Q. Being a branch manager and having six reps and no sales manager, how do you delegate some of their requests back to them without discouraging their efforts?
A. Begin with clear expectations. What you expect the sales person to do ought not to be a secret, nor a matter for negotiations. In the absence of clear
and specific expectations, the sales people will default to what feels comfortable to them. So, you’ll naturally have them coming into the office to do their quotes, source product and make phone calls. If you haven’t indicated otherwise, they‘ll naturally fill that time with other stuff to do, and some of that involves you!
So, the first step to getting control of your own time is to make sure the sales people know what is their job, and what is yours. In our Kahle Way® Sales Management System, for example, we teach managers to create three to five annual goals for each sales person, and then to manage those with a monthly one-on-one conference.
When you do that, you communicate specifically what you expect of each sales person. By investing quality time up front, you reduce the
‘low quality’ time that the sales person demands of you down the road.
Now, before we go too far, let’s stop and think about this a
bit. One of the biggest time wasters for sales people is the amount of clerical work that they are often expected to do. These typically include things like looking up prices, sourcing new products, creating quotes, managing price increases, checking on back orders,
delivering
literature, etc.