequately. Let’s face it: it’s not
easy to keep up with what’s on everyone’s plate. One way to avoid losing track is to
make sure you match people with the right projects. If someone is mismatched with
a particular task, that could slow down the whole company. Effectively aligning your
resources with the appropriate function adds to the company’s efficiency, which
ultimately affects the bottom line. Division of labor becomes critical as your staff
grows.
• Commit to training and development. Identifying appropriate educational
opportunities, and making them available, lets your people know that you’re
interested and invested in their professional development. Providing them with the
tools to do their best work will keep them motivated and increase their loyalty to the
company.
• Create a collaborative and friendly culture. It’s just a fact of life: the more people
you have, the greater the chance of conflict. Create a workplace characterized by
mutual trust and respect. High ethical standards should be the norm, and those whocannot abide by company rules should face the consequences. Be consistent and
firm but respectful, too. Communicate what's expected, and demonstrate your
commitment to that standard.
• Simulate a small staff environment when you can. Occasionally, you might hear
someone grumbling about the size of your staff: “I don’t know anyone anymore” or
“Who’s that ?” You can’t stop growth (well, you can, but you probably don’t want to),
but you can simulate a “small office” ambiance. Get everyone together for a
spontaneous ice cream social, distribute an e-mail newsletter announcing all new
hires (including some background on them), and make sure you know
Develop the technology
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While most small businesses require technology to grow, they are also likely to have
tight budgets and be unable to invest in "pie in the sky" IT projects with no guaranteed
returns. That's why it's important to lay down a technology investment strategy that
aligns with the specific goals of your organization.
Begin by looking at your business strategy over the next two to three years and
determine in which areas you plan to grow, change, or improve. It will be easier to
identify technologies that can help your business if you have a clear picture of where
you're heading and what steps you must take to get there.
Once you've set down your business strategy, you should appoint a member of your
organization to track IT trends and advancements in the marketplace. With the
explosion of possible technologies available to you, it can be helpful to have someone
on your team who is on top of the current products and trends.
Sit down with this person and list the key technology areas they should be monitoring
based on your business needs. For example, these areas could include business
applications, data warehousing, Web services, or wireless technologies. By creating this
list you can begin to assess which technologies are likely to impact your business. Do
any of the technologies you've listed present growth opportunities or offer significant
improvements in performance or customer service? Are other players in your industry
using these technologies to enhance their businesses, and if so, how?
This list of technologies and opportunities is a way for you to narrow down your
technology requirements and come up with a well-thought-out investment plan.
Once you have some technology projects in mind, talk to a trusted IT advisor and run a
cost/benefit analysis. (If you don't already have an advisor, be sure to read How to
Choose an IT Consultant.) Look carefully at your technology budget over the next few
years, taking into account the cost of maintaining and supporting the IT you already
have.
Create a short list of IT investments that you can not only afford, but will also help you
achieve your stated business goals. Prioritize these investments according to the
benefits they will give your business and then start to look at factors such as the time it
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will take to implement and test the new technologies, the staff required to support them,
and any necessary training.
The project that offers the greatest benefit may also be the one that requires the most
time, money, and staff. Investing in one large project may mean you don't have theresources to invest in others, so you will want to do a risk analysis of any significant
project you consider undertaking.
Technology projects are notorious for running over time and budget, so make sure to
plan for possible overruns. It's better to have a realistic idea of the costs you could be
facing. If the project comes in on time and on budget, it will be a pleasant surprise!
Finally, continue to update your IT investment plan and monitor new technology
developments. The last thing you want is an aged IT strategy that misses out on thecurrent opportunities in the marketplace. Keep in constant communication with your
trusted IT advisor, and once you embark on a project, update your investment plan with
new deadlines or cost estimates.
Keep in mind that while most recognize that technology advances at a rapid pace, many
small business owners neglect to plan for technological obsolescence. Read Anticipate
Obsolescence When Planning Your Technology Investment Strategy for some good
advice.
Create a short list of IT investments that you can not only afford, but will also help you
achieve your stated business goals. Prioritize these investments according to the
benefits they will give your business and then start to look at factors such as the time it
will take to implement and test the new technologies, the staff required to support them,
and any necessary training.
The project that offers the greatest benefit may also be the one that requires the most
time, money, and staff. Investing in one large project may mean you don't have the
resources to invest in others, so you will want to do a risk analysis of any significant
project you consider undertaking.
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Technology projects are notorious for running over time and budget, so make sure to
plan for possible overruns. It's better to have a realistic idea of the costs you could be
facing. If the project comes in on time and on budget, it will be a pleasant surprise!
Finally, continue to update your IT investment plan and monitor new technologydevelopments. The last thing you want is an aged IT strategy that misses out on the
current opportunities in the marketplace. Keep in constant communication with your
trusted IT advisor, and once you embark on a project, update your investment plan with
new deadlines or cost estimates.
Keep in mind that while most recognize that technology advances at a rapid pace, many
small business owners neglect to plan for technological obsolescence. Read Anticipate
Obsolescence When Planning Your Technology Investment Strategy for some good
advice.
Performance reviews
Annual performance reviews can be stressful for both employees and managers. Here
are some simple but effective tactics to help minimize your employees' anxiety and
ensure reviews are both fair and effective:
• Explain the process ahead of time. Ideally, whenever you hire an employee you
should explain the details of the performance review process — how often these
meeting occur, how they are conducted, and what the employee can expect during
the discussion. Put these details in writing for easy reference. This way, the review
conversation will have a structure that is clear to both you and your employee.
• Schedule the review together. Some employers blindside their workers by
springing a review on them without much advance notice. This is a poor tactic, as it
puts the employee on the spot and denies them the opportunity to think throughtheir accomplishments, objectives, and questions. A far better approach is to
schedule the meeting with the employee in advance and even share your proposed
conversation agenda ahead of time. The employee will come into the room feeling
prepared and confident, and will be much more inclined to engage in an honest,
productive conversation with you.
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• Flag any trouble spots in advance. If you unleash a series of aggressive
questions and complaints regarding a performance shortfall during the actual
meeting, you are sure to get a defensive, underdeveloped response in return.
Difficult as it might be to talk with an employee about their inability to hit their
professional marks, it is much more awkward when they enter the review under the
mistaken impression that things are fine. A smart tactic is to tip them off before the
date of the review by saying something to the effect of "We'll need to discuss why
goals X, Y, and Z were not met this year. Please come into the conversation having
given that some thought, so that we can work together on a solution."
• Have employees conduct self-reviews. In addition to the traditional manager-
delivered review, employee self-reviews are a new and viable alternative that are
becoming more and more prevalent in the workplace. Consider having your employee provide you with a self-review in advance of your formal meeting. You
can gain valuable insight into what the employee is thinking and use this to craft
your later discussion. Read the Benefits of Employee Self-Reviews to learn more.
• Bring reviews into the round. Rather than have a one-way review process (a
manager reviewing an employee), consider a "360 degree review" in which the
employee also has the opportunity to evaluate your effectiveness as a manager.
Have the employee fill out a brief questionnaire rating your management skills. Or
you can simply alert the employee in advance that, during the review, the floor will
be open to a discussion regarding your management techniques — what works for
the employee and what doesn't. Encourage the person to suggest ways that you
could manage them more effectively going forward. In addition, invite your
employee to create a "wish list" of how he or she might expand upon or develop his
or her job duties.
• Don't begin on a down note. It is important to keep in mind that your opening
remarks will set the tone for the rest of the meeting. Starting a review by diving
immediately into the employee's failings is a sure way to start the conversation off
on a sour note and set up a barrier between the two of you. Even if you must
analyze performance shortcomings, a better approach is to initiate the conversation
by highlighting the positive aspects of the employee's performance over the past
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year. The eventual conversation about what is not up to snuff will feel less dire, and,
as a result, the employee will be more likely to listen and work with you toward a
solution.
• Hatch a plan. A review shouldn't simply be about rating an employee's
performance. It should be a springboard from which the employee can grow and
advance in the company. For every criticism, provide suggestions on how he or she
could improve in the coming year. Working together can develop tactical, concrete
approaches to overcome shortcomings. Let the employee see that you are
interested in helping them develop and succeed. Inspire them to excellence by
indicating that improvements will be rewarded with enhanced responsibilities.
Knowing that your manager is on your side can be a powerful motivator.
• Don't let the conversation stop. A formal review meeting is a good opportunity to
stop and "check in" with your employee, but you should also strive to sustain an
ongoing conversation about job performance throughout the year. By making the
review process less formal, communication between the manager and the
employee will improve. Allow the employee some time to ponder what was said
during the review meeting, and then come back to the table to discuss any resulting
questions or ideas that may not have come to mind during the initial conversation.
If you are an employee and need advice on how to turn your review into a positiveexperience that inspires you to improve and advance your career, check out Maximize
Your Year-End Performance Review.
• Bring reviews into the round. Rather than have a one-way review process (a
manager reviewing an employee), consider a "360 degree review" in which the
employee also has the opportunity to evaluate your effectiveness as a manager.
Have the employee fill out a brief questionnaire rating your management skills. Or
you can simply alert the employee in advance that, during the review, the floor will
be open to a discussion regarding your management techniques — what works for
the employee and what doesn't. Encourage the person to suggest ways that you
could manage them more effectively going forward. In addition, invite your
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employee to create a "wish list" of how he or she might expand upon or develop his
or her job duties.
• Don't begin on a down note. It is important to keep in mind that your opening
remarks will set the tone for the rest of the meeting. Starting a review by diving
immediately into the employee's failings is a sure way to start the conversation off
on a sour note and set up a barrier between the two of you. Even if you must
analyze performance shortcomings, a better approach is to initiate the conversation
by highlighting the positive aspects of the employee's performance over the past
year. The eventual conversation about what is not up to snuff will feel less dire, and,
as a result, the employee will be more likely to listen and work with you toward a
solution.
• Hatch a plan. A review shouldn't simply be about rating an employee's
performance. It should be a springboard from which the employee can grow and
advance in the company. For every criticism, provide suggestions on how he or she
could improve in the coming year. Working together, develop tactical, concrete
approaches to overcome shortcomings. Let the employee see that you are
interested in helping them develop and succeed. Inspire them to excellence by
indicating that improvements will be rewarded with enhanced responsibilities.
Knowing that your manager is on your side can be a powerful motivator.
• Don't let the conversation stop. A formal review meeting is a good opportunity to
stop and "check in" with your employee, but you should also strive to sustain an
ongoing conversation about job performance throughout the year. By making the
review process less formal, communication between the manager and the
employee will improve. Allow the employee some time to ponder what was said
during the review meeting, and then come back to the table to discuss any resulting
questions or ideas that may not have come to mind during the initial conversation.
If you are an employee and need advice on how to turn your review into a positive
experience that inspires you to improve and advance your career, check out Maximize
Your Year-End Performance Review.
Budgeting
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Most companies don’t use budgets to help them meet profit goals. Why? Because most
owners and chief executive officers reason that the effort required to learn how to build
and use workable budgets is just too much. They seem to feel that learning how to
budget is more frustrating than just hoping the numbers will all work out -- if they only
sell enough widgets, services, or whatever.
That’s a mistake. The fact is, budgeting is the most effective way to consistently meet
profit targets and avoid costly surprises. Budgeting helps you invest your resources to
your company’s best advantage by using careful consideration rather than responding
to the urgent need to make some kind of move right now.
Owners and CEOs need to begin controlling the bottom line with some of the same
tools they use to control the top line, and budgeting is the first step. Consider these
eight tips to help you become a better budgeter.
1. Take the time to do it right. A budget is not a sales forecast you put together on
the weekend to impress your banker. It must be the result of coordinated input
and effort by you and your management team. That budgeting is a project that
requires some time and thought, just like any other project your company takes
on.
2. Practice, practice, practice. Regardless of how tough it may be to estimate the
future, your forecasting accuracy will improve, and you’ll be better able to control
the results if you actively use a budget. Practice does make (almost) perfect.
3. Don’t think your company is the exception. Any business can be budgeted.
The only question is how much practice it takes to strike a balance between the
time invested and your forecasting accuracy. Remember that a startup has to be
forecasted and budgeted in order to get financial backing. This includes
companies trying to do something that’s never been done before.
4. Use a Gantt chart. This is an expanded timeline that tracks deliverable dates for
budget completion. It will tell you if you’ve scheduled too much to be completed
in too short a time given other business activities that also require your team’s
participation.
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5. Don’t try to budget to the last penny. Predicting exact results down to the
penny is not the objective. Rather, budgeting is more about giving your
employees a direction to use for course corrections at a level of detail where it
matters. If you try to forecast every last expense no matter how small, the details
will drive you crazy.
6. Make tradeoffs when necessary. You have finite resources available to you. If
you must spend money for something you didn’t budget, decide what budgeted
expenses can be removed to “finance” the new item. Without this discipline, you
will almost always overspend, because there are always good reasons to spend
money. They don’t always produce more profit, however.
7. Set both profit and cash flow targets. These two measures are very different
and require different kinds of gauging and monitoring to prevent unpleasant
surprises. Don’t believe it? Keep in mind that every year businesses with great
profits fail due to a lack of cash.
8. Ask three questions to assess your results. With budget comparisons in
hand, ask your team these three sets of questions at the end of every month: (1)
How are we doing compared to the budget? If the results are different from the
plan, why did this happen? (2) What must we do now to have a better result next
month? How can we keep the positive differences and avoid the negative ones?(3) What are we learning that will help make next year’s budget better?
Follow these tips and your income statement will be more informative, your bottom line
is more appealing, and your stress level a good deal lower.
1. Don’t try to budget to the last penny. Predicting exact results down to the
penny is not the objective. Rather, budgeting is more about giving your
employees a direction to use for course corrections at a level of detail where it
matters. If you try to forecast every last expense no matter how small, the details
will drive you crazy.
2. Make tradeoffs when necessary. You have finite resources available to you. If
you must spend money for something you didn’t budget, decide what budgeted
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expenses can be removed to “finance” the new item. Without this discipline, you
will almost always overspend, because there are always good reasons to spend
money. They don’t always produce more profit, however.
3. Set both profit and cash flow targets. These two measures are very different
and require different kinds of gauging and monitoring to prevent unpleasant
surprises. Don’t believe it? Keep in mind that every year businesses with great
profits fail due to a lack of cash.
4. Ask three questions to assess your results. With budget comparisons in
hand, ask your team these three sets of questions at the end of every month: (1)
how are we doing compared to the budget? If the results are different from the
plan, why did this happen? (2) What must we do now to have a better result next
month? How can we keep the positive differences and avoid the negative ones?
(3) What are we learning that will help make next year’s budget better?
Follow these tips and your income statement will be more informative, your bottom line
is more appealing, and your stress level a good deal lower.
Employees Risk management
As work environments become safer, the number of workers' compensation claims
continues to decline. At the same time, the cost per claim has continued to rise along
with the rising cost of health care in general, making the business costs substantial.
Along with death and taxes, workers' compensation is something every small business
owner with employees must deal with.
As of September 2008, figures from the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor
Statistics show that businesses spend an average of $28.87 per hour for each
employee. This includes salary, as well as benefit expenses such as health insurance,
vacation time, and workers' compensation benefits. Overall, 69.7 percent (or $20.13) of
the hourly compensation given to employees goes toward salary, and 30.3 percent
($8.74) goes toward benefits, with 1.6 percent ($0.47) of that benefit percentage making
its way to workers' compensation. Although 47 cents an hour doesn't sound like much, it
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adds up over time and can severely impact your business expenses, particularly if this
per-hour amount increases.
Job classification is the main factor determining the cost of your premiums. Roofers and
construction people, who work around heavy equipment, have the highest risks,whereas office workers have the lowest risk. The basic rates for each job classification
are set by each individual state, but there are more guidelines for insurance carriers to
follow than there are rules.
By working with your risk management insurance carrier, you can implement both pre-
and post-claims programs that will reduce your workers' compensation costs overall.
Besides implementing procedures that make your business a more desirable client in
terms of insurance rates, you can save even more on your risk management costs by
implementing the following practices:
• When paying an employee time and a half for overtime, you may only have to
report the regular wages, decreasing the amount of payroll that determines your
insurance premiums.
• Implement programs that bring workers back into the workforce at a faster rate,
even if it means bringing them back part time or in a limited capacity. Rising
workers' compensation costs are primarily due to increased use of benefits and
longer duration of disability. The more time an employee spends on disability, the
more wage replacement and medical services increase in cost.
• Look for a pattern to claims. Do some locations or areas in your business have
fewer claims than others? Determine the reason why. Reducing the number of
workers' compensation claims gives your business a better safety record. This
makes you a much better risk to an insurance company, making it more likely they
will give you better rates in the long run. Overall, this is the best way to reduce your
risk management expenses.
Checklist: Additional Factors in Insurance Premiums
The workers' compensation insurance premium is negotiated between the business and
the insurance carrier and can be increased or reduced depending on factors that
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insurance companies consider when calculating workers' compensation premiums.
These factors include the following:
Proclaims Programs
• Level of employee health insurance offered by the employer
• Performance of regular safety checks
• Encouragement and reinforcement of safe working behavior in employees
• Emphasis on the use of safety procedures and proper equipment
• Instruction manuals that detail safety procedures
• Promotion of effective new-hire selection processes
• Employee education and training
• Management accountability
• Elimination of employee risk taking
Post-Claims Programs
• Employer's safety record
• Elimination of hazards that cause injuries
• Consistent internal policies and medical referral procedures
• Return-to-work programs
Tip: Double-Check Job Classification Codes
A common but easily avoided classification error that affects workers’ compensation is
to assign the code of office clerk to all administrative personnel. Not all administrative
personnel perform the same job duties, and there are different classifications that carry
different levels of risk. A file clerk, for example, typically doesn't use a keyboard. A data
entry clerk, on the other hand, usually sits in front of a keyboard and a computer all day
long and runs a much higher risk of carpal tunnel injury. To be certain you're classifying
employees correctly, use the most up-to-date classification code book for your state and
thoroughly familiarize yourself with the appropriate codes for your employees.
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• Implement programs that bring workers back into the workforce at a faster rate,
even if it means bringing them back part time or in a limited capacity. Rising
workers' compensation costs are primarily due to increased use of benefits and
longer duration of disability. The more time an employee spends on disability, the
more wage replacement and medical services increase in cost.
• Look for a pattern to claims. Do some locations or areas in your business have
fewer claims than others? Determine the reason why. Reducing the number of
workers' compensation claims gives your business a better safety record. This
makes you a much better risk to an insurance company, making it more likely they
will give you better rates in the long run. Overall, this is the best way to reduce your
risk management expenses.
Checklist: Additional Factors in Insurance Premiums
The workers' compensation insurance premium is negotiated between the business and
the insurance carrier and can be increased or reduced depending on factors that
insurance companies consider when calculating workers' compensation premiums.
These factors include the following:
Proclaim Programs
•
Level of employee health insurance offered by the employer • Performance of regular safety checks
• Encouragement and reinforcement of safe working behavior in employees
• Emphasis on the use of safety procedures and proper equipment
• Instruction manuals that detail safety procedures
• Promotion of effective new-hire selection processes
• Employee education and training
• Elimination of employee risk taking
Post-Claims Programs
• Employer's safety record
• Elimination of hazards that cause injuries
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• Consistent internal policies and medical referral procedures
• Return-to-work programs
Tip: Double-Check Job Classification Codes
A common but easily avoided classification error that affects workers’ compensation is
to assign the code of office clerk to all administrative personnel. Not all administrative
personnel perform the same job duties, and there are different classifications that carry
different levels of risk. A file clerk, for example, typically doesn't use a keyboard. A data
entry clerk, on the other hand, usually sits in front of a keyboard and a computer all day
long and runs a much higher risk of carpal tunnel injury. To be certain you're classifying
employees correctly, use the most up-to-date classification code book for your state and
thoroughly familiarize yourself with the appropriate codes for your employees.
Advantage for factoring and leasing
Most business owners who have been in business for any length of time understand the
power of financial leverage. It’s especially important for manufacturing companies,
which usually require a significant investment in equipment, raw materials, and
inventory before they can begin generating revenue.
The key to success for most manufacturers is to spend as little out of pocket as possible
on these necessities, thus preserving cash flow for the actual operation of the business.When used properly, financial leverage helps manufacturers achieve that goal.
Two particular kinds of leverage can be especially beneficial for manufacturers:
factoring and leasing. And when used together, factoring and leasing provide a powerful
one-two commercial financing punch.
Leasing
“All businesses are built on cash flow and leverage, especially manufacturers,” says
Andrew Kaplan, the president of United Financial Group in Maitland, Fla., which
specializes in equipment leasing. “It doesn’t make sense for them to use all their cash to
pay upfront for something that’s going to generate income when they can lease it
instead. Also, if they spend all their cash on equipment, there’s nothing left over for
materials, inventory, payroll, overhead, etc.”
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will receive up to 90 percent of the outstanding accounts receivable (or more than
$67,000) within a matter of days to begin fulfilling its new government contract.
In this example, using factoring and leasing together helps XYZ Manufacturing turn a
profitable new opportunity into reality quicker and more precisely than it could with anyconventional financing a bank could provide.
“When properly maintained, equipment will still be making money for a business for
many years after it has been paid for,” says Kaplan. “Every manufacturing business will
eventually reach a threshold where it can’t grow anymore due to a lack of capacity.
Factoring and leasing can help companies expand beyond this threshold.”
Trucking is another example of an industry that commonly uses factoring and leasing
together, with good results. Trucks are usually leased with a small down payment as away to conserve cash, and invoices are usually factored to accelerate collections and
provide the cash needed to keep trucks rolling.
Automatic Cash Flow
The bottom line is that it can be much easier to manage a business financially by using
factoring and leasing together, because all you have to do is concentrate on your
margin. Your cost to lease and operate a machine is fixed each month, along with your
factoring cost, so it’s easy to set prices that ensure the level of profitability you desire.
Meanwhile, you’ve created a scenario in which cash flow to your business is virtually
automatic and you can keep growing as fast as you can sell products. Need a new
machine? No problem, lease it. Need to collect receivables faster in order to keep the
machine running? No problem, factor them.
In today’s fast-paced business environment, where conditions change on a dime and
opportunities often arise with little or no warning, companies must be nimble and
flexible. Using factoring and leasing together can provide the powerful one-two
commercial financing punch you need to succeed.
Factoring
Like leasing, factoring can be an important cash flow management tool. In the same
way that it’s usually not smart to lay out cash to buy equipment, it often doesn’t make
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sense to carry your accounts receivable, especially for slow-paying customers that may
not pay for 60 to 90 days or more.
By factoring accounts receivable, businesses accelerate their cash receipts drastically
while also outsourcing credit and collections, thus freeing up owners to spend more timeconcentrating on core competencies. “Factoring and leasing go hand in hand,” Fix says.
For a manufacturing company, it might look something like this:
XYZ Manufacturing Co. needs to buy a new computed numerically controlled machining
center to take advantage of a government contract it’s just landed. The cost of the
machine is $100,000. While the company does have the cash to purchase this
equipment outright, it can lease it instead with a down payment of, say, $5,000 and
regular payments over the next five years.
At the same time, the company will need to purchase a large amount of raw inventory,
prepare its shop for the new machine, and hire another employee before it can begin
the new contract. Like many companies in similar situations, XYZ is cash poor but work
wealthy.
In addition, XYZ has outstanding accounts receivable totaling $75,000 from customers
that typically pay in 60 to 90 days. By selling these invoices to a factoring company, it
will receive up to 90 percent of the outstanding accounts receivable (or more than$67,000) within a matter of days to begin fulfilling its new government contract.
In this example, using factoring and leasing together helps XYZ Manufacturing turn a
profitable new opportunity into reality quicker and more precisely than it could with any
conventional
When properly maintained, equipment will still be making money for a business for
many years after it has been paid for,” says Kaplan. “Every manufacturing business will
eventually reach a threshold where it can’t grow anymore due to a lack of capacity.
Factoring and leasing can help companies expand beyond this threshold.”
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Trucking is another example of an industry that commonly uses factoring and leasing
together, with good results. Trucks are usually leased with a small down payment as a
way to conserve cash, and invoices are usually factored to accelerate collections and
provide the cash needed to keep trucks rolling.
Automatic Cash Flow
The bottom line is that it can be much easier to manage a business financially by using
factoring and leasing together, because all you have to do is concentrate on your
margin. Your cost to lease and operate a machine is fixed each month, along with your
factoring cost, so it’s easy to set prices that ensure the level of profitability you desire.
Meanwhile, you’ve created a scenario in which cash flow to your business is virtually
automatic and you can keep growing as fast as you can sell products. Need a newmachine? No problem, lease it. Need to collect receivables faster in order to keep the
machine running? No problem, factor them.
In today’s fast-paced business environment, where conditions change on a dime and
opportunities often arise with little or no warning, companies must be nimble and
flexible. Using factoring and leasing together can provide the powerful one-two
commercial financing punch you need to succeed.
Office managements
In order to successfully manage an office, regardless of your company's product or even
your customer base, you should adhere to some basic guidelines. Here are six areas
that you should keep in mind:
1. Employment and human resources. It's critical to have an employment policy
in place. A policy manual gives you a blueprint for the way the company
approaches employment. It spells out rules in a way that can prevent later problems. (Imagine working for an organization that came to a standstill each
time an employment issue arose.) In addition, you'll want to include a training
and development program under this area. Even if your training and
development program is modest, you still need to consider building this into your
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policy. Read Ten Employee Training Tips to learn how to implement an effective
training program.
2. Project management. Keeping track of projects is critical to the successful
completion of important tasks and represents an essential piece of
documentation. Knowing when things have to be completed and by whom gives
everyone a clear idea of what's ahead. Deadlines are less likely to be missed
and people are more likely to know their roles. Plus, each project, through careful
documentation, can become a useful case study for future assignments.
3. Equipment and furniture requirements. You don't need every piece of office
equipment out there to run a smooth operation. But you do need certain products
that are going to optimize people's performance. What you need and how much
it will cost are simple but important considerations. Check out What Office
Equipment Do I Need for My Business? for a good introduction. And what about
software? Are you trying to achieve a paperless office? If not, do you know how
you'll store certain documents? Answering these and other questions about
equipment will help you
4. Inter- and intra-office communications. For many small businesses, the
responsibility for communication falls upon the office manager. Knowing how and
when to communicate key information is vital to successful office management.E-mail blasts, posted instructions at the copier, and weekly staff meetings are
just a few of the types of communication that occur within a busy office. Having a
communication plan that everyone can adhere to will increase an office's
productivity and ensure that information is disseminated clearly and quickly.
5. Conflict resolution. Conflicts are inevitable. Knowing how to handle them
properly, however, will make life easier. Whether you have a formal policy or rely
on your own wits, you need to prepare yourself for a wide variety of
disagreements. Even with an employment manual, such issues as equitable
distribution of work, pay rates, and job descriptions often arise in a company.
Ignoring a conflict or waiting for it to dissipate is never the right solution. Having a
plan or a policy for conflict resolution will help everyone navigate through a
disagreement in a professional manner.
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6. The company and its people. Knowing how to run an office must include
understanding the company and its people. Knowing the product line and how it
fulfills a need is just as important as ordering more toner for the printer. If you
don't understand your company's mission, you won't know how best to support
its various functions. The same goes for people — knowing employees' roles,
where they fit into the big picture, and how they operate will help you manage the
office so that every function supports the people tasked with getting things done.
The more you know about how the company works and what people are doing to
build business, fulfill customer requests, meet deadlines, and otherwise perform
their duties, the more successful you'll be in creating and sustaining an
environment that fosters success.
Work and economic turn down
Given the immense uncertainty within which businesses across all sectors are currently
operating, harsh new economic realities are now taking hold which is fundamentally
reshaping the nature of the employment relationship.
In many respects what we are now witnessing is the re-emergence, even though
perhaps on a temporary basis, of the old "master-servant" employment relationship as
the "balance of power" shifts towards the employer. Skilled highly-paid employees
engaged in all areas of the service sector are now no longer in the ascendancy as theyrecalibrate their priorities. Stability within their working lives is now being given a higher
priority over the pursuit of variety, flexibility and self autonomy in how they provide their
services.
Of course it is not that the basic floor of statutory or contractual rights has diminished,
but rather that it is now employers that are running with the flexible working stick and in
a very practical sense are able to impose sweeping changes to terms of the
employment contract, which would have been unthinkable only a matter of months ago.
It is now becoming commonplace for employers operating within all types of businesses
to seek to reach agreement with their employees to reduce contractual working hours
and in some cases pay, as means to try to avoid the necessity of making redundancies.
Employees recognize and understand that unless they are willing to make, in some
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employees retained. Clearly great care needs to be taken how the proposals are
put forward.
• Carrying out dismissals of employees who refuse to accept variations to their
contractual terms which an employer views as being necessary for the business
may be a potentially "fair reason for dismissal" and therefore provide a defense
to an unfair dismissal claim. The initial hurdle for the employer is to show that the
reason for the change is more than trivial or whimsical. Assuming that the
employer can overcome this hurdle and that appropriate individual consultation
has been undertaken in order to establish the fairness of the dismissal, a broader
balancing test will be applied by an Employment Tribunal, which involves
balancing the needs of the employer and the interest of the employee.
• Determine whether the contemplated reorganizations will trigger a redundancy
situation. Reorganizations and redundancies are two different concepts and they
are easily confused. Reshuffling duties amongst existing staff will not create a
redundancy situation nor will seeking to reduce costs by enforcing imposed
changes, such as reductions in pay. Redundancy, on the other hand, has a
specific statutory meaning and care needs to taken in establishing whether, if a
redundancy situation exists, any actual dismissal carried out will be regarded as
being by reason of redundancy.
• In the current economic downturn, if dismissals are required by businesses, then
in most instances employers can be reasonably confident in establishing that a
redundancy situation exists. A headcount reduction by reason of redundancy
offers the opportunity for an employer to reflect critically on the skill sets it needs
to retain in order to ride out the economic downturn. Redundancy selections can
be made accordingly, by reference to the skills which the employees at risk have
as well as a variety of other factors including their individual performance.
• Ensure that consistent treatment is applied to all affected employees (including
those away on long-term sickness absence, maternity leave or sabbatical etc) so
as to minimize the risk of claims of discrimination being raised.
• Bear in mind that employees often receive large awards at Tribunal not because
the employer has treated them particularly badly, but rather because
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economically they are substantially out-of-pocket as they are unable to reduce
their loss by securing income from alternative employment. Therefore, the
importance of following the correct procedures and giving due consideration to
the issues set out above should not be underestimated in a recession since
dismissing employees unfairly is likely to prove even more expensive for
employers in these difficult times.
Top Tips
• Don’t procrastinate make a sales call NOW!
• Grab every little five minute wait time during your day to make a sales call
• Never switch off looking for subliminal sales opportunities, then….
• When you become aware of an opportunity, grab it, with both hands, immediately.
No matter how much planning you do, no matter how much research you gather, no
matter how many gadgets and gizmos you possess, the only way you make sales is by
getting in touch with prospects, generating rapport and giving it your best shot. It isn’t
just that there is a time for planning and a time for doing , it is also about making and
taking time for doing every day.
You can’t afford to wait until the product is made before you start to sell it; what if the
guys in market research got it wrong and there is no market for the product? Taiichi
Ohno, the “inventor” of the concept of The 7(+1) Wastes, identified two of the primary
areas of waste in industry as overproduction and overstocked inventories. Both of
these link to creating and holding stocks that aren’t sold…these aren’t assets, they’re
liabilities! You need to be out there talking direct to customers long before the product is
gathering dust in a warehouse.
This goes for services too; the best “problem” to have is the one where you walk out of
the client’s office with the ink drying on the contract and think to yourself, “Gosh, we are
going to have to move fast to put this together in time!” You may be in a role where you
are responsible for the operational delivery of the service as well as the sale, in which
case this is your problem, if not it is the role of someone else in your organisation; so
long as the two of you are communicating there is no reason why this Just-In-Time
approach will cause a problem.
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Grab every opportunity to make sales calls. A sales call doesn’t have to be an hour
long affair; two or three minutes is often more than enough, so make sure that every
day you have to hand (wherever you are) the ability to make a half dozen sales calls.
The prospect won’t know that you are in the car park of his competitor, if you use text or
mobile email the prospect won’t know that you are on the train! By grabbing every 5 or
10 minute waiting time in each day you can make an extra 30 or 40 sales calls a week.
I was running a sales training workshop in a hotel in Leicestershire; I popped into the
gents during the morning coffee break, and could hear a candidate in one of the stalls
talking on his mobile. He was making a sales call from the loo!
Get into the habit of actively looking for sales opportunities in everything you see and
hear. Then grab every opportunity that you spot. What are we talking about? Here are
some real life examples.
The local Basingstoke newspaper carried the story that Chas. A. Blatchford and Sons,
manufacturer of traditional prosthetic limbs, had just bought a competitor and was
moving into the competitor’s area of strength, modern “beachwear” prosthetics. The
woodworking and metal working shops would be phased out over the next six months
as the company invested in plastic and electronics. An outplacement consultancy saw
the news item and contacted Blatchford’s personnel manager and won a contract to
support the craftsmen who were being made redundant.
A salesman was travelling in the train home one evening but hadn’t picked up the
evening paper. Opposite him was a gent reading the London Evening Standard. The
lead story on the front page was all about a large overseas defence contract being
awarded to a UK company and the beneficial effect this would have protecting jobs. On
the gent’s lapel was a pin bearing the logo of the lucky UK defence manufacturer, the
salesman offered his congratulations and the two struck up a conversation, the
salesman offered his business card and was given one in return. He called the next
day, met the following week and got a supply contract about three months later.
By staying active within the Business Information world you can be aware of the likely
and planned evolutions in the marketplace and by judicious use of this information, you
can leverage this to your advantage. Alert Research actively seeks out sector specific
intelligence for you to tap into and use to generate more and better sales productivity.
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Foxing the opposition may sound like an odd way to improve your sales productivity but
it can be a valuable strategic tool. As a supplier you may be convinced that you have
no hope of breaking into your competitor’s biggest account, but if you consistently try,
you keep the competitor busy fighting you, this takes them time and energy that they
may otherwise use to attack your key accounts. You never know, you might even be
successful and actually win business with the prospect!
By staying active within the Business Information world you can be aware of the likely
and planned evolutions in the marketplace and by judicious use of this information, you
can leverage this to your advantage. Alert Research actively seeks out sector specific
intelligence for you to tap into and use to generate more and better sales productivity.
Ray Murphy of Alert Data can be contacted on [email protected] or visit
their website at www.salesresearcher.com Digg this post Recommend on
Facebook Share on Linkedin share via Reddit Share with Stumblers
Tweet about it Subscribe to the comments on this post
Establish a communication plan.
Top Tips
• Search for ways to reduce your “admin” time. You need every available minute to
think, plan and sell.
• If you haven’t yet got a communication plan, in writing, write one within a week.
• When was the last time you actively sought out a new prospect? If it was over a
week ago, do it today.
Establish a communication plan. There is an adage; Do you plan to fail or fail to plan?
This is just as true in sales as it is in house building or war. You probably have a sales
plan already; something that lays out the target revenue generated per month but you
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• Regular general update messages or a newsletter
Regular and planned activity doesn’t stop you from reacting to sales signals, it helps
you to manage those reactions; you can still respond to a “walk in” prospect and seize
that opportunity but you will also find that having and working a communication plan
keeps you on the boil rather than hitting the ‘feast and famine’ cycle that can come
when you reach the end of a customer project and realise that you have let the pipeline
run dry.
Email…is it worth the paper it isn’t printed on? Within your communication plan also
consider the media that will be most effective. 80% of email is reckoned to be spam
and spam filters are notoriously fickle; even a valued client who hangs on your every
word can discover that their spam filter is cutting out your communications. Use email
but also consider the other options;
• Snail mail
• SMS
• Tweets
• Phone calls
• Website updates
Entice the contact” is a good way of thinking about the actual content of your individual
communications; you need to have a message to get across to the contact and it has to
be a bit more interesting than either “Can I have an order” or “I’m still alive”. A snippet
of information that is relevant to the contact is always going to be interesting enough for
them to read; an update about their marketplace or clients, a bit of intelligence about
their competitors, a quote from an influential person in their sphere of interest, an
opinion of their organisation from a respected pundit.
By staying active within the Business Information world you can be aware of the likely
and planned evolutions in the marketplace and by judicious use of this information, you
can leverage this to your advantage. Alert Research actively seeks out sector specific
intelligence for you to tap into and use to generate more and better sales productivity.
Ray Murphy of Alert Data can be contacted on [email protected] or visit
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The traditional elevator pitch, which has been around since the mid 1980s, is a 20
second to 2 minute ‘sell’ that aims to convince a prospect that they want to know more.
As such it has to be unique to you (or your product/service).
A saleswoman, introduced to a prospect at a business seminar, answered the question
“And what do you do?” with a smooth, prepared and comprehensive elevator pitch. The
prospect fixed her with a look and said, “I’ve heard pretty much the same story from
four people already this morning, what makes you different?”
The saleswoman was floored, the moment gone, the prospect unconverted and any
chance of a sale lost.
You also have to hit the right note between grabbing their attention and telling them so
much that you talk yourself out of the sale. It is fair to say that in the 2010s two minutes
is just too long. Go for something nearer 45 seconds.
There are three things a successful elevator pitch needs;
• Hook -something that makes the listener want to listen to the next 40 seconds!
• Story -the content that you want to get across to the listener; this could be about
you, if you are the ‘product’, it could be about the team; if the team is the USP of
your proposition or it could be about the unique benefits offered by your product or
service. You must deliver this with passion; if you aren’t able to enthuse about
your subject, why the heck should you expect your prospect to?
• Request - you have to finish on a strong note; go for a request, be it a business
card, a follow up meeting request or even a request for an order.
You also need to work on your modern versions of the hook of the elevator pitch: the
Tweet, the Linked In update, the voicemail message and the subject line of an email.
Remember that the purpose of the hook is to make the listener want to listen for the rest
of your pitch. Here are two more Ds to help you improve your hook:
Don’t be sound like a salesperson. A sure fire way to fail in this purpose is to sound
like a stereotypical salesperson. You need to be hooking the listener with something to
their benefit, not yours, about their needs, not about your offering.
Differentiate with Information. One way to differentiate your elevator pitch is to use
information that is not about your product or service but is about the prospect and their
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business. For example; if you are talking to a potential buyer from say, Harley-
Davidson, and you can tell them that their competitor, Ducati, just improved their
performance…by using your service or product, this will undoubtedly be of interest.
Another way to differentiate with information is to simply share industry information that
will be of direct interest to the prospect by virtue of being relevant. For example, if you
are contacting a prospect in Birmingham City Council and you can give the person an
update on the legal challenge between Bristol City Council and UNISON over pensions,
the prospect will almost certainly want to read/listen to your message.
Different situations call for different pitches. If you meet someone at an industry
exhibition and they are wearing a badge with their name title and company on it, you
probably wouldn’t use the same pitch as you would if you met someone at the golf club.
Think about how you can adapt the basic formula of hook, story, request to suit different
situations. If you don’t, you’ll either say the wrong thing or say nothing at all! Digg
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C – Connectivity
Top tips
• Use all available and appropriate media; do something today, write, email, fax,
phone, SMS, tweet or link in.
• Make a connection plan that covers all your contacts at least once a month
• Set aside a scheduled time each day or week just for connecting
Connectivity increases conversions. There is a quotation that “If you invent a better
mousetrap the world will beat a path to your door”. It’s rubbish. How will the world
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know that you have built a better mousetrap? How will they know how to find you?
How will they know what your mousetrap costs? Why would people with no mouse
problem want a mousetrap?
If you want to successfully sell you have to connect with prospective buyers, and
connecting is a two way process. There is an acronym used in marketing which is
AIDA. The A stands for Awareness (the IDA will be covered in later releases of this
series). You have to make the customer Aware of your existence and of the existence
of your products or services. You have to then keep them aware; in the 21st Century
people are exposed to more information in a single Sunday paper than a 17 th Century
landowner would be likely to read in his entire adult life. Large amounts of the
information we see and hear each day simply don’t stick; they are forgotten within a
short period. Consequently you have to keep drip-feeding people with messages inorder to remain close to the surface of their conscious memory. Why do you want to be
close to the surface of conscious memory? Because again, in the 21st Century the pace
of life is fast; when a manager discovers a need he or she wants to fulfil that need
quickly. When a manager need a trainer, if the first words that pop into his or her mind
are “Rus Slater of coach –and-courses.com” the manager doesn’t need to google or
look in their business card index for a potential supplier. The supplier who comes to
mind first is probably the one they’ll call.
So how do you connect with prospects and customers? The options range from the
traditional to the cutting edge and from the glaringly obvious to the subtle.
• You can invite them to Corporate hospitality such as the races or the rugby.
• You can entertain them on a One to One basis for a meal or a drink or golf.
• You can Network with them at the meetings of any trade associations or bodies
that are relevant to both of you.
• You can regularly send them relevant News cuttings that are of value to them.
• You can deliberately meet them at Exhibitions and Expos where you or they are
running a stand.
• You can call them to Catch up with what is happening in their life (Note here that
you want to find about them NOT tell them about you; if they declare an infestation
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of mice then obviously you can tell them about your invention, but avoid just
calling on the pretext of telling them your news.)
• You can Tweet, Face-book, Link In
If you want to continue to sell to customers you have to stay connected to them, so youwill probably need to use a variety of these approaches over the course of the year with
a variety of customers and prospects. This connectivity increases the Awareness of
you and your organisation, the next stage in AIDA is the ‘I’ which stands for Interest and
in this instance it is a double ended Interest;
1. You need to take an interest in them and their current situation in order to find out
whether there is any value in trying….
2. to create an interest in your product or service
Always remember to do Number 1 first; otherwise you are telling someone something
they have no interest in and that is boring!
By staying active within the Business Information world you can be aware of the likely
and planned evolutions in the marketplace and by judicious use of this information, you
can leverage this to your advantage. Digg this post Recommend on Facebook
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– Buyers and Businesses Evolve
1. Top tips
• Find out about the individual buyer at your client; not just their name and job title
but what makes them tick.
• Cultivate other contacts within the client; they are a source of valuable information
for you; this will allow you to beat the competition when an opportunity arises.
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• Stay abreast of industry sector developments; this allows you to anticipate rather
than react.
is for ‘Buyers and Businesses Evolve’. No, the nice people at Sales Researcher haven’t
lost their marbles and aren’t suggesting that people are developing gills or webbed feet.
But both buyers and business evolve nothing stays the same for long in the world of
commerce and industry and business information can help you to stay ahead.
Buyers evolve in several ways; the organizations changes the person who buys from
you, or the buyer changes his or her wants and desires for your type of product or
service. You need to keep abreast of personnel changes at the client or prospective
client. If an organization announces a change of personnel there is a sales opportunity;
new people may have no loyalty to past suppliers so they may be open to change, or
they may actively want to change. By you being aware of this opportunity you can tap
directly into this opportunity with a ‘welcome’ message and an offer. Incumbent buyers
also evolve in their wants and desires from the products or services they buy. This can
be as straightforward as ‘we are having a cost cutting review and need less expensive
products’ to ‘we have won a big contract and will need to increase our intake’ through to
‘I personally have changed my attitude in life and now want more ethical or
environmental products’
Or even
I had been courting a buyer in a potentially large and lucrative account for over a year to
no avail; it seemed that he just didn’t like me. I started to research and send him
clippings from the ‘movers and shakers’ columns, announcements that told of people in
his field moving to new jobs and new employers, the market at the time was buoyant
and there was so much migration going on I was able to send him a couple each week.
After about four months I read an article that he himself had just moved. Like a flash I
got in touch with his replacement and won a small pilot contract. I also sent him a
‘Congratulations’ card…..to which I received for the first time ever an invitation to bid!
Buyers also have access to an increasing wealth of information online and are taking a
much more flexible view of the ways and timescales in which they want to buy. Doing a
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solid sales pitch to one person is no longer enough to secure new or existing business.
Interspersing your infrequent sales pitches with real help for a customer buying team
can work brilliantly though. You need to understand what are your buyers critical
priorities, and what else do they feel they need to know when making buying decisions.
What knock-on issues are they and their team considering? You also need to establish
connections across the team….everyone in the team counts, even the person who
seems to be low down the pecking order. By including these people in your Business
Information strategy you can influence the people who can influence the buying the
decision.
People don’t want just to be sold to any more, they want to make right buying decisions.
Giving them valuable information that shows you understand their challenges and that
you have expertise that can help is vitally important.
Businesses evolve too, P&O Ferries ply the English Channel and there is nothing pacific
or oriental about that stretch of water. British Gas supplies electricity, Norwich Union is
no longer a Union and isn’t confined to Norwich (Yes, they changed their name to Aviva,
and think how many sales people in design agencies, printers, advertising firms and
sign writers hit their targets on the back of that evolution [even Paul Whitehouse’s
agent!)
By staying active within the Business Information world you can be aware of the likelyand planned evolutions in the marketplace and by judicious use of this information, you
can leverage this to your advantage. Alert Research actively seeks out sector specific
intelligence for you to tap into and use to generate more and better sales productivity.
Ray Murphy of Sales Researcher can be contacted at [email protected]
or visit their website at www.salesresearcher.com Digg this post Recommend
on Facebook Share on Linkedin share via Reddit Share with Stumblers
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A – Account Research
Top Tips to help you to maximize sales profitability on an existing account
• Keep your name uppermost in their mind; make contact at least once a month, not
always about the product but other areas of interest
• Ask your contacts about referrals to other departments and sister companies.
Draw up a map of the relationships. Act on them.
• Foresee changes in their industry – find one good website about the sector and
sign up for an industry newsletter – speed read them.
Improving Your Sales Productivity
Is for ‘Account’ research. There was a time when life was simpler and if you had
a customer, you had a customer for a long time; you might speak to the buyer once a
quarter and you might actually meet face to face once a year, but otherwise you could
just pick up the order every now and then and everything was fine.
Sadly things ain’t what they used to be! In to the 2010s the environment is ever
changing; your customers’ customers are making new demands, the government is
adding new legislation, your customers’ industries are developing daily and your
business is under constant threat from your competitors. You have to ensure that youdon’t suffer from ‘Red Queen Syndrome’; if you stand still your customers will be moving
away and your competitors will move ahead. You have to keep moving and in the sales
business, knowledge is power.
Even if you are on a Preferred Supplier List, it is worth being aware that you are only
‘preferred’ and probably only one on the ‘list’; the other organizations on the list are not
only your competitors but they are your most dangerous competitors; they, like you, are
already close to the client, don’t let them get closer still! There are lots of examples of
companies investing many thousands of pounds to get through the tender process to
get on a PSL only to get virtually no actual sales from that list once they are on it.
In order to maximize your sales opportunities with clients and prospects alike you need
to keep talking to them so that your name is never slipping to the back of (or out of) their
mind. You probably can’t justify (and neither can they) spending two days a week
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wining and dining them at corporate hospitality events so in order to keep talking to
them you need to have something to say other than just “Hi, how’s it going?” By really
keeping your finger on the business information pulse you will always have a useful
snippet of information to use as a hook on which to hang a reason for contacting
someone, even if the information you are providing isn’t directly relevant to the product
or service you are selling.
There is a range of business information that you need to keep on top of to give you the
competitive edge;
People information; who does what, who is moving to where, whose star is on the rise
and whose is on the wane, who is getting media exposure
Technical information; which company has invented or launched a new product or
process, what ‘problems’ are rearing their ugly heads in an industry, what challenges
are being identified or overcome
Financial information; who is winning or losing big contracts, who is offering big
contracts, whose report and accounts are coming out and what are the predictions.
Legislative and legal information; what legislation is due for consideration or enactment
that will affect the sector, what legal judgments are being made that will effect activities
Networking information; what industry seminars or expos are happening, who isspeaking at them, what are they saying and how is that perceived in the market.
Competitor information; you need to keep an eye on the people who are out to steal
your bread and butter, so you need to keep an eye on which of your competitors are
expanding, what services or products are they marketing, where are they
speaking/exhibiting at trade shows, what new technology are they buying.
Some of this information will come to you almost intuitively; you and your staff are active
in your industry so you’ll get to hear things on the grapevine. However, you undoubtedly
have many other things to do and you can’t expect to pick up more than a small minority
of the intelligence that is out there.
By staying active within the Business Information world you can be aware of the likely
and planned evolutions in the marketplace and by judicious use of this information, you
can leverage this to your advantage. Sales Researcher actively seeks out sector
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specific intelligence for you to tap into and use to generate more and better sales
productivity. Ray Murphy of Sales Researcher can be contacted at
[email protected] or visit our website at www.salesresearcher
change management
organizational and personal change management, process, plans, change
management and business development tips
Here are some rules for effective management of change. Managing organizational
change will be more successful if you apply these simple principles. Achieving personal
change will be more successful too if you use the same approach where relevant.
Change management entails thoughtful planning and sensitive implementation, and
above all, consultation with, and involvement of, the people affected by the changes. If
you force change on people normally problems arise. Change must be realistic,
achievable and measurable. These aspects are especially relevant to managing
personal change. Before starting organizational change, ask yourself: What do we want
to achieve with this change, why, and how will we know that the change has been
achieved? Who is affected by this change, and how will they react to it? How much of
this change can we achieve ourselves, and what parts of the change do we need help
with? These aspects also relate strongly to the management of personal as well as
organizational change.
See also the modern principles which underpin successful change.
Refer also to Psychological Contract theory, which helps explain the complex
relationship between an organization and its employees.
Do not 'sell' change to people as a way of accelerating 'agreement' and implementation.
'Selling' change to people is not a sustainable strategy for success, unless your aim is
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to be bitten on the bum at some time in the future when you least expect it. When
people listen to a management high-up 'selling' them a change, decent diligent folk will
generally smile and appear to accede, but quietly to themselves, they're thinking, "No
bloody chance mate, if you think I'm standing for that load of old bollocks you've another
think coming…" (And that's just the amenable types - the other more recalcitrant types
will be well on the way to making their own particular transition from gamekeepers to
poachers.)
Instead, change needs to be understood and managed in a way that people can cope
effectively with it. Change can be unsettling, so the manager logically needs to be a
settling influence.
Check that people affected by the change agree with, or at least understand, the need
for change, and have a chance to decide how the change will be managed, and to be
involved in the planning and implementation of the change. Use face-to-face
communications to handle sensitive aspects of organisational change management
(see Mehrabian's research on conveying meaning and understanding). Encourage your
managers to communicate face-to-face with their people too if they are helping you
manage an organizational change. Email and written notices are extremely weak at
conveying and developing understanding.
If you think that you need to make a change quickly, probe the reasons - is the urgency
real? Will the effects of agreeing a more sensible time-frame really be more disastrous
than presiding over a disastrous change? Quick change prevents proper consultation
and involvement, which leads to difficulties that take time to resolve.
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For complex changes, refer to the process of project management, and ensure that you
augment this with consultative communications to agree and gain support for the
reasons for the change. Involving and informing people also creates opportunities for
others to participate in planning and implementing the changes, which lightens your
burden, spreads the organizational load, and creates a sense of ownership and
familiarity among the people affected.
See also the excellent free decision-making template, designed by Sharon Drew
Morgen, with facilitative questions for personal and organizational innovation and
change.
To understand more about people's personalities, and how different people react
differently to change, see the personality styles section.
For organizational change that entails new actions, objectives and processes for a
group or team of people, use workshops to achieve understanding, involvement, plans,
measurable aims, actions and commitment. Encourage your management team to use
workshops with their people too if they are helping you to manage the change.
You should even apply these principles to very tough change like making people
redundant, closures and integrating merged or acquired organizations. Bad news needs
even more careful management than routine change. Hiding behind memos and middle
managers will make matters worse. Consulting with people, and helping them to
understand does not weaken your position - it strengthens it. Leaders who fail to consult
and involve their people in managing bad news are perceived as weak and lacking in
integrity. Treat people with humanity and respect and they will reciprocate.
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its people currently have the 'wrong' mindset, which is never, ever, the case. If people
are not approaching their tasks or the organization effectively, then the organization has
the wrong mindset, not the people. Change such as new structures, policies, targets,
acquisitions, disposals, re-locations, etc., all create new systems and environments,
which need to be explained to people as early as possible, so that people's involvement
in validating and refining the changes themselves can be obtained.
Whenever an organization imposes new things on people there will be difficulties.
Participation, involvement and open, early, full communication are the important factors.
Workshops are very useful processes to develop collective understanding, approaches,
policies, methods, systems, ideas, etc. See the section on workshops on the website.
Staff surveys are a helpful way to repair damage and mistrust among staff - provided
you allow allow people to complete them anonymously, and provided you publish and
act on the findings.
Management training, empathy and facilitative capability are priority areas - managers
are crucial to the change process - they must enable and facilitate, not merely convey
and implement policy from above, which does not work.
You cannot impose change - people and teams need to be empowered to find their own
solutions and responses, with facilitation and support from managers, and tolerance and
compassion from the leaders and executives. Management and leadership style and
behaviour are more important than clever process and policy. Employees need to be
able to trust the organization.
The leader must agree and work with these ideas, or change is likely to be very painful,
and the best people will be lost in the process.
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change management principles
1. At all times involve and agree support from people within system (system =
environment, processes, culture, relationships, behaviours, etc., whether
personal or organisational).
2. Understand where you/the organisation is at the moment.
3. Understand where you want to be, when, why, and what the measures will be for
having got there.
4. Plan development towards above No.3 in appropriate achievable measurable
stages.
5. Communicate, involve, enable and facilitate involvement from people, as early
and openly and as fully as is possible.
John P Kotter's 'eight steps to successful change'
American John P Kotter (b 1947) is a Harvard Business School professor and leading
thinker and author on organizational change management. Kotter's highly regarded
books 'Leading Change' (1995) and the follow-up 'The Heart Of Change' (2002)
describe a helpful model for understanding and managing change. Each stage
acknowledges a key principle identified by Kotter relating to people's response and
approach to change, in which people see, feel and then change.
Kotter's eight step change model can be summarised as:
1. Increase urgency - inspire people to move, make objectives real and relevant.
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ideas on illustrating change management issues
When people are confronted with the need or opportunity to change, especially when it's
'enforced', as they see it, by the organization, they can become emotional. So can the
managers who try to manage the change. Diffusing the emotional feelings, taking a step
back, encouraging objectivity, are important to enabling sensible and constructive
dialogue. To this end, managers and trainers can find it helpful to use analogies to
assist themselves and other staff to look at change in a more detached way.
On this site there are several illustrations which can be used for this purpose,
depending on the type of change faced, and the aspect that is to be addressed. Here
are a few examples, useful for team meetings, presentations, one-to-one counselling or
self-reminder, particularly to help empathise with others facing change:
On the Stories section look at 'Murphy's Plough' (negative thinking = obstacle to
change) and 'We've always done it that way' (not questioning need for change). Both
good aids for understanding and explaining why people - all of us - find it difficult to
change assumptions, conditioned thinking, habit, routine, etc.
Look also at the Monkey Story, as to how policies, practices, attitudes and even cultures
can become established, and how the tendency is to accept rather than question.
Just as the state of 'unconscious incompetence', needs to be developed into 'conscious
competence' to provide a basis for training, so a person's subjective emotion needs to
be developed into objectivity before beginning to help them handle change. None of us
is immune from subjectivity, ignorance or denial. The lessons and reminders found in
stories and analogies can help to show a new clear perspective.
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Aesop's Fables section has other short and beautifully simple analogies useful for
illustrating aspects of causing or dealing with change, for example (all on the Aesop's
Fables section):
The Crow and the Pitcher (change being provoked by pressure or necessity)
The North Wind and the Sun (gentle persuasion rather than force)
The Lion and The Ass (enforced change - might is right)
The Crab and his Mother (lead by example and evidence - or you'll not change people)
The Miller, his Son and the Ass (no single change is likely to please everyone -
everyone wants something different)
The Oak and the Reeds (the need for tolerance - changer or 'changees')
The Rich Man and the Tanner, (time softens change - given time people get used to
things)
The Ass and the Mule (agree to reasonable change now or you can risk far worse
enforced change in the future)
job reorganization, task analysis, job transfer due to IT development or
outsourcing etc
First see the modern principles which underpin successful change. It's not always easy
or perhaps even possible to consider matters at such depth, but try to if you can, or try
to persuade others above in their ivory towers to think about the fundamental integrity of
the situation, instead of short-term profit, or satisfying greedy shareholders.
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There are various approaches to task analysis and job reorganization, whether
prompted by outsourcing or IT development. Generally change process of this sort is
pragmatic, and it's difficult to identify transferable processes, templates, etc. Examples
of projects don't generally find their way into the public domain, although the likelihood
is increasing of government project pdf's becoming available on the web as this sort of
information is increasingly required to be available to the public. IT vendor case studies
and trade journals of the IT and outsourcing sectors can also provide indicators of best
practice or transferable processes. There are some useful software tools now available,
which are helpful, especially if the change involves a high level of complexity and a
large scale.
As a broad guide when managing this sort of change, these aspects are important for
the process:
• Really understand and clarify mutual expectations about the level of detail and cost
that the project requires. Sometimes it's possible to see it what you need on a table
napkin. The organisational context, and other strategic drivers, personalities and
politics are often more significant influences than the task analysis.
• If you are a consultant or project manager, agree expectations on a pragmatic basis.
Agree the templates and systems to be used and the the level of report data required
for the decisions to be made.
• Assume that the situation can be improved - it generally can be, so while it's essential
to capture all activities based on current jobs, many of these can be absorbed,
superseded, updated, etc., when you begin to look at the ideal situation ('blank sheet
of paper') possibilities, so;
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• A new overview analysis enables fresh unencumbered look at the whole, which
suggests new and better ways of doing things. A flip chart and a few creative minds
are the main pre-requisites. It makes a great workshop session and is good for
creating ownership and buy-in for major change. It's a good process also to cascade
down to departments to bring out ideas for improved processes and new ways of
doing things.
• In terms of capturing all current processes and inputs, the individual job analysis
templates need to enable jobs to be broken down into sub-tasks, and elements within
sub-tasks.
• This is a tricky one, and not practicable in certain X-Theory cultures, nevertheless, be
aware of the high probability of upsetting people whose jobs are threatened by
change and try to develop a way of anticipating and reducing damaging fall-out. Treat
people at risk with the respect they deserve and avoid keeping them in the dark -
involve threatened people wherever possible so they can see what's happening and
why. If possible encourage the executive team to take the same humane approach,
and try to establish counselling and support resources if none exist already.
• Analyses are more helpful if they identify critical vs essential task elements - this will
help you to help the decision-makers to be more pragmatic (not least because by
applying pressure to some of the 'essential' elements will reveal them to be habitual
dispensable or traditional replaceable elements).
• Flow diagrams identify subtask linkage (inter and intra), variation and chronology.
• Behaviour needs identifying aside from processes.
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Age is another factor. Erik Erikson's fascinating Psychosocial Theory is helpful for
understanding that people's priorities and motivations are different depending on their
stage of life.
The more you understand people's needs, the better you will be able to manage
change.
Be mindful of people's strengths and weaknesses. Not everyone welcomes change.
Take the time to understand the people you are dealing with, and how and why they feel
like they do, before you take action.
business development driven change
Business development potentially includes everything involved with the quality of the
business or the organization. Business development planning first requires establishing
the business development aims, and then formulating a business development strategy,
which would comprise some or all of the following methods of development.
•
sales development
• new product development
• new market development
• business organization, shape, structure and processes development (eg,
outsourcing, e-business, etc)
• tools, equipment, plant, logistics and supply-chain development
• people, management and communications (capabilities and training) development
• strategic partnerships and distribution routes development
• international development
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• acquisitions and disposals
Generally business development is partly scientific, and partly subjective, based on the
feelings and wishes of the business owners or CEO. There are so many ways to
develop a business which achieve growth and improvement, and rarely is just one of
these a single best solution. Business development is what some people call a 'black
art', ie., difficult to analyse, and difficult to apply a replicable process.
fast changing environments
Planning, implementing and managing change in a fast-changing environment is
increasingly the situation in which most organizations now work.
Dynamic environments such as these require dynamic processes, people, systems and
culture, especially for managing change successfully, notably effectively optimising
organizational response to market opportunities and threats.
Key elements for success:
• Plan long-term broadly - a sound strategic vision, not a specific detailed plan (the
latter is impossible to predict reliably). Detailed five years plans are out of date two
weeks after they are written. Focus on detail for establishing and measuring delivery
of immediate actions, not medium-to-long-term plans.
• Establish forums and communicating methods to enable immediate review and
decision-making. Participation of interested people is essential. This enables their
input to be gained, their approval and commitment to be secured, and automatically
takes care of communicating the actions and expectations.
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Actually 'troubleshooting' isn't a great word - it scares people. Use 'facilitator' or 'helper'
instead. It sets a more helpful and cooperative tone.
On which point, you could well find that the main issue will be people's resistance and
defensiveness to someone coming in to their organisation do what you are doing. When
you overcome that challenge, then you can start comparing what's happening with what
the organisation sets out to do (mission, values, goals, priorities, targets, key
performance indicators, processes, measures); how the people feel about things (staff
turnover, retention, morale, attitudes); and how customers and suppliers feel about
things too (actually go out and visit customers, and ex-customers particularly).
You must observe protocols very diligently - introduce yourself properly to people and
explain who you are and what you are doing. Don't assume that your task gives you the
right to be secretive, or to have access to anyone or anything without permission. Ask
for help. Ask for introductions. Ask for permission. Be polite and courteous. Respect
people more than you would do normally, because they will be sensitive,
understandably so.
Look at the Sharon Drew Morgen facilitation method, which helps with the style and
approach you should use. You must aim to help, enable and facilitate discovery and
clarity, not work in splendid isolation, as an outsider, who's come to 'sort things out'.
And then be led by the people there as to what can be improved. You should adopt the
role of a researcher and enabler rather than a problem solver.
Plan lots of questions that will help people to tell you how they feel about things -
customers and staff and suppliers - and what they think can be done to improve things.
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Avoid asking 'why' unless they're really trusting you and working with you. Used early,
'why' puts people on the defence and you'll not find out anything.
Look at the customer relationship materials as well - customers will tell you what's best
to focus on, and will give you an early opportunity to facilitate some improvement
responses. Also look at the employee motivation survey material.
It's likely that you'll have to write a report and recommendations afterwards, in which
case try wherever possible to involve the people in what you say about them. Let there
be no surprises. Be constructive. Accentuate the positive. Be straight and open with
people.
Enjoy the experience. Be respectful and helpful to people and they'll be respectful and
helpful to you.
see also
• The Psychological Contract
• John Fisher's personal change theory
• Conscious Competence - a personal change model in learning and development
• Elisabeth Kübler-Ross's Five Stages of Grief - primarily for dealing with death and
bereavement, but helpful for understanding change reaction to other types of major
shock and loss
• Modern principles which underpin successful change in organisations
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