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Diagnosing a Dying Sales Department

houseFrom my experience, most companies don’t know their sales department is dead until they begin to smell the corpse and see their sales numbers fall off a cliff into Lake Competitor.

 It has been my job from time to time over the years to identify sales issues, diagnose sales health and return these sales organizations to top form.  As a result, I have learned where to look for the signs of decay.  Here is a rough version of the roadmap I use to find the problems.

Sales Metrics

 How are the Sales Managers measuring their existing sales team’s performance?  More often than not, I find that the sales organization as a whole is only using one sales metric consistently, final sales numbers. 

You can’t steer a dog by its tail and if you try you will eventually end up stepping in it.  The same is true of the Sales department.

 The final sales numbers should not be a measurement tool because it is too late at that point to do anything about it.  Final sales numbers are only a gauge, measuring your sales success for one moment in time.  No different than a customer survey or comment card after a sale measures overall customer service on a single sales transaction.

 A good sign would be to see multiple sales metrics in place and seeing Sales Managers actually use them to manage their business.  (CRM packages setup and used properly are a great source of information assuming the stored information is current, complete and accurate.)

The Sales Managers

 If the metrics are out of whack or missing I look for the Sales Manager to understand how he is managing his team and how he reviews his sales pipeline.

 Typically I find that a struggling sales department has a Sales Manager that is spending too much time looking at the bottom of the sales funnel or has never been trained how to  measure his team’s performance.

The Forecast

 The next stop is the individual forecasts of the sales team, present and past if available.  I want to understand how leads are collected and the process determining how a lead is converted to an opportunity and how it moves its way through the system toward a close.  I want to know what specific information a sales representative used to rank every opportunity on his or her forecast.

Usually this will tell me there is no consistent process for converting leads in place and the present standard is a combination of guess work and wishful thinking.

 I also want to understand what they are selling and equally important, what they are not selling and why.  This helps me understand what other departments outside of sales I need to visit.

Sales Training Process

 A look at sales training is next on my list.  How are the sales representatives being trained?  What methodology are they using?  How do they get trained on new offerings?  How have they been trained to manage opportunities through the pipeline?

The Services, Support & Systems Engineers

 Next I want to meet with the services manager. I want to understand how he decides what he will train his staff on, how they maintain certifications, how skill sets are allotted to the various offerings the company sells, and if there is communication with Sales to keep them in lock step with what Sales is actually selling. 

The Marketing Department

 The marketing department, if there is one, is next.  I want to compare the message Sales is sending with the message Marketing is sending.  I also want to understand how they coordinate their efforts in the end goal of bringing in more business.

C-Level Executives

 I want to understand the overall company direction.  What are the company objectives?  What are the company commitments to vendors and distribution relationships?  What is the company sales message? Etc.

Summary

 Decay in a sales organization can come all the way from the top, manifested in bad policies or poor communication that puts various departments in isolated silos.  From my experience it is the well connected CEO, or oddly enough the lowly Sales Manager that is in the best place to diagnose these problems internally.

 In the early days I only looked at the Sales department but as I worked through the challenges I began to expand my scope because many of the problems manifesting themselves in Sales I found were created by seeming innocuous decisions made in other parts of the company.

 If your sales department is inconsistent, struggling or darn near dead, look at the quality and quantity of your leads, analyze your forecast, focus on managing the top of the sales funnel and take this list and use it to find the root cause of your problem, don’t get caught up treating symptoms.

  • Chayson Comfort
    Val,

    I agree....to a point. I have found that the most important metric to track as well as the universal starting point for early diagnosis of a sales team/organization is "number of first time meetings". i have found that when sales management goes awry is when they focus on either end sales (as you pointed out) or outbound activity (which is equally flawed and off target).

    How many "first" meetings your reps are conducting per week/month and what's happening /being said in those meetings is the real core of the sales process. Out of this activity (or lack there of) can one begin to diagnose and then prescribe an effective "fix" to an ailing team. I could go on and on here....but this is and will always be a real source of contention with me as I have regularly worked with and for sales management that either tried to spend all of their time micro-managing the front end (sales activity) or the back end (sales results) in order to coach a sales team. I liken it to a a race care driver. The main focus isn't spent each week looking at where they finish or what components go into the car before the race. Those are, without a doubt aspects of examination in the overall analysis of how a race is won. But rather, a team examines how the race was run, how many pit stops, when to change tires, how the driver performed as leading indicators of over all success.

    Anyways...I love this topic and could go on and on....but I digress. thanks for examining it more closely.

    Chayson
  • Val
    Now that is the kind of Top of Funnel activity I am talking about! I am glad you brought up that point because I did mention that specifically anywhere in the article and measuring the quantity of first meetings is a very good tool to use as a quick gut check to assess rep performance and a fantastic place to drill down into the details.

    From your experience, is the lack of first meetings due to poor time management skills, lack of any training on how to converts contacts into meetings, or some other reason?

    I am amazed sometimes by how extensive the sales representative onboarding training can be at a company only to find that when a new Sales Manager is fielded there is zero training provided on how to do the job.

    Thanks for the input Chayson. I love having smart readers.

    Val
  • Dirk Beveridge
    To accurately assess your sales reality so that you can develop an implementation roadmap for sales process improvement, it helps to observe your team’s effort from two perspectives:
    1. A bird’s eye view that takes in the “big picture”--the various roles, processes, and dynamics that fuel your sales performance
    2. A close-up view that reveals how your frontline salespeople and managers accomplish their daily work.
    In both cases, you must observe behaviors--what your people do to drive results. When you parallel their actual behaviors with best practices, you can see opportunities for growth.
  • sellgosell
    I like your analogy John. Glad you liked the article.

    Val
  • Totally spot on. Taking final sales numbers is like driving down the road at 100mph, blindfolded and being given directions by someone looking out the back window.

    First you have to understand your business, evaluate your salesforce and get a grip on credit control. That gives you direction, fresh sales and cash.
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