Tag Archives: Maximize

How Do You Incentivize Salespeople to Sell? Five Points

Situation: Many companies have challenges creating effective incentives for sales people to sell. The CEO of one company asked others around the table what their experience has been creating effective incentives to maximize the efforts of their salespeople. How do you incentivize salespeople to sell?
Advice from the CEOs:
• The three fundamental sales compensation strategies are commission only, salary only, and base salary plus commission. The group discussed the advantages and disadvantages of each approach.
• Commission only. This system is good in the sense that it incentivizes the salesperson to earn as much as possible. Some highly successful sales organizations give new salespeople a “runway” of, for example, a year with a modest salary to establish themselves. Once they have reached the end of the runway, provided that they have proven that they can sell, they shift to commission only. Once on commission they must sell to eat. The down sides are that a high percentage of “rookie” sales reps many do not succeed, and even successful reps may not to be dedicated to the company. Both latter groups may be on the lookout for a more suitable option for themselves or a better deal.
• Salary Only. Unlike commission-based sales, this option may not provide much incentive to excel. It may foster complacency.
• Base salary plus commission. Generally, this system is the one favored by many companies. It gives the salesperson some degree of stability while they are developing their accounts yet motivates them to “break the bank.”
• The best sales systems allow and encourage their salespeople to make a lot of money. In some of these companies salespeople are among the most highly paid people in the company. This boosts both retention and success.

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How Do You Prepare for Sale of the Company? Six Points

Situation: A company’s founder and CEO wants to sell the company. The company’s software is well-suited to current governmental priorities and should be of value to potential buyers. What are the best steps to take both to prepare for a sale and to sell at the highest price? How do you prepare for sale of the company?

Advice from the CEOs:

  • Add a person with connections to potential buyers to the board.
  • Look for an M&A specialist who knows the company’s market.
    • The right specialist will help validate the valuation of the company, review and identify potential purchasers, and make the inquiries that will lead to the sale of the company.
  • Investigate M&A cases in the industry and related technologies – both cases of firms like the company and cases of companies that may be suitors to determine their purchasing behavior.
    • This will help develop strategies to maximize the value of the company and the optimal bargaining position and will help prepare for negotiations.
  • Maximize the value of the company in preparation for the sale.
    • The fastest business growth may come from within the company’s current customer base – additional business customers where the company already has contacts.
    • Work up the food chain within existing customers to increase the company’s business within these companies.
  • Important preparations for a sale:
    • Assure that financial records are very clean. These are critical during the price-setting process and in negotiating the final price.
    • In computing company valuation, exclude the salaries of current principals to improve the income statement. These individuals will be replaced post-sale with lower-paid employees.
    • Continue to operate the company as though there will never be a sale. This maintains the value of the company regardless of what happens.
  • How open should be the company be – internally and externally – concerning a potential sale of the company.
    • Be as honest and open as is prudent. The biggest concern will be salespeople who may leave the company if they feel threatened by a sale, or who may stop selling because they do not want to try to explain the situation to prospects.
    • The other “at risk” group is developers, who may fear that they will be replaced or terminated following a sale and who may leave.

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How Do You Develop a Sales Organization? Four Points

Situation: A small company’s business is increasing and they need to build a sales organization. To date all sales have been conducted by the founder CEO and a single employee salesperson. Should they build inside or outside sales first? Are there trigger points at which one or both should be increased? How do you develop a sales organization?

Advice from the CEOs:

  • Right now you have first mover advantage in your market space. You have a unique offering and no existing competition. The immediate objective is to maximize early market share. Borrow if necessary to ramp sales. There is no trigger point.
  • Hire an outside salesperson now. You want an individual who is knowledgeable about your market and who has a large set of contacts. Make at least 50% of this individual’s compensation variable (commissions) to start and escalate the percentage of variable compensation as sales grow. Hire at current market rates.
  • Supplement your existing marketing with an investment in social media marketing and SEO (search engine optimization). Don’t try to do this yourself on the cheap – hire a pro. Invest in Pay-Per-Click to push your visibility.
  • To sell this plan to your existing salesperson and the rest of the team, it’s time for a Come to Jesus talk.
    • Make a strong business case for your program.
    • The trade-off is either invest now to rapidly build sales or become insignificant.
    • Once you’ve made your pitch and received consent, let the plan work before you ask for more.

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