Grow sales by reducing administration
Carla Zilka
Growth. It’s the mantra of sales and marketing managers everywhere.
Yet many companies inadvertently limit growth by burdening their sales
teams with high levels of non-revenue-generating administrative work.
In our restructuring work with clients, we often find that more than
50 percent of a sales professional’s time is spent on
non-customer-facing work, including account maintenance, issues
resolution, and reporting.
Since
the top mandate (and natural talent) of sales professionals is to
generate revenue, excessive administrative work-be it paper or
automated-represents a significant loss of revenue.
How much? To answer this question, we looked at the sales force of a
$6 billion global consumer services organization. Our first step was to
identify sales activities using a Business Core Competency Model-and
then to determine how much of the sales force’s time is being spent on
each activity.
This allows you to measure-and ultimately minimize-the amount of
administrative work assigned to the sales team.
The high-priority improvements are those administrative areas where
“current” time allocations are significantly higher than “ideal” or
benchmark allocations. In this example, sales professionals were
spending between 40 percent and 70 percent of their time on non-sales
activities. The goal should be to eliminate or transition as much
administrative work as possible.
To accomplish this goal, we segmented administrative work into three
categories: (1) work to streamline (2) work to automate and (3) work to
transition.
Streamline
The streamlining stage of the project involves a team of sales
professionals and process experts (i.e., individuals trained in Six
Sigma.) This team works together for a short period of time (usually
three months or less) to identify decision-making processes and policies
that stand between the sales force and their ability to sell, key design
principles to keep in mind are “alignment,” “simplicity,”
“consolidation,” “agility,” and “customer focus.” The goal is to
quantify the total costs associated with gaps, overlaps, and cumbersome
processes-and to capture the savings that come from streamlining
inefficiencies.
Automate
Typically, the automation stage of the project is more difficult and
requires an investment. If the sales team is not using a customer
relationship management (CRM) platform, you need to invest in one right
away. You also need to integrate current platforms that are autonomous.
Do not be penny wise and dollar foolish.
An investment in a robust sales platform today will pay significant
dividends later. Happily, it is usually possible to self-fund this
investment through near-term cost savings and revenue improvements.
Transition
The final step is to identify the work to be transitioned. This type
of work is typically manual-and highly administrative. Here, it’s often
a good idea to create an administrative hub or “centre of excellence,”
staffed by administrators who are trained to support the sales process
end-to-end. These administrators can be housed together or work
remotely. The goal is to standardize administrative support and free up
sales professionals to spend more face time with the client.
Among the sales activities that typically can be transitioned to an
administrative centre of excellence are:
* Sales presentation development
* Contract development and management
* Pricing and bid support
* Customer correspondence
* Data entry (and CRM maintenance)
* Product inquiries
* Issues resolution regarding contracts
By transitioning these (and other similar) activities to a centre of
excellence, companies reduce the number of hours sales professionals
spend on non-sales activities.
Most companies also find that centres of excellence increase
standardization, consistency, and accuracy, which improves the overall
customer service experience.
The bottom line: Growth
Often, sales professionals can increase their “selling power” by
roughly 25 percent by streamlining, automating, and/or transitioning
non-sales work.
That’s essentially one extra day per week of additional selling time
for each salesperson.
In every company, the goal of sales managers is to do more with less.
In the current economic environment, this mandate is more important than
ever.
The best way to meet this mandate is to free sales teams from
non-sales, administrative work. The bottom line will be increased
efficiency-and profitable growth.
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