My experience is that despite the many techniques for measuring the performance of the sales team and salespeople individually, an incredible number of firms neglect to do so. This is especially true for small businesses. As a starting point for the KPI, management sets the sales of the previous month, or even pay attention to how much time the salesperson spends at the workplace.
Understanding how effective the sales department as a whole and each salesperson in particular is necessary for planning the development of the company. Any firm that does not pay attention to this, doomed, and they will not be saved even just purchased CRM. To understand the effectiveness of the department, you need to manually and impartially assess the quantitative and qualitative performance of the sales department and salespeople:
Note that all of these metrics are related to products sold. There are other quantitative performance measures that include:
In turn, this information makes it possible to determine:
These ratios help answer the following questions:
Many of the indicators listed above point to possible reasons why a salesperson may not be achieving his or her sales volume target.
Perhaps the salesperson is lazy and therefore the required number of contacts with potential customers is not taking place. Perhaps the rate of contacts made is quite satisfactory, but their effectiveness (the ratio between sales volume and total number of contacts) is quite low. This may indicate a lack of training. Maybe the salesperson communicates too much with regular customers and does not devote enough time to potential customers.
My experience is that after our first visit, the management of the company changes in face as they realise how much time and profit they have actually lost. Let’s analyse the performance of your sales team together, identify the quality of your salespeople and find where we focus our attention.
We can guarantee that if you apply our recommendations, you can increase your sales by tens of per cent.