Step 1: Setting Performance Standards Performance Standards May Be Set
Step 1: Setting Performance Standards Performance Standards May Be Set
The factors affecting sales peoples'performance are many. Some of these are
beyond the control of the individual, while some can be modified. Aspects like
motivation, skill-set, job satisfaction, role perception, personal factors like age, sex,
height, etc; the ego drive, and empathy towards the customers are inherent in the
individual salesperson. Environmental and organizational factors, along with the
different functions of sales management come under external factors. It is difficult
for the sales manager to predict the influence of the external factors on the
performance of the sales force.
The sales manager or the concerned person involved in appraising the sales force
can take the help of quantitative or qualitative criteria. These are also termed the
behavior and outcome components. Qualitative criteria include sales skills, territory
management skills, personality traits, etc. The quantitative factors include the sales
volume, average calls per day, sales orders, etc. Quantitative criteria are those
aspects that measure the sales performance in terms of the end results whereas
qualitative criteria involve all those activities that the sale person does to achieve
the end results.
The sales manager must ensure that the performance standards are set to compare
and evaluate the actual performance of the sales force. The standards vary from
industry to industry and are different for different job profiles. Performance
standards come under quantitative standards, qualitative standards, time-based
standards, or cost-based standards. All the sales force activities can be segregated
into one of these four categories and compared with the base standard.
Sales Quota
Quotas are quantitative objectives assigned to sales
organizational units—individual sales personnel, for instance.
As standards for appraising selling effectiveness, quotas specify
desired performance levels for sales volume; such budgeted
items as expenses, gross margin, net profit, and return on
investment; selling – and nonselling-related activities; or some
combination of these items. Sales management sets quotas for
organizational units, such as individual sales districts and sales
personnel. In some companies, sales management sets quotas
for middlemen, such as agents, wholesalers, and retailers.
Quotas set for sales regions, or other marketing units on higher
organizational levels, are customearily broken down and
reassigned to lower-level units like sales districts, or to
individual sales personnel. All quotas have a time dimension—
they quantify what management expects within a given period.
Quotas are devices for directing and controlling sales operations.
Their effectiveness depends upon the kind, amount, and accuracy
of marketing information used in setting them, and upon
management’s skill in administering the quota system. In
effective
systems, management bases quotas on information derived from
sales forecasts, studies of market and sales potentials, and cost
estimates. Accurate data are important to the effectiveness of a
quota system, but, in and of themselves, they are not sufficient;
judgment and administrative skill are required of those with
quota-
setting responsibilities. Soundly administered quotas based on
thorough market knowledge are effective devices for directing
and
controlling sales operations.
Objectives in Using Quotas
The general objective that sales management has in mind in
using quotas is to control the sales effort. Sales control is
facilitated through setting quotas to use in appraising
performances of sales organizational units, such as a sales
region or an individual on the sales force. Sales control is
tightened through setting of quotas on expenses and
profitability of sales volume. A skilled management uses
quotas to motivate personnel to achieve desired performance
levels. When management sets quotas, if firms up its
performance expectations; when these expectations are
communicated to those who are to perform, motivational
forces are put into operation that, it is hoped, result in the
required.
To Provide Quantitative Performance Standards
Quotas provide a means for determining which sales personnel,
other units of the sales organization, or distributive outlets are
doing an average, below-average, or above-average job.
Territorial sales volume quotas, for instance, are yardsticks for
measuring territorial sales performance. Comparisons of quotas
with sales performance identify weak and strong points, but
management must dig deeper to uncover reasons for variations.
A well-designed quota system combined with sales analysis
helps, for example, in assuring that a bad showing in selling
one product in a territory is not hidden by good showings in
selling other products. Sales performances vary product by
product, territory by territory, and salesperson by salesperson.
Quotas identify the strong and weak points ; additional analysis
of performance data uncovers reasons for performance
differentials.
Tto Obtain Tighter Sales and Expenses Control
Control over expenses and profitability is tightened through
quotas. Some companies reimburse sales expenses only up to a
certain percentage of sales volume, the expense quota being
expressed as a percentage of sales. Others set dollar expense
quotas and appraise sales personnel, in part, by their success in
staying within assigned expenses limits. Still others establish
quotas for dollar profit or within assigned expense limits. Still
others establish quotas for dollar profit or profit percentage on
sales. These “budget” quotas shift the emphasis from making
sales to increasing profitability. Budget quotas are particularly
appropriate when additional sales volume is obtainable only at
increased expense; thus profits increase only with improved
selling efficiency (lower selling expenses or more profitable
sales).
To Motivate Desire Performance
should feel that they must reach assigned quotas, and they
should be confident that management will recognize their
decline may, in fact, be so great that sales personnel are less likely
for example, may appear to indicate that the sales volume quo
level.
and quota setting but upon how the planners integrate these
naturally into a sales budget, thus setting the stage for the