1 / 52

Personal Selling , Sales Management, & Direct Marketing

Personal Selling , Sales Management, & Direct Marketing. Chapter Objectives. role of personal selling within the promotion mix steps in personal selling process role of the sales manager direct marketing. SELLING. Personal Selling. when a company representative interacts directly

valentine
Download Presentation

Personal Selling , Sales Management, & Direct Marketing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Personal Selling, Sales Management, & Direct Marketing

  2. Chapter Objectives • role of personal selling • within the promotion mix • steps in personal selling process • role of the sales manager • direct marketing

  3. SELLING

  4. Personal Selling • when a company representative • interacts directly • with a (prospective) customer • to communicate • about a good or service

  5. Personal Selling • Personal touch” is more effective • than mass-media appeal. • Selling/sales management • jobs provide high mobility, • especially for college grads • with marketing background.

  6. The Role of Personal Selling • Personal selling is more important: • --when firm uses push strategy. • --in B2B contexts. • --with inexperienced consumers • who need hands-on assistance. • --for products bought infrequently • (houses, cars, computers). • Cost per contact is very high.

  7. SALESFORCE.COM Technology and Personal Selling • Customer relationship management • (CRM) software • partner relationship management • (PRM) • Teleconferencing, • Video-conferencing, • Improved corporate Web sites • Voice-over Internet protocol • Assorted wireless technologies

  8. Types of Sales Jobs • Order taker • Technical specialist • Missionary salesperson • (stimulate clients to buy) • New-business salesperson • Cold calls, breaking in new territory • order getter • Team selling & cross-functional team

  9. Approaches to Personal Selling • Transactional selling: Putting on the hard sell • High-pressure process • focuses on immediate sales • no concern for developing long-term customer relationship

  10. Approaches to Personal Selling (cont’d) • Relationship selling • Process of building long-term customers by developing mutually satisfying, win-win relationships with customers

  11. Creative selling Process • Makes positive transactions happen • Series of activities

  12. Figure 14.1: Steps in Creative Selling Process

  13. The Creative Selling Process • Step 1: Prospecting and qualifying • --Prospecting: • developing a list of potential customers • --Qualifying: • determining how likely potential customers are to become customers

  14. The Creative Selling Process (cont’d) • Step 2: Pre-approach • Compiling prospective customers’ • background information • planning the sales interview

  15. The Creative Selling Process (cont’d) • Step 2: Pre-approach • Purchase history, • current needs, • customer’s interests • From • informal sources, • CRM system, • customers’ Web sites, • and/or business publications

  16. The Creative Selling Process (cont’d) • Step 3: Approach • Contacting the prospect • Learning prospect’s needs, • create a good impression, • build rapport • “You never get a second chance to make a good first impression.”

  17. The Creative Selling Process (cont’d) • Step 4:Sales presentation • benefits & added value • of product/firm • advantages over competition • Inviting customer involvement • in conversation

  18. Step 5: Handling Objections • Anticipating why • prospect is reluctant to make a commitment • Welcoming objections • Handling objections • successfully • to move prospect to decision stage

  19. Step 6:Closing the Sale • Gaining the customer’s commitment • in the decision stage --Last-objection close --Assumptive close --minor-points close --Standing-room-only close --buy-now close

  20. Step 7:Follow-Up • Arranging for delivery, • Ensuring sure customer received delivery • and is satisfied • Payment • Credit, factors, etc. • purchase terms • Bridging to next purchase

  21. Figure 14.2: The Sales Force Management Process

  22. Sales Management: Sales force objectives • What sales force is expected to accomplish and when Customer Satisfaction Loyalty Retention / turnover New customer development New product suggestions Training Reporting on competition Community involvement

  23. Creating a Sales Force Strategy • Establishing structure and size • of a firm’s sales force • Sales territory: a set group of customers • Geographic sales force structure • Product-class sales territories • Industry specialization • key/major accounts

  24. Recruiting, Training, & Rewarding • Recruiting the right people • Good listening and follow-up skills • adaptive style • from situation to situation • Tenacity • High level of personal organization

  25. Recruiting, Training, & Rewarding • Sales training: • teaches salespeople about firm, • its products, • how to develop skills, • knowledge, and • attitudes to succeed

  26. Recruiting, Training, and Rewarding • Paying salespeople well to motivate them • Straight commission plan • Commission-with-draw plan • Straight salary plan

  27. Recruiting, Training, and Rewarding • Running sales contests • for short-term sales boost • Call reports: • which customers were called on and • how call went

  28. Evaluating the Sales Force • Is sales force meeting its objectives? • What are possible causes of failure? Measuring performance Monitoring expense accounts for travel and entertainment

  29. DIRECT MARKETING

  30. DIRECT MARKETING ASSOCIATION Direct Marketing • Any direct communication • to a consumer or business recipient • designed to generate a response

  31. DIRECT MARKETING ASSOCIATION Direct Marketing • Response: • in the form of an • order, • request for further information, • a visit to a store • other place of business • for purchase of a product

  32. Direct Marketing: MAIL ORDER • Catalogs: • collection of products • offered for sale • described in book form, • product descriptions and photos

  33. Direct Marketing: MAIL ORDER • Direct mail: • brochure/pamphlet • offering a specific good/service • at one point in time

  34. FEDERAL DO NOT CALL REGISTRY Direct Marketing: telemarketing • conducted over the telephone • More profitable for business • than consumer markets • In 2003, FTC established: • National Do Not Call registry

  35. Direct Marketing (cont’d) • Direct-response advertising: • allows consumer to respond • by contacting the provider • with questions or an order

  36. Direct Marketing (cont’d) • Direct-response TV (DRTV): • short commercials, • 30-minute+ infomercials, • home shopping networks • HSN • QVC • Jewelry television • ShopNBC • Gemtv

  37. Direct Marketing (cont’d) • M-Commerce: • promotional & other e-commerce activities • transmitted over mobile phones/devices

  38. Direct Marketing (cont’d) • M-Commerce: • (SMS) • Short-messaging system marketing • Spim: • instant-messaging version of spam • Adware: • software that tracks Web habits/interests, • presenting pop-up ads • resetting home page

  39. THE END

  40. Marketing Plan Exercise • In developing her marketing plan, Esther Ferre at IBM must use marketing communication mix elements (1) in an integrated way that (2) best invests her promotional dollars. • --Should personal selling be a high priority in Esther’s marketing plan? Why or why not? • --Is there a role for direct marketing in her plan? If so, what is it?

  41. Marketing in Action Case:You Make the Call • What is the decision facing Eli Lilly? • What factors are important in understanding this decision situation? • What are the alternatives? • What decision(s) do you recommend? • What are some ways to implement your recommendation?

  42. Keeping It Real: Fast-Forward to Next Class, Decision Time at Darden Restaurants • Meet Jim Lawrence, Vice President, Supply Management & Purchasing. • Volatility in the supply chain threatened food supplies to restaurants. • The decision: A new model for supply chain management?

  43. Real People, Real Choices • IBM (Esther Ferre) • IBM must prioritize investment of resources to achieve revenue and profit targets. • Option 1: reduce sales and support resources for a specific customer or business segment. • Option 2: maintain current level • of resources. • Option 3: evaluate lower-cost • ways to provide sales and • support resources.

  44. IBM.COM Real People, Real Choices • IBM (Esther Ferre) • Esther chose option 3: evaluate lower-cost ways to provide sales and support resources. • Minimized impact to customer and improved cost structure of sales team. • Maintained customer satisfaction with lower cost. • Resulted in increased revenue over time.

  45. Discussion • Professional selling has evolved from hard-sell to relationship selling. --Is hard-sell still used? If so, in what types of organizations? --Can hard-sell still succeed –is transactional selling still appropriate? --If so, when?

  46. Group Activity • Your group are field salespeople for a firm that markets university textbooks. • As part of your training, your sales manager asks you to outline what you’ll say in a typical sales presentation. --Write that outline.

  47. Individual Activity • What are the pros and cons of personal selling as a career choice for you? • --List them in two columns, and be as specific as you can in explaining each.

  48. Discussion • Will sales training and development needs vary based on how long salespeople have been in the business? Why or why not? • Is it possible (and feasible) to offer different training programs for salespeople at different career stages? Why or why not?

  49. Discussion • Based on the compensation figures in the chapter, do you think professional salespeople are appropriately paid? Why or why not? • What do salespeople do that warrants the compensation indicated?

  50. Discussion • What is a sales manager’s best approach for determining the appropriate rewards program? • What issues are important in developing the program?

More Related