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Written by Jeff Hardesty
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Sunday, 20 August 2006 |
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Word Count: 1593 Does Your Sales Training Program Address Your Sales Performance Issues? Part 2
In Part 1, we went over the steps to uncover sales performance issues and decide which are applicable at a high priority for pin-point sales skill
training.
We first documented the main sales performance issues. There are (4)
distinct sales performance silos that will effect the overall outcome of any
sales team, year in and year out. They are:
• % of Sales reps to Quota
• Average New-hire Ramp-to-Quota in months
• Sales Employee Turnover rate
• Time spent versus Result achieved
Next we, listed (4) steps to find out if you have any sales performance issues
in each individual sales performance silo and if so to what degree. They were:
Step 1: ‘Run the Numbers’ for any realistic ROI opportunity
Step 2: ‘Run the Numbers’ hypothetically for a ‘Specific’ improvement
Step 3: ‘Run the Numbers’ for a ‘Reality Check’
Step 4: Set the Goal and ‘Train to It’
In our first example, we looked at a sales organization’s performance silo of
‘New-hire Ramp-to-Quota and determined (1) a sales performance issue and (2) a
worthy sales training objective and (3) a realistic sales training return on
investment.
Let’s take that same sales force and utilizing our (4) step process look at
the remaining two Sales performance issues; ‘Sales Employee Turnover rate’
and ‘Time spent versus Result achieved’ to see what the X2 Evaluator™
system turns up.
Step 1: ‘Run the Numbers’ for any realistic ROI opportunity
Our example sales force has 350 sales reps that are responsible for securing new
business each month. They currently have a sales employee turnover rate of 45%,
or 155 reps per year. I’ve found in the sales industries I partner with, my
clients average between 30%-70% sales employee turnover per year, so these folks
are right in norm.
But the ‘norm’ doesn’t have to be the ‘Future’.
Here’s another important point. In the sales arena, 95% of sales employee
turnover is due to Low 1st appointment activity. And in our example sales force,
it was nearly 100%. Simply, if you’re not creating enough sales appointments
each month, you either go out the door or you are ‘Shown the door’.
Now let’s run the numbers to see exactly what this sales employee turnover is
costing them and attach a weight of priority to consider ‘pin-point’ sales
performance training.
Here are the numbers relevant to costs:
• Average Salary: $30,000
• Recruiting Costs: $ 2,000
• Training Costs: $ 3,500
• Monthly Sales Quota: $ 3,500
In sum, this sales management team is looking eye to eye to a total of
$4,512,200 going out the door each year, a combination of revenue ramp up costs
on the front end, revenue production loss on the back end, salaries and
benefits, then again revenue ramp up costs and salary for the replacement new
hire. It’s a vicious circle.
And once again that total ‘Penalty cost’ number is an attention getter.
Simply put, each sales rep going out the door, due to low sales appointment
activity, is costing the company $29,300 of lost revenue.
Does that portray a legitimate sales training Return on investment opportunity?
Well, in less you need to invest $29,300 per sales rep in the training of choice
to remedy the sales performance issue… it certainly does.
Step 2: ‘Run the Numbers’ hypothetically for a 50% improvement
In this case, I showed the sales management team what return on investment they
would get by retaining just half of the sales reps going out the door due to low
sales appointment activity.
Using their numbers my diagnostic system showed them a ROI of $2,256,100 just by
reducing their sales employee turnover due to low sales appointment activity
from 44% down to 22%. That’s keeping 77 sales reps from going out the door and
adding to the sales productivity pool.
Step 3: ‘Run the Numbers’ for a Reality Check
Remember in Part 1 of ‘Does Your Sales Training Program Address Your Sales
Performance Issues?’ we ran this sales force team’s key sales performance
indicator numbers in the X2 system to see ‘if and where’ there were leaks in
the ‘KPI ship’. And we discovered not a leak, but a big ‘ole fire hose.
Two ‘KPI issues’ were apparent. First, their ramp-to-quota for a new-hire
took 7 months when the average sales cycle is 17 days? Second, they were only
setting 3 new appointments per week when they needed to set 6, based on their
other KPIs and a subsequent sales appointment activity number.
Thus, their sales appointment ‘activity barometer’ was only running at 50%.
And that we determined dictates a longer ramp-to-quota.
Then we dug a bit deeper in the X2 system and out popped a 6%
conversation-to-appointment ratio; they had to conduct 15 prospect conversations
to get 1 new appointment.
We then asked the ‘Reality Check’ question. Is it realistic to focus on
reducing the sales rep turnover due to low sales appointment activity in half,
from 44% to 22% for a sales training ROI of $2,256,100 or $29,300 per rep?
And we answered ‘yes’ if they addressed the front-end of their sales
process; setting targeted sales appointments. Again as before, they needed to
(1) establish an activity standard to reach quota based off of individual KPIs
and (2) develop a sales prospecting methodology and supporting system to spend
less time in achieving it.
Because most sales employee turnover happens in the new hire ramp-to-quota issue
silo, the same pin-point sales skill training initiative kills two birds with
one stone.
And if you add those (2) ‘sales training initiatives birds’ up, it points to
$14,532,100 of realistic revenue recovery.
Step 4: Set the Goal and ‘Train to It’
Reducing sales employee turnover due to low sales appointment activity now
appears to be a worthy one. It makes good business sense for this sales
organization. And if we measure our results, we will probably add some more
revenue back on the table with additional reps not going out the door… to the
tune of $29,300 per rep.
As in Part 1, our sales training goal in this case is to spend the least amount
of time to get the desired number of sales appointments each week to assure our
monthly success.
Now as a side bonus, let’s take a look at our last sales performance issue
silo, ‘Time spent versus Result achieved’, and see what, if anything, we can
address related to our pin-point sales training initiative.
“Time is money”. What’s your ‘Hourly rate’? If you’re a sales rep
with a W-2 goal of $100,000 your hourly rate is approximately $51 dollars an
hour. Here’s an interesting statistic. My clients spend an average of 50% of
their time on the very front-end of their sales process; sales prospecting for
new opportunities to initiate their sales process. This sales management team
gave me an average prospecting time of 45% to plug into the Evaluator™ system.
And here’s what it showed.
The sales reps were spending an average of 20 hours per week on sales
prospecting and sales appointment generation. But they were only running at 50%
on their ‘Activity Barometer’ and needed to generate 50% more sales
appointment activity; going from 3 new appointments per week to 6.
At their current sales prospecting efficiency rate of 6% (15 Prospect
conversations to get 1 appointment) they would need to dedicate 33 hours per
week to sales prospecting and sales appointment generation. And we know that’s
not realistic.
But if they set a sales training objective of moving that appointment conversion
ratio to 50%, they would not only meet their sales appointment activity number
but save 26 hours per week, for a time recovery of 79%, from 33 hours per week
to 7. And 26 hours times $51 per hour recovers $1326 ‘Hourly Rate’ money,
allowing sales reps to increase capacity and pursue higher-value,
solutions-based selling opportunities.
Once again with our last (2) sales performance issue silos we determined (1) a
sales performance issue and (2) a worthy sales training objective and (3) a
realistic sales training return on investment.
Ask any CFO what their first impression is when they hear the words ‘Sales
Training’ and they might communicate back their ‘Real world’ vocabulary of
‘un-accountable’ and ‘un-measurable’. Simply put, they know they’re
wasting at least half their sales training budget dollars; the problem is they
don’t know which half.
As a sales management leader, methodically discovering sales issues first and
then running ‘Quantitative’ sales performance numbers to check for
feasibility, worthiness, and return on sales training investment will
differentiate you from the pack. And you’ll stand an excellent chance of
getting the result you want.
In this case, giving sales reps a skill-set to set 1 ‘Top-down’ business
appointment in 2 conversations will allow participants to set the required
amount of targeted business appointments to assure their monthly revenue goals.
So less people will leave, they’ll make more money and spend less time and you
will recover measurable dollars; something you can actually put your finger on.
Jeff Hardesty is President of JDH Group, Inc. and the Developer of the X2 Sales
System®, a blended training system that teaches sales professionals the
competency of setting C-level business appointments. Jeff can be reached at
This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it
.
Calculate your sales team’s ‘Sales Performance Competencies’ here
http://convertmoresales.com/marketing_blitz.php
Receive a complimentary 30-minute performance consultation with Jeff Hardesty
complete with a customized Performance Improvement Blueprint:
http://convertmoresales.com/roi_survey.php
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