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Match Your Sales Force Structure to Your Business Life Cycle.

Authors :
Zoltners, Andris A.
Sinha, Prabhakant
Lorimer, Sally E.
Source :
Harvard Business Review; Jul/Aug2006, Vol. 84 Issue 7/8, p81-89, 9p, 3 Charts, 1 Graph
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

Although companies devote considerable time and money to managing their sales forces, few focus much thought on how the structure of the sales force needs to change over the life cycle of a product or a business. However, the organization and goals of a sales operation have to evolve as businesses start up, grow, mature, and decline if a company wants to keep winning the race for customers. Specifically, firms must consider and alter four factors over time: the differing roles that internal salespeople and external selling partners should play, the size of the sales force, its degree of specialization, and how salespeople apportion their efforts among different customers, products, and activities. These variables are critical because they determine how quickly sales forces respond to market opportunities, they influence sales reps' performance, and they affect companies' revenues, costs, and profitability. In this article, the authors use time-series data and cases to explain how, at each stage, firms can best tackle the relevant issues and get the most out of their sales forces. During start-up, smart companies focus on how big their sales staff should be and on whether they can depend upon selling partners. In the growth phase, they concentrate on getting the sales force's degree of specialization and size right. When businesses hit maturity, companies should better allocate existing resources and hire more general-purpose salespeople. Finally, as organizations go into decline, wise sales leaders reduce sales force size and use partners to keep the business afloat for as long as possible. INSETS: How Sales Sizing Strategies Stack Up;Sizing the Sales Force by the Numbers;Optimizing the Maturity Phase. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00178012
Volume :
84
Issue :
7/8
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Harvard Business Review
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
21124751