Do Sales Managers Add Value?
A recent survey of more than
3000 salespeople reveals that
the majority of sales managers
are not driving business growth,
or any other critical business
objectives.
You
may recall
Shakespeare's
quote from Henry VI: "The first thing we do,
let's kill all the lawyers." which was of
course a somewhat harsh approach to the
problem. And of course I am not actually
recommending that we kill all sales
managers. But I do have serious doubts about
the actual business contribution of many sales
managers. They tend to be very well
compensated, and many were highly productive
as salespeople, but how do you truly measure
the ROI of your sales management?
You may say that sales
results will prove a sales manager's worth
(or lack thereof) but how do you assess the
manager's real contribution to those
results. If your entire sales management
team vanished one morning, would your sales
volume decline significantly? Maybe...or
maybe not.
Please
understand that this has nothing to do with
my personal feelings or opinions about sales
managers. I have many good friends who are
sales managers and I truly respect the work
they do. However, there is significant
evidence that in many cases, sales managers
are not driving sales growth or adding
other tangible value for their businesses.
Frontline
Learning conducted a survey of more than
3000 salespeople in a broad range of markets
and industries. The survey results were both
interesting and troubling:
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before publication.
-
56% of salespeople
reported that their direct manager adds "little
value" or "no value" in helping them achieve their
sales objectives.
-
62% of salespeople do
not provide their sales manager with accurate
information regarding prospects and sales call
results.
-
58% consider their
direct sales manager either a "necessary evil" or a
"shameless waste of resources."
Whether or not these perspectives are valid and objective, just the fact that
salespeople have these opinions is problematic. Even if
you have a highly competent, motivated and hard working
sales manager, how is he or she supposed to be effective
when dealing with a sales force that has such a low
opinion of sales managers? And, even more disconcerting,
what if the salespeople are right?
What if We Just Get Rid of Them?
In 2005 a US manufacturer of industrial equipment decided
to dramatically scale back the ranks of their sales management team.
They had determined that the sales management function have evolved into
essentially a data reporting position, with regional sales managers
delivering sales data every week, also providing interpretation and context for the results (good or bad).
Sales Managers for this company also handled customer problems and
complaints that came to them via the sales representatives. In terms of
actual sales planning, coaching and training, these activities were
minimal or non-existent.
The manufacturer developed an online system to automate the
sales reporting function, and captured the interpretation/context
directly from sales representatives, so the
need for "on the ground" field sales management had diminished
significantly.
The company's sales force of 400 field
sales representatives went from 30 regional sales managers to 10. And
those 10 were focused on the geographic areas with the most growth
potential.
Interestingly, the manufacturer so no negative impact on
their sales results. Even a year later, there was no discernable
negative impact. The 10 remaining sales managers received significant
training and development support to help them transition to the role of
on-the-ground sales coach. These managers were eventually able to drive
a significant increase in sales volume from these high potential
territories.
Here is a summary of the lessons this company learned
from their experience:
-
Determine where you have genuine
growth potential, and where you need to focus
primarily on maintaining the business. Your sales
management model should be different for areas with
different growth potential.
-
For areas where you are primarily
focused on maintaining the business, use technology
and systems to collect data, not people. You may
still deploy "sales managers" but they are really
"sales maintenance managers" and should be
compensated differently (less) than your sales
growth managers.
-
Clearly define the role of your
growth-driving sales managers. It is not enough to
tell them they need to be "in the field" X number of
days a week. The specific coaching and sales
planning activities need to be detailed.
For more details on specific activities for
growth-driving sales managers, see Frontline Learning's REAL Coaching
program. It is a detailed, specific process designed to help sales
managers add real value to the selling cycle.
  
Whether your training need is small and focused, or
enterprise-wide, you can count of Frontline Learning to deliver.
For more than 20 years we have been helping organizations
achieve their business objectives with targeted training
initiatives.
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