MEANING OF SALES MANAGEMENT
In
recent years, Sales Management has changed more rapidly as a practice and
profession than ever before. A lot of this has to do with the rapid
disruption in the sales industry and a transition to Inside Sales, which as a
model is much more measurable and transaction driven. I thought now would be a
good time to redefine what sales management is and the new roles of sales
managers.
Things
changed for many reasons, some due to the information asymmetry from the days
before the Internet, which has transmuted into information parity that is now
the prevalent de facto standard, not to mention the fact that the buying cycle
is 70% complete (according to Corporate Executive Board) before a buyer
even speaks to a sales representative. Additionally, there has been a
disruptive change within the Inside Sales model, which is growing 10x faster
than traditional field sales as a profession – more and more sales are done
over the phone rather than in person. Thus, the practice, approach and science
of sales management have fundamentally changed forever.
Defining Management as a Practice
So much of what we call management consists of
making it difficult for people to work.
—Peter Drucker
Management
in business is typically defined as both an art and the science of coordinating
people and resources to accomplish desired objectives efficiently and
effectively. The late management guru and visionary Peter F. Drucker stated in
his classic “The Practice of Management” (which created the discipline of
modern management practices) that management’s first function is improving
economic performance. Management’s second function is to create a productive
enterprise through people and resources. Management is a practice, not merely a
theoretical discipline or area of study.
So What Does a Manager Do?
The
manager is responsible for setting objectives and helping make people more
effective than they would be without him or her. While a manager is
administering, organizing, directing, controlling, planning, budgeting,
coordinating, communicating and motivating, ultimately they are there to make
things better than they would be otherwise.
A
manager’s primary role is to inspire people to do their best and establish an
environment that allows employees to reach their goals. Managers remove
obstacles and obtain resources and training that helps their team be more
effective. The best managers don’t tell people how to do things, but act
as coaches who guide and encourage people to achieve their goals.
Who is a Sales Manager?
As
Chris Lytle says in his book The Accidental Sales Manager: How to Take Control
and Lead Your Sales Team to Record Profits: “Your title is a misnomer. You are
not managing sales; you are managing the people who make the sales.”
At
the executive level, a sales manager is the person responsible for leading and
guiding a team of salespeople and is focused on the 5 essential foundations of
the role:
1. People
2. Planning
3. Process
4. Pipeline
5. Performance (incl. Goals & Analysis)
Sales Manager is someone who is responsible for
building a high-performance sales organization using a repeatable process that
generates predictable revenue. Building a repeatable or formulaic process
requires measuring it because, as Peter Drucker put it, if you can’t measure it
then you can’t manage it.
What Makes a Good Sales Manager?
Whatever you are, be a good one. —Abraham
Lincoln
Things
have really changed for sales management and many of the old management
practices generally do not work as effectively in today’s environment. Today,
it has been confirmed that the single most important sale management activity
that drives sales performance is coaching. Coaching requires the manager to
understand each individual rep’s sales metrics in order to help gauge their
performance and then improve it.
A
good sales manager is a master at “coaching” and has a unique coaching approach
for each individual, avoiding a “one-size-fits-all” approach. Thus, they are
data-driven and run the business by the numbers — they monitor individual sales
rep’s KPIs, ultimately looking to achieve the highest performance with each
rep.
Good
sales managers are analytical and carefully track metrics. One simply can’t set
right goals, build a predictable, repeatable and scalable process or manage the
sales team efficiently or effectively without looking at real data and
measuring performance. A good sales manager generates predictable revenue as a
result of coaching based on knowing metrics and improving performance based on
this knowledge.
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