Chapter 9 Managing the Global Sales Territory Sales Management: A Global Perspective Earl D. Honeycutt John B. Ford Antonis Simintiras.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 11 Compensating the Sales Force
Advertisements

B2B Advertising.
UNIT 1 CONCEPT OF MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS (continue)
Click here to advance to the next slide.
Chapter 5 Global Selling Process, II Sales Management: A Global Perspective Earl D. Honeycutt John B. Ford Antonis Simintiras.
SELLING AND SALES MANGEMENT Chapter Three Territory Development And Time Management.
Sales Organization Structure and Sales Force Deployment Module Four.
12 Cost Analysis McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
International Human Resources Management
The Theory and Estimation of Production
Copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved.
The Islamic University –Gaza
Time, Territory, and Self-Management: Keys to Success
Chapter 8 Global Sales Training Sales Management: A Global Perspective Earl D. Honeycutt John B. Ford Antonis Simintiras.
Continual Development of the Sales Force: Sales Training
Chapter 12 Evaluation in the Global Marketplace
CHAPTER FIVE Territory Management.
Entrepreneurship Estimating Sales - Chapter 9.2. Estimating Sales You need to plan for your sales force Sales Force Planning What selling methods do you.
1 Copyright © 2000 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved. (1) 7 Continual Development of the Salesforce: Sales Training Module 7 Continual Development.
Chapter 7 Selecting the Global Sales Force Sales Management: A Global Perspective Earl D. Honeycutt John B. Ford Antonis C. Simintiras.
1 PowerPointPresentation by PowerPoint Presentation by Gail B. Wright Professor Emeritus of Accounting Bryant University MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTING 10 TH EDITION.
Foundations of Business 3e
UNIT F MANAGEMENT OF DISTRIBUTION, PROMOTION, AND SELLING
Chapter 7 and 8 Organizational Structure and Managing Change.
Chapter 6 Global Sales Organizations Sales Management: A Global Perspective Earl D. Honeycutt John B. Ford Antonis Simintiras.
1 Copyright © 2000 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved. (1) 5 Module 5 Sales Organization Structure and Salesforce Deployment.
Chapter 1 marketing is all around us Section 1.1
Chapter 1 What is Marketing? n n Marketing is the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging.
Financial Assessment and
Managing within Your Company
Chapter 3 Personal Sales in a Global Context Sales Management: A Global Perspective Earl D. Honeycutt John B. Ford Antonis Simintiras.
Chapter Learning Objectives
Sales Organization Structure and Sales Force Deployment
Chapter 16 Managing Within Your Company
Chapter 1 Introduction Managers and Managing.
Managerial Accounting: An Introduction To Concepts, Methods, And Uses Chapter 11 Profit Center Performance Evaluation Maher, Stickney and Weil.
1 Profit and Cost Center Performance Evaluation CHAPTER 10 © 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in.
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Market entry strategies introduction. Potential determinants of the firm´s choice of foreign markets THE COMPANY Degree of internationalization and overseas.
Chapter 1 Introduction Sales Management: A Global Perspective Earl D. Honeycutt John B. Ford Antonis Simintiras.
1 WEEK 2 – Identifying and Selecting Markets Market Segmentation, Targeting, and Positioning.
© 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Time, Territory, and Self- Management: Keys to Success Chapter 14 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Irwin/McGraw-Hill Copyright © 2001 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-1.
Click here to advance to the next slide.. Chapter 5 Entrepreneurship Section 5.1 Rewards and Challenges of Entrepreneurship.
WEEK 2: MANAGEMENT AND MANAGERS BUSN 107 – Özge Can.
Sales Organization Structure and Sales Force Deployment Module Four.
1 Sales & Distribution Management (2005) Martin Khan Instructor Abdel Fatah Afifi MA&T, MBA, BA, ACPA, CPT 1 st Semester 2009/2010.
Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Managerial Accounting: An Introduction To Concepts, Methods, And Uses
Dr. Bea Bourne 1. 2 If you have any troubles in seminar, please do call Tech Support at: They can assist if you get “bumped” from the seminar.
Time, Territory, People and Self-Management: Keys to Success Chapter Dudut Urip Prasetyo
McGraw-Hill © 2000 The McGraw-Hill Companies 1 S M Custom Research, Inc.
Part II SALES FORCE ACTIVITIES Chapter 3: Sales Opportunity Management.
SDM-Ch.4 1 Chapter 4 Management of Sales Territories and Quotas.
Chapter # 19: Sales Mix Considerations Margin of Safety Operating Leverage Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis Business Applications of CVP Additional Considerations.
2-1 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved Chapter 2 Retail, Business, Services and Nonprofit Selling.
Dr. Bea Bourne 1. 2 If you have any troubles in seminar, please do call Tech Support at: They can assist if you get “bumped” from the seminar.
SDM-Ch.4 1 Chapter 4 Management of Sales Territories and Quotas.
TOPIC 1 INTRODUCTION TO SELLING AND SALES MANAGEMENT
Chapter 8 Strategy in the Global Environment
Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis
TOPIC 1 INTRODUCTION TO SELLING AND SALES MANAGEMENT
PART I INTRODUCTION TO SALES MANAGEMENT. PART I INTRODUCTION TO SALES MANAGEMENT.
Sales Organization Structure and Sales Force Deployment
PART I INTRODUCTION TO SALES MANAGEMENT. PART I INTRODUCTION TO SALES MANAGEMENT.
Sales Organization Structure and Sales Force Deployment
Chapter 8 Strategy in the Global Environment
Chapter 8 Strategy in the global Environment
PART I INTRODUCTION TO SALES MANAGEMENT. PART I INTRODUCTION TO SALES MANAGEMENT.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 9 Managing the Global Sales Territory Sales Management: A Global Perspective Earl D. Honeycutt John B. Ford Antonis Simintiras

Introduction Sales territory environments constantly change With change, territorial decisions should be revisited by the sales manager: Sales force or agents? Criteria for selecting partners What is the correct sales force size? Ethical dilemmas in sales force territory design and management

Sales Force or Agent? Firm can use independent agents or company sales force –Outside U.S. about 72% of firms use agents –Best choice when entering markets with small sales or unknown potential –Agents receive high commission, but only when sales are made –Agents must be expert in market situation and customer base

Agent Attributes Agents are used when: –Markets are geographically dispersed –There are few customers in market –Firm is inexperienced in global markets –Product is new and demand is uncertain –Firm wants to simplify business activities Concerns about agents include: –Partner loyalty –Product knowledge

Managerial Decisions Who should be hired for the position? –Expatriates, host-, or third-country Expatriates – product knowledge & control, but high cost of maintaining Host-Country – economical and market knowledge; need product training Third-Country – culture and language knowledge; training & identity problems

Breakeven Analysis Economically, sales manager can compute the breakeven point (Q*) of using an agent or a company sales force That is: Q* = Fixed Costs CMsp – rCMa Where Q* is the point of indifference Fixed Costs = Obligated costs CMsp & Cma = Contribution Margin r = percent of time agent spends on product line vs. a company salesperson

Breakeven Application Suppose a salesperson has $2,000 fixed costs, the agent spends 50% of their time on the firm’s product line, the contribution margin is $60 and $50, respectively, for the salesperson and agent, we compute Q* this way: 2,000 (60-.5x50) Or 2,000/35 = 57 units If the sales manager forecasts sales of 100 units for a company salesperson, then economically the firm should use a company salesperson

Selecting Partners Partners will contribute directly to the success or failure of a sales firm Partners should posses the following attributes: –Marketplace knowledge –Marketplace status –Similar goals and values –View partnering as a “win-win” situation

Sales Force Size How many salespersons are necessary? Three methods available: –Economic – a new salesperson should be hired as long as the revenue produced by that salesperson exceeds their cost Difficult to compute this point Can at best be estimated This suggests that a full commissioned salesperson should always be hired

Breakdown Method Second method to compute sales force size is the breakdown method Sales Force Size = Forecasted Sales Average sales per SP For example if forecasted sales in Euros was 250 million and the average salesperson sold 20 million Euros, then 12.5 salespersons would be needed

Computational Concerns When the breakdown is utilized, then one must ask how accurate are the forecasted sales figure and the average sales numbers? Most sales forces have a number of average salespersons, but also a few superstars that raise the average higher than what is accomplished by most salespersons!

Composite Method A third method of computing sales force size is the composite method –Firms are prioritized into A, B, C categories –The call frequency for each category determined –To compute total calls multiply call frequency times the number of firms in each category –Next, compute total calls per salesperson Take average calls per day x days of week clients are called upon x number of weeks worked per year E.g. 4 calls per day x 4 days per week x 45 weeks a year = 720 calls made per salesperson per year

Completing the Computation Suppose that there are 60A, 45B, and 310C accounts that have to be called upon 15, 10, and 6 times, respectively, per year This amounts to 4,210 accounts Divide 4,210/720 calls and this works out to salespersons needed However, if cold calling consumes 10% of salespersons time, this must be factored in

Sales Force Size Summary Economic method teaches us that sales manager must be aware of relationship between costs and sales Breakdown provides an estimate that can be biased by extreme performances Composite method takes many factors into account and allows sales manager to set service levels and additional duties

Sales Administration Sales manager must decide upon sales force activities: –Office hours, cold calls, reports, travel frequency –Will differ depending upon culture –Some cultures expect firm to play a parental role – high level of supervision and inspiration –Firms have global data support and Customer relationship management systems

Sales Management Control US firms assume “master of destiny” that assumes salesperson responsible for their actions and accomplishments = merit pay Many cultures view success as being out of the individual’s control – Saudi Arabia Individual evaluations may cause problems in a collectivistic culture Degree of authority delegated to overseas offices must be determined

Travel Planning Travel can consume a salesperson’s time –Must plan and work efficiently Best to start at most distant point and work back toward the office or starting point Use a circuitous route the minimizes backtracking Employing a computer program that plans the most efficient travel schedule

Ethical Issues A number of decisions arise when designing sales territories –Equitable opportunity –Territory assignment process –Account service levels –Partner relations –Switching from agents to salespersons –Treatment of host- and third-country salespersons

Distributors and Partners Industrial firms refer smaller customers to distributor partners –Allows small quantities to be purchased –Relationship with distributors must be coordinated, training must occur, and a coherent sales strategy must be pursued –Distributor serves smaller customers and industrial firm concentrates larger customers –This cooperation complements market service

Discussion Questions If a firm decides to expand into a new territory with a high-tech product, which form of the salesperson—expatriate, host-, or third-country—is appropriate? For a consumer good such as clothing? List and discuss the four criteria for sound partner selection In what ways is the management of the sales force impacted by ethical behavior?

Summary Territory management is an important duty of the sales manager –Sales force employed to insure control and increase emphasis on company product line There are techniques for computing whether to maintain an agent or go to a company salesperson There are three methods to determine sales force size Managers must ascertain sales force administration and control issues Ethical issues influence sales territory management decisions

Discussion Questions Are any sales training stages within the process more important than another? Why or why not? List as many reasons as possible why it is difficult to objectively evaluate sales training. Why is it important to conduct follow-up training? How can high-tech methods help with this responsibility?