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Mega changes in
distributor sales efforts
New technology, new knowledge, and
external motivation for change
by Scott Benfield
A quarter-of-a-century experience in industrial channels gives us a
long-term perspective on the slow but substantial changes in
merchant wholesaling. The areas that have been slowest to change are
outside and inside sales forces. In the next decade, however, we
believe the traditional sales model will change substantially.
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Attention distributors!
Maximize
your sales force’s productivity. The new book Restructuring
the Distribution Sales Effort for Maximum Productivity,
from distribution industry consultant Scott Benfield and Progressive
Distributor editor Rich Vurva is available now. Did you know that inside and outside
sales forces are 30% to 40% of the typical distributor’s
operating expenses? To
learn more about this important book, click here.
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The change in sales efforts will be
initiated by external factors including industry life cycle,
technology, new knowledge, and the need for productivity. In
essence, if you are expecting substantial and lasting change to your
sales force to come from within, you may be waiting a long time. We
expect external pressures to force sales force change far greater
than internal changes from existing management.
Industry life cycle
Wholesale distribution is largely comprised of privately held,
family businesses. Most families, however, are entering the late
second or third generation. Generational change brings common
experiences that significantly affect sales efforts. They include:
1) As generations transfer from the second to the third, most
families will sell the business. Often, the acquirers are public
companies or larger companies owned by private equity firms. These
acquirers run the firm for profits, not lifestyle, and quickly
squeeze out excess costs, including personnel.
2) Over the generations, most products within distribution become
commodities and are well known by the user base. Our work within
wholesale distribution finds, on average, 70 percent of products are
commodities that don’t require sales support on a per-call basis.
Most sales territories are comprised of commodity products with
sellers earning commissions on 100-year-old technology platforms. In
the future, we expect many mature products will be sold and
solicited by other, less costly, means than the outside sales force.
With changes in ownership and the commodity status of products,
there is no room for bloated sales structures. End users, given the
choice of full sales service at full price or minimal sales service
with a low price, often choose the latter. The streamlining of the
sales effort is a foregone conclusion given the generational
transfer and commodity status of products.
Technology and process knowledge in sales force redesign
Five technologies will greatly impact the understanding and
productivity of sales efforts in distribution. Three are IT based
and two involve process knowledge. When all five are combined in a
coherent solicitation strategy, the decrease in solicitation costs
can be substantial.
Starting in the last decade, e-commerce capability has grown
dramatically. Today, it is common to find 30 percent or more of a
vertical industry with e-commerce capability. Most distributors are
content to use e-commerce as a support strategy. However, it is
becoming commonplace for customers to prefer transacting daily
business through the Web, and pay for the sales call as they need
it. Consequently, we expect e-commerce as a stand-alone solicitation
effort will grow at an increasing rate as customers begin to rely on
the technology.
Inside sales and telesales are aided by two burgeoning technologies.
First, phone queuing systems that link disparate branches and labor
forces can greatly increase the productivity of inside sales. In
prior years, each branch had an inside and outside sales effort
specific to their geographic footprint. As products mature and
applications homogenize, the inside seller in Chicago can answer the
call from a San Francisco customer equally as well as an employee
based in California. Once management realizes that the cost of
living in Chicago is lower than in San Francisco, it is not
difficult to realize where the inside sales pool will be located.
Also, most modern telephony systems come with a host of measurements
that help manage the inside sales effort, including different
numbers for customer assignments, time-on-call, time-in-queue, calls
dropped, etc. Used well, phone technology can maximize inside sales
productivity.
Secondly, outbound telesales is greatly aided by the growth of sales
management and CRM software. Programs such as Salesforce.com and
Microsoft Dynamics help manage the barrage of inquiries from
potential customers and review which activities are value added. Of
course, these software packages are only as good as the
distributor’s ability to populate the fields with current and
meaningful data. However, more distributors are requiring outside
and inside salespeople to enter inquiries into their CRM
repositories.
Finally, two knowledge-based technologies can offer promise in sales
force productivity enhancement. While the concept of activity
costing is well known, it has often been used as a basis to identify
low-profit customers and as a starting point for seller negotiation
of larger transactions or supply chain services that reduce excess
transactions. Recently, activity costing and activity profiling has
been used to review groups of customers so they can be assigned to
different solicitation models. The process, called
Hybrid Marketing,
uses activity profiles to match the appropriate solicitation
model(s) to the needs of the customer segment. In Exhibit 1 below,
we depict the use of activity profiles and hybrid marketing logic to
lower solicitation costs while maintaining suitable customer
service. The decision matrix uses market variables of segment size
and number of accounts, and activity metrics of number of
transactions, number of deliveries and technical need to determine
the best-fit solicitation model(s).
Hybrid
Marketing
Segment To Solicitation Decision Matrix
Exhibit 1
| Segment
size |
No. of
accounts |
GM% |
Number
of transactions |
Number
of deliveries |
Tech.
needed |
Solicitation
strategy |
| Small |
Large |
Many |
Few |
Low |
High |
Low |
High |
Low |
High |
Low |
High |
|
| x |
|
x |
|
x |
|
|
x |
|
x |
|
x |
5,7,8,9 |
| |
x |
x |
|
|
x |
|
x |
|
x |
|
x |
1,2,5,6 |
| x |
|
|
x |
x |
|
x |
|
x |
|
x |
|
8,9 |
| |
x |
|
x |
|
x |
x |
|
x |
|
|
x |
1,2,3,4 |
| |
x |
x |
|
|
x |
|
x |
|
x |
x |
|
5,8,9,6 |
| |
x |
|
x |
|
x |
|
x |
|
x |
|
x |
2,3,4,1 |
| x |
|
x |
|
|
x |
x |
|
x |
|
x |
|
6,7,8,9 |
| |
x |
x |
|
x |
|
|
x |
|
x |
|
x |
1,2,5,6 |
| Solicitation
Key: |
| 1 = Functional |
5 = Transactional |
9 = E-Commerce |
| 2 = Segment |
6 = Hybrid/queuing |
|
| 3 = Consultative |
7 = Telesales |
|
| 4 = Enterprise |
8 = Catalog |
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For example, the first row depicts a
segment with many accounts and low revenues, but high transaction,
delivery and technical requirements. These segment dynamics indicate
a high cost to serve and, with low gross margin percent of sales,
the segment is likely activity negative or low activity profitable.
Therefore, the recommended solicitation strategies include, among
others, the lower-cost methods of telesales, catalogs and
e-commerce. Again, when applying hybrid marketing and segment
activity profiles, the results provide a strong argument for change.
Putting new technologies and new processes together to maximize
sales productivity has traditionally been the challenge in
distribution. Selling has been viewed as an integral and often
sacrosanct function. Plus, the sales focus has been on individual
technique or product differentiation. With product commoditization
and generational changes afoot, selling as a value-added function
will need to focus less on technique and product knowledge and more
on efficiency of process. Selling costs are the most expensive part
of distributor operating expenses. It is difficult to imagine how
the industry will increase sagging productivity unless new
technologies and knowledge are brought together in a comprehensive
process.
The need for productivity
In two studies,
we have chronicled the need for better sales productivity in
distribution. Our findings showed that, between 1997 and 2002,
sales-per-employee in durable goods distribution lagged most other
U.S. economic sectors. Recently, in a
separate study,
only 30 percent of U.S. wholesale sectors
accounted for 70 percent of merchant wholesaling’s productivity
growth from 2001-2005. In summation, for the years from 1997 to
2005, there appears to be low or limited growth in productivity in
the majority of wholesale sectors.
Simply put, productive companies continually improve processes or
shed obsolete processes and do more with less. The lack of
productivity is seen in lagging investment in new technologies,
falling earnings, loss of sales to more efficient channels, and a
host of other undesirable business trends. Since sales costs are 30
percent to 40 percent of distributor operating expenses, new and
less costly methods of solicitation and customer interaction are
required if distributors are to retain their value proposition and
current place in the U.S. economy.
In our book, Restructuring the
Distribution Sales Effort, we
establish the need for sales productivity and explain how new
technologies and knowledge can increase the efficiency and
effectiveness of the sales effort. The technologies and knowledge
primarily come from outside the distribution industry. Based on our
sales consulting experience, we also believe the drive to
restructure the sales force will come from the top of the
organization or from outside.
If distributors want to change their sales structure substantially
and permanently, they will need considerable help from new
technologies and new knowledge. They should also expect C level
executives or those from the outside to drive change with the new
tools. Existing sales leaders are not likely to change unless the
current platform demands it. Unfortunately, the decline in the
current model is glacial in pace and almost imperceptible.
Therefore, change may catch many off guard and by surprise.
Hybrid Marketing is a concept first introduced in 1990 from the
Harvard Business Review article of the same name. Benfield
Consulting has adapted the concept for distribution markets and used
common activity and marketing measures to guide the allocation of
solicitation efforts. Back to story
See “Productivity and Profit Issues
in Durable Goods Distribution,” a white paper from Benfield
Consulting at
www.benfieldconsulting.com. Back to
story
See “Where productivity is
growing in wholesale distribution,” Adam Fein,
IBM, August 2006. Back to story
See Restructuring the
Distribution Sales Effort, Benfield and Vurva, Brown Books
Publishing, 2006 at nawpubs.org,
progressivedistributor.com or
benfieldconsulting.com
Back to story
Scott Benfield is a consultant for distributors and manufacturers
in industrial channels. He can be reached at (630) 428-9311 or
through his Web site
www.benfieldconsulting.com.
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