Most sales structures, however, haven’t come under the critical review of the company’s management. Typically, the structure slowly takes shape over time. Decisions are often made with heavy input from the salespeople, almost always in response to a single event. These decisions slowly become codified into the company’s written and unwritten structure.
As a result, many sales structures are vestiges of years gone by, the legacy of salespeople who may not even be with the company today.
Why do you have the sales compensation plan that you have, for example? Is it because you crafted a strategic plan that directly compensates the sales force for achieving the company’s objective? Or, is it because it’s the plan you inherited?
Why do some salespeople come into the office every week? Is it because you have determined that this is the most valuable use of their time? Or, is it because that’s just the way some of them like to do it?
Why is it that some of your salespeople are highly organized, with well-designed file systems and effective ways to track their interactions with their customers, while others continue to get by with scraps of paper and yellow pads? Is it because you have invested in a system that helps them become well-organized and information-savvy? Or, is it because that’s just how it’s worked
out?
Can you see the point? Many of these structural issues – spoken and unspoken rules about how the salesperson does the job – have evolved by the salespeople in response to their own specific situations.
And most sales managers are oblivious to the impact of these decisions on the productivity and effectiveness of the salesperson.
I recently had lunch with a friend — an entrepreneur who had successfully started and run a number of businesses. As we were discussing the pros and cons of organizing a sales force for his latest venture, he remarked that he has learned how easy it is to gradually cede control of the company to the sales force. One decision at a time, made in response to the passionate pleas of an individual
salesperson, would form, over time, the structure that governed the sales side of the business.
I was impressed with his insight. That very observation described the number one mistake that sales managers make – they accept the historically evolved status quo for the structure, and don’t invest time in focusing it to provide the environment for sales success.
Read more about Sales Managers’ Most Common Mistakes:
https://www.davekahle.com/sales-managers-mistakes-2/
https://www.davekahle.com/sales-managers-mistakes-3/