1. TRAINING!
Sales is a sophisticated profession where the skill set of the highest performers is significantly greater than that of the mediocre. And the unfortunate, ugly truth is that most B2B sales people don’t know how to do their jobs well. They have never been instructed in the best practices of the best sales people.
They have struggled to learn on their own, on the job, through trial and error. Some of them have arrived at routines that have been successful for them, but most have not.
You can change the compensation plan all you want, but if you don’t instruct the
sales people in how to do the thing that you are paying them to do, your results will be considerably less than spectacular.
Here’s an example. Let’s say that you want to gain new customers. So, you change your compensation plan to pay a premium for new
customers. That’s good, and some sales people will, as a result, put more effort to acquiring new customers.
But, that doesn’t mean that any of them know how to do this well. While some will be attracted to the income, the lack of comfort associated with how
to do it will be a far greater force, holding them back.
If you pay them a premium to create new customers, and then train them specifically in how to do that, you’ll find that your change in sales force compensation will make a dramatic improvement in their
behavior.
The same can be said for any specific behavior that you want to encourage through a revised sales force compensation plan. It won’t do you much good to emphasis key account penetration, key product line sales, etc., unless you take the time to show
them how to do what you want them to do.
2. Management Practices
The practices and routines followed by sales management can have a great impact on the performance of the sales person. For example, if you change your compensation plan to emphasize acquiring new accounts, and your sales manager never measures the number of new accounts acquired, never measures the various steps in that process, never asks the sales person about it, nor holds him accountable in any way, your change in sales force compensation will be
ineffective.
Sales managers need to measure the progress on every performance indicator encouraged by the compensation plan. They need to have regular meetings with each sales person in which the topic of conversation is dictated by the sales manager, and focuses on
specific progress on each performance indicator, and...[Click Here To Read The Entire Article Online]