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Sales Management 15

Sales Management 15. Performance Analysis. Purposes of Salesperson Performance Evaluations I. To ensure that compensation and other reward disbursements are _________with actual salesperson performance To identify salespeople that might be _________

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Sales Management 15

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  1. Sales Management 15 Performance Analysis

  2. Purposes of Salesperson Performance Evaluations I • To ensure that compensation and other reward disbursements are _________with actual salesperson performance • To identify salespeople that might be _________ • To identify salespeople whose employment should be _________and to supply evidence to support the need for _________

  3. Purposes of Salesperson Performance Evaluations II • To determine the specific _________ and _________ needs of individual salespeople and the overall sales force • To provide information for effective _________ _________ planning • To identify _________ that can be used to recruit and select salespeople in the future

  4. Purposes of Salesperson Performance Evaluations III • To advise salespeople of work expectations • To _________ salespeople • To help salespeople set _________ _________ • To improve salesperson _________

  5. Salesperson PerformanceEvaluation Approaches I General conclusions: • Most evaluate on an _________ basis • Most combine input and output criteria which are evaluated using quantitative and qualitative measures • When used, performance standards or quotas are set in collaboration with salespeople • Many assign weights to different objectives and incorporate territory data.

  6. Salesperson PerformanceEvaluation Approaches II General conclusions: • Most use multiple sources of information • Most are conducted by the _________ _________ _________ who supervises the salesperson • Most provide a written copy of the review and personal discussion

  7. Sales Manager Evaluation Oneself Team Members Evaluation Evaluation Salesperson Evaluation Evaluation Internal Customers External Customers 360-Degree Feedback System • Salesperson is evaluated by multiple raters • Helps salespeople better understand their ability to add value to their organization and their customers

  8. Type of Measurement • Objective • Statistically-based • Use internal data • Subjective • Personal evaluations • Usually sales manager

  9. Objective Measures I • Common _________ Factors • Orders • #, Avg. size, # cancelled • Accounts • # active, # new, # lost, # overdue, # prospective • This data is in computer records • Measures _________

  10. Objective Measures II • Common _________ Factors • Calls: # planned, made, unplanned • Time: Days worked, calls/day, % time selling • Expenses: Total, by type, % sales, % quota • Non-selling Activities: Letters/calls to prospects, # formal proposals, displays built, # meetings, # missionary calls, # service calls, overdue accts collected • This data is in salespeople’s records • Measures _________

  11. Objective Measures III • Ratios are a quick and dirty way to judge salespeople performance • Common Ratios • Expense • Account development/service • Call activity/productivity

  12. Subjective Measures I • Focus is on how well salespeople do their job vs. focus of objective measures, what they do. Qualitative vs. Quantitative. • More difficult to measure qualitative (how well) rather than quantitative (how much). • Qualitative measures tend to be inconsistent and plagued with biases because they rely on human judgment.

  13. Subjective Measures II • To force some consistency in judgment, and eliminate bias, salespeople are judged along multiple attributes using a rating scale. • Five attributes rated: • _________ _________ • _________ _________ • _________ _________ • _________ _________ • _________ _________

  14. Sales Results • Volume performance • Sales to new accounts • Selling the full product line

  15. Job Knowledge • Product knowledge • Pricing • Company policies • Competitors

  16. Territory Management • Planning activities and calls • Controlling expenses • Reports and records

  17. Customer/Company Relations • Solid, professional relationship with customers • Working well with colleagues • Good company citizen

  18. Personal Characteristics • _________ (also drive and ambition) • _________ _________ (yes, it’s important) • _________ • _________ (getting things done)

  19. Merit Rating Forms: Common Problems • Lack of an _________ focus • _________ personality traits • _________ effect • _________ or _________ • _________ tendency • _________ bias • Organizational _________ influence

  20. Lack of an Outcome Focus • Need goals, not just attribute ratings • Accomplishment • One type is BARS • (behavioral anchored rating scale) • Critical Success Factors • Focus on behaviors that are effective in achieving goals • Key attributes

  21. BARS

  22. Ill-defined Personality Traits • Are they related to performance? • E.g., initiative, aggressiveness, goal-oriented, resourcefulness • These are intuitively appealing, but do they lead to good performance? • Sometimes personality traits (e.g. aggressiveness) can be counter-productive.

  23. Halo Effect • Rating on one attribute tends to influence the rating on other attributes • Important characteristics influence others • Both positive and negative effects • Managers have different ideas of what is important • Even then, they will change over time

  24. Leniency or Harshness • Managers are not the same in their evaluations (same with professors) • Same performance will be judged differently by different managers • Need consistent expectations and evaluations of performance throughout the organization

  25. Central Tendency • Sometimes managers (like people) don’t like the extremes on scales • Given 1-4, most people pick 3 • Not very helpful scores • Can be a problem when used for raises, promotions, terminations, etc.

  26. Interpersonal Bias • Our perceptions of people and their behavior are influenced by whether we like the person or not • Salespeople can use their skills of personal influence to affect the scores • Impression Management • E.g., Eddie Haskell 

  27. Organizational Uses Influence • Managers may be more lenient (or not) if the evaluations are to be used for raises or promotions • If meant for employee development, then they focus on weaknesses in order to have salespeople improve

  28. Protections Against Biases • Instructions on forms • Descriptive categories not words • Request objectivity • Use Objective Measures

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