Is your salesperson really selling?
If you have a salesperson, I challenge you to try
this simple time and motion study.
Follow her around for a week and take note of the different
activities in which she engages and the percentage of her working hours that are
devoted to each.
My guess is that youll discover something like the following:
-
Sixty percent of her time is spent prospecting (looking for someone
to sell to).
-
Thirty percent of her time is spent face-to-face with qualified
prospects (actually selling).
-
And 10% of her time is spent servicing existing accounts (looking
after people to whom she has already sold).
Now, ask yourself a question: is your salesperson investing her time in
the most effective manner?
To answer that question, lets examine each of the activities in
which she engages, starting with servicing existing accounts.
In my experience, using salespeople to perform customer service duties is
a little like trying to kill a butterfly with a hammer: you waste resources, and make a
hell of a mess in the process!
The fact is, the best salespeople tend not to be great at customer service
and visa versa.
Better to give your customer service duties to a full-time,
telephone-based customer service person wholl do the job properly, for around half
the salary.
Your salesperson can now divide the time she saves between prospecting
(now approximately 70% of her available time) and selling (now 30%).
Lets take a look now at prospecting is
this activity
really an effective use of your salespersons time?
If youre paying your salesperson $70,000 a year, and this person has
20 timeslots a week that she could theoretically fill with appointments, 14 of these slots
are currently being spent looking for people to sell to in the remaining six!
Or, to put it another way, each appointment is costing you (in salary
alone) $243, instead of the $73 youd be paying per appointment if all of the
available slots were filled. Is this so bad?
The answers no
and yes!
No, its not unrealistic to invest $243 to set an
appointment for a $70,000 a year salesperson. But this calculation doesnt take
opportunity cost into account. In other words, whats it costing in lost
sales revenue to have your salesperson perform only six out of a possible 20 appointments?
Lets assume that a typical customer is worth $10,000 to you
(lifetime value) and that your salesperson successfully closes one sale
for each six appointments.
Right now, your salesperson is performing six appointments a week
which equates to one sale, worth $10,000 (or $1,670 revenue per appointment).
If you can find another way to invest that available $243 per appointment,
such that each of your salespersons 20 available timeslots is filled, your
salesperson will now be performing an additional 14 appointments lifting revenues
to $33,400 a week. (That should just about cover your customer service persons
salary!)
Therefore, the opportunity cost of having your salesperson do
her own prospecting is a massive $23,400 a week!
But thats not the half of it!
If your salesperson is no longer setting her own
appointments, who is? And whats the likely impact on her closing ratio?
Lets assume that you were to use advertising to generate inquiries
youll find examples of lead-generation advertisements in this (and previous)
editions of AdVerb. And lets assume that you give your new customer service person
the job of setting appointments for your salesperson.
Our experience is that responses to a lead-generation advertisement placed
in a metropolitan newspaper are likely to cost you somewhere in the region of $30 each. If
your customer service person appoints one in five, each appointment will cost you $150.
So will your salespersons closing rate suffer if her appointments
are set for her? In our experience, no. The fact is, salespeoples closing rates
typically more than double when appointments are set with respondents to a
lead-generation campaign.
And theres a simple reason why: those prospects who set appointments
after responding to an advertisement and then reading an information pack (usually
the offer in a lead-generation advertisement) are significantly better qualified
than those appointed by a salesperson using traditional prospecting methods.
If we assume that your salespersons closing rate increases by only
50%, she is now making five sales a week, worth a total of $50,000.
So lets take a look at what weve achieved with our little
hypothetical re-engineering exercise.
Well, weve increased your costs. A good telephone-based customer
service person will cost around $35,000 a year. And your lead-generation campaign will
cost you $150 per appointment. (Accordingly, your costs have risen by around $3,700 a
week.)
But weve also increased your revenues from $10,000 a week, to
$50,000 a week.
There are 40,000 good reasons to grab a notebook and a calculator
and spend a week spying on your salesperson (with her permission, of course)!
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