Building Your Sales Metric Management System In 4 Easy Steps
Written by Lee Salz
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When I conduct workshops on building a sales
metric management system, the first metric
that the group usually mentions for inclusion is revenue. Revenue is not a
metric. It is a result. There is nothing that sales managers can do to
address revenue. They can, however, work with a sales person on specific
activity levels that lead to quota attainment.
Thinking back to one
of the great cult films of the 1980s…Caddyshack. There is a conversation
between Ty Webb (Chevy Chase) and Judge Smails (Ted Knight) in the locker room
after Ty has just finished a round of golf. Judge Smails asks Ty what he shot
that day and Ty responds by telling the Judge that he doesn't keep score.
Puzzled, Judge Smails says, "How do you measure yourself with other
golfers?" Ty responds by saying, "By height."
Obviously, height doesn't tell you anything
about a golfer's performance which is why that dialogue is humorous. Yet, there
is nothing funny about a sales organization that is using meaningless,
arbitrary data to assess the performance of their sales team. Even worse is if
the only number tracked, measured, and monitored is revenue quota attainment.
When I conduct workshops on building a sales
metric management system, the first metric
that the group usually mentions for inclusion is revenue. Revenue is not a
metric. It is a result. There is nothing that sales managers can do to
address revenue. They can, however, work with a sales person on specific
activity levels that lead to quota attainment. In essence, the statistical
components of your sales metric management system create a success roadmap for
your sales people. If they are achieving the metrics in the system, they will
be blowing out their revenue targets.
There are four steps to identifying the
metrics for inclusion in your sales metric management system.
1.Measurable. If the area of the
business you want to measure cannot be measured statistically, then how will
you know whether or not it is working? This seems like circular logic, but I
often hear about "trusting your gut" as a measurable statistic. Needless
to say, gut instinct does not belong in a sales metric management system. There
needs to be a way to track the data easily and efficiently.
For example, if you
wanted to track the number of outbound calls made by your sales team, but that
data was not tracked anywhere, you would not be able to measure it. Thus,
outbound calls would not be part of your sales metric management system as it
is not measurable. Search for other data points that reflect performance that
is measurable. If you find that many of the areas you want to measure are not
measurable, you may need to look at your CRM. It may need to be reconfigured or
replaced altogether.
2.Meaningful. Just because you
can measure a data point, it doesn't mean that it belongs in your sales metric
management system. Like sports, there is no end to the data that can be
measured in a sales organization. Sportscasters commonly use a series of
statistics to present how well or terribly a player is performing. Easily, a
set of counterpoint data could be presented showing the opposite point of view.
I recall my time as a
sales management executive where on any given day I could put together a series
of data that would support promoting or firing any member of the sales team
including myself. The key is to select the most critical activities that drive
the sales person's success and include those in your sales metric management
system. For each metric, ask yourself what that data tells you relative to the
sales person achieving their revenue goal. The meaningful ones go in your
system while the others are cast aside.
3.Goal-oriented. Statistics without
goals tell you very little about performance. Each statistical component of
your sales metric management system needs to have a corresponding goal. When
performance discussions take place with the sales person, their performance
versus goal achievement serves as the center-point of the agenda. This is a
significant change from the typical discussions that are focused on whether or
not sales quota was attained.
When setting the
goal-levels for your sales metric management system, there is an important
consideration. Thinking back to report cards from school, students achieved a
letter grade based on their performance. A few kids received an "A"
which meant they had delivered stellar performance. However, average performance
reflected a "C" on the report card. If your sales person achieved the
goal for a particular metric, what does that mean? Was their performance
exceptional? Or did they perform at the mere minimum acceptable level to keep
their job?
If you set your goal
levels so that they mean A-level performance, you should expect few of your
sales people to hit them. If you set them at the C-level, you are establishing
the baseline for minimum acceptable performance. There isn't a right or wrong
approach between the "A" and "C" philosophies. The key is
to select one, understand its meaning relative to performance, and handle
achievement accordingly.
4.Trainable. The final component
is to identify the mentoring that can be provided to a sales person who is not
achieving a defined metric in the system. Since the metrics that you are
managing are critical to a sales person's success (meaningful), deficiencies
cannot be left unaddressed. When you identify each metric for the system, if a
sales person is not achieving it, what potential weaknesses does it expose in
their arsenal? As a sales manager, you can then begin digging to determine the
root cause and help the sales person improve.
Just like many think
that revenue is a metric, many think that if a sales person is failing to
achieve their revenue quota that they cannot close. It's possible that closing
is the issue. However, if you have your sales metric management system in
place, you may find that closing isn't the issue at all. Perhaps, the sales
person doesn't have enough activity in their pipeline. Or, that they struggle to
move prospects through the buying process. Or, any of countless other possible
deficiencies. Managers who have their sales metric management system in place
can quickly identify the problem area and address it.
Designing your sales metric management system
well-positions you to create an effective sales compensation plan. Remember, your
sales compensation
plan tells your sales people where to invest their selling time. Thus, the
compensation plan reinforces your sales metric management system. If you would
like my sales metric management system worksheet, send me an
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.
Lee Salz
About the author:
Lee B. Salz is a sales management strategist who specializes in helping companies build scalable, high-performance sales organizations through hiring the right sales people, on-boarding them effectively and efficiently, and aligning their sales activity with business objectives using his sales architecture® methodology. He is the President of Sales Architects, the C.E.O. of Business Expert Webinars and author of “Soar Despite Your Dodo Sales Manager.” Lee is a member of the Editorial Advisory Board and featured columnist with Sales and Marketing Management Magazine. Look for Lee's new book in 2010 titled, "The Sales Marriage” where he shares the secrets to hiring and on-boarding the right sales people. He is a results-driven sales management consultant and a passionate, dynamic speaker. Lee can be reached at
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or 763.416.4321.