Share the Wealth
If you've got one superstar handling all your top accounts, it's time to redistribute the work--and the risk.
Would you knowingly endanger the viability of your business? Not
likely, but many entrepreneurs inadvertently risk financial life
and limb by placing all their top accounts with just one great
seller. According to Susan Kearney, CEO and president of
sales-effectiveness company SalesTraction, located in Falls Church,
Virginia, putting all your customer eggs in just one rep's
basket is sales suicide. Kearney elaborates, "It's
dangerous for one rep to have several top accounts in any size
business, and it can be suicide in a small company where a majority
of the revenue and referrals flow from a small number of
clients." Kearney goes on to say the misstep is a common one
for entrepreneurs who "hire a few [salespeople] with great
Rolodexes, turn the selling effort over to them, and focus on other
[aspects of the business]." To protect your company's accounts-and to ensure that having
one top sales rep leave your company doesn't end up inflicting
a mortal wound-follow these steps to avoid the dreaded "all
your eggs in one basket" syndrome: - Spread sales accounts around. This strategy has worked
for T. Gregory Bender, founder of Message Logix Inc. in Rye, New
York: "Spreading major accounts across a variety of
salespeople can limit the risk factors regarding employee churn and
empower the entire sales force." Bender, whose business sells
CampaignBuilder-e-mail broadcast communications
software-adds, "When a company is growing at a fast clip,
it's especially hard not to rely on its primary star
salesperson. A corporate sales manager needs to take a step back
during fast growth periods and reassign major accounts to other
salespeople in order to protect those assets." Bender, who
manages six sales reps, anticipates his company will bring in $1.5
million in 2004 sales.
Kearney agrees that sharing the riches among the sales force
makes good sense, and she urges entrepreneurs to "balance your
revenue portfolio as you balance your investment portfolio."
Kearney says the balance should be assessed yearly, when a sales
manager can determine what percentage of revenue he or she is
comfortable having in the hands of one sales rep. If it turns out
that one salesperson is responsible for a disproportionate share of
accounts-and company revenue-territories may need to be
rejiggered. - Assign more than one rep to each strategic account.
Message Logix assigns each account a major sales rep, an associate
sales rep and a technical contact, in addition to Bender keeping an
eye on each customer. Bender, 42, explains his team approach:
"The touch points you build with customers help with customer
retention no matter what happens with your salespeople."
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"Be sure other members of the sales team-folks who
implement, customize, deliver, install, support and train-know they
are responsible for understanding key clients and developing
ongoing relationships with them," says Kearney. "These
relationships, which are often more stable, remain after a sales
rep leaves." - Keep the sales manager involved. Kearney advises that a
sales manager should stay close to the ground in managing accounts.
She believes that the sales manager should be involved in all key
accounts, and that he or she "should build strong
relationships at the most senior levels of the customer
organization through quarterly check-in calls or regular
face-to-face meetings."
Bender sees two reasons for a sales manager to closely monitor
accounts. He believes that a leader who stays in tight contact with
major accounts ensures "sales and service stability."
Another bonus, according to Bender: "Customers feel very
important when the CEO or sales manager checks in [with
them]."
Kimberly L. McCall ("Marketing
Angel") is president of McCall Media & Marketing Inc.
and author of Sell It, Baby! Marketing Angel's 37
Down-to-Earth & Practical How-To's on Marketing, Branding
& Sales.
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