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SNDM Sem2 - Session 6

1) Sales managers are interested in motivating their sales force to achieve performance goals. A salesperson's performance is influenced by their ability, motivation, and effort. 2) Motivation is goal-directed behavior aimed at achieving rewards. Most salespeople require external motivation to reach performance targets. Their motives prompt them to take actions to reduce tensions and fulfill needs. 3) Management can provide motivational help for salespeople due to challenges like ups and downs in the job, role conflicts, and apathy from covering the same territory repeatedly. Motivational theories like Maslow's hierarchy of needs and Herzberg's hygiene theory inform management strategies.

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Kunal Saini
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
62 views

SNDM Sem2 - Session 6

1) Sales managers are interested in motivating their sales force to achieve performance goals. A salesperson's performance is influenced by their ability, motivation, and effort. 2) Motivation is goal-directed behavior aimed at achieving rewards. Most salespeople require external motivation to reach performance targets. Their motives prompt them to take actions to reduce tensions and fulfill needs. 3) Management can provide motivational help for salespeople due to challenges like ups and downs in the job, role conflicts, and apathy from covering the same territory repeatedly. Motivational theories like Maslow's hierarchy of needs and Herzberg's hygiene theory inform management strategies.

Uploaded by

Kunal Saini
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Sales Force Management Sales Force Motivation

Meaning of Motivation
• Sales Manager’s Performance depends upon the composite
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performance of the individuals making up the sales force


• Hence Sales Managers are greatly interested in the factors influencing
individual sales personnel to achieve given performance levels
• What causes a salesperson to achieve a given performance level?
• Native ability or potential - No one achieves more than they are capable of
achieving
• Performance is influenced by skills that come with education, training, and
experience
• The amount and effectiveness of effort expended by the individual
impacts performance
• Most sales personnel require motivation to reach and maintain
satisfactory performance levels
Performance( P)  Ability( A)  Motivation( M )
Meaning of Motivation
• Motivation is goal-directed behavior aimed toward achieving
given results, which, in turn, provide rewards in line with the goal
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• Some sales personnel are self-starters, requiring little external incentive –


but they are exceptions
• Most sales personnel require motivation to reach and maintain
satisfactory performance levels
• The process of motivation starts when a motive prompts people
to action
• The behavior of the salesperson comprises a series of activities that the
person does by being motivated to achieve individual or organizational
goals
Motive

Behavior Tension Reduction

Goal
Need Gratification and Motivation

• All human activity including the salesperson’s job behavior – is


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directed toward satisfying certain needs (i.e., reaching certain


goals)
• Individual behavior differ because individuals seek to fulfill
different sets of needs in different ways
• Some salespersons are more successful than others because of
the differing motivational patterns and amounts and types of
efforts they exert in performing their jobs
• How individual behaves depends upon the nature of their
fulfilled and unfulfilled needs modified by their environmental
and social backgrounds
• The motives lying behind any specific action derive from
tensions built up to satisfy particular needs.
• Any action taken is for the purpose of reducing these tensions
Motivational Help from Management
• Important reasons why sales personnel require additional motivation are:
• Inherent Nature of the Sales Job cause salespersons to become discouraged, to
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achieve low performance levels


• Succession of ups and downs
• Interaction with pleasant/courteous and unpleasant/rude people
• Aggressive competing sales personnel
• Working after-hours time away from home
• Salesperson’s Boundary Position and Role Conflicts
• Salesperson must try to satisfy the expectations of people both within the company as well
as in customer organization
• Conflict due to the dual role as an advocate for both the customer and the company and the
salesperson’s basic interest as an entrepreneur
• Tendency towards Apathy
• Lack of interest and enthusiasm because of covering the same territory and virtually the
same customers
• Maintaining a Feeling of Group Identity
• The salesperson working alone, finds it difficult to develop and maintain a feeling of group
identity with other company salespeople
Motivational Theories – Hierarchy of Needs
Self
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Actualization
Needs

Esteem Needs

Belongingness and Social


Relations Needs

Safety and Security Needs

Basic Physiological Needs


Hierarchy of Needs
• Abraham H Maslow developed a theory of motivation based on the notion
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that an individual seeks to fulfill needs according to a hierarchy of importance


as shown in the figure
• Abraham Maslow’s need hierarchy theory proposes that:
• All people possess five sets of needs
• These needs follow a hierarchical pattern from the most fundamental or basic
survival instincts to the most advanced needs of personal growth and
development
• People are motivated to engage in behavior that will result in the satisfaction of
the lowest level of needs currently not fulfilled
• Once a need is satisfied, the next need in the hierarchy becomes dominant, i.e., a
higher order need cannot become active unless the preceding lower order need is
satisfied.
• A satisfied need is not a motivator and an unsatisfied need activates goal seeking
behavior
• People wish to move up in the hierarchy and seek growth. No individual is content
with physiological needs
Sales Force Management Motivational Theories – Hygiene Theory
Hygiene Theory
• Frederick Herzberg and his co-researchers developed the motivation-hygiene
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theory by grouping the motivating variables into two categories: Hygiene


factors and Motivators
• Hygiene factors are those factors that when absent increase dissatisfaction with
the job, and when present help in preventing dissatisfaction but do not increase
satisfaction or motivation
• Motivators are factors that when absent in a job prevent both satisfaction and
motivation, and when present lead to satisfaction and motivation.
• Motivation-hygiene theory has two important implications for sales
management:
• Management must see that the job provides the conditions that prevent job
dissatisfaction – this means that management needs to provide an acceptable
working environment, fair compensation, adequate fringe benefits, fair and
reasonable supervision, and job security (to get a fair day’s work from the
salesperson)
• Management must provide opportunities for achievement, recognition,
responsibility, and advancement (to motivate performance beyond that of a fair
day’s work)
Sales Force Management Motivational Theories – Expectation Model
Expectancy Model
• The expectancy model, developed by Vroom, conceptualizes
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motivation as a process governing choices of behavioral activity


• The strength of an individual’s motivation to behave in a certain way (in
terms of efforts) depends upon how strongly that individual believes that
these efforts will achieve the desired performance levels
• If the individual achieves the desired performance, then how strongly
does the individual believe that the organization’s rewards/punishments
will be appropriate for that kind of performance
• And to what extent will this satisfy the individual’s needs (goals)
• Put differently, The strength of a tendency to act in a certain way
depends upon the strength of an expectation that the act will be
followed by a given outcome and on that outcome’s
attractiveness to the individual

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