Not long ago, I spoke with a frustrated CEO. His company was doing OK, but somehow not meeting his expectations.
Like many companies, the customers' needs were changing quite profoundly. They were rapidly shifting their solution offerings to match customer needs and to compete. They were investing in new areas, had launched some products to expand the value they could bring to their target customers. But the product sales weren’t taking off as he had expected.
The CEO felt that shifting focus to many of the new products was critical to their future success. He believed, over time, reliance on their traditional product sets would not drive the expected growth, even worse, customer demand for these products would decline.
We talked about sales performance. Sales performance was OK, they were meeting their numbers, but the CEO was still concerned about what was happening.
Analyzing the Sales Data
The VP of sales and I started analyzing sales performance. We noticed a several things:
- Traditional products dominated sales. While the sales people had been well trained and were well supported on the new products, they weren’t selling them. They were selling the things that had made them successful in the past.
- Sales to the customers that were generating 75% of their revenue (in this case about 15 percent of their customers generated 75% of their revenue) were flattening, in many market segments there was actually a decline.
- Also, new product sales to those major customers was virtually non existent.
- New customer acquisition, particularly in the segments where some of the new products should have been the strongest, was virtually non existent.
- While sales people were making their numbers, the qualitative feedback was that it was getting tougher and tougher.
We scratched our heads wondering what was going on. The new products and some of the new market segments represented the future for the company. These would drive the growth engine, particularly as some of the traditional products went into decline. The VP of sales had put together strong sales enablement, training and support programs to help sales people become successful in selling these new products, but it wasn’t happening. Sales Management constantly talked about new customer acquisition, particularly in a couple of the segments facing the greatest declines, but it just wasn’t happening.
As I talked to salespeople, I saw they were struggling. All of them were saying that it was becoming harder and harder to make their numbers. I asked about the new products and new customer acquisition. The reaction was very predictable.
Creatures of Habit? Change the Metrics
As the salespeople faced increasing difficulty in making their numbers, their natural reaction was to double down on the things they had always done in the past. As it became tougher to succeed, they focused on doing more of what had made them successful in the past.
The problem was, it was becoming harder and harder to be successful.
They were scraping by just making their numbers.
The VP of Sales and I looked at their metrics. The key metric was quota–a revenue target.
We needed to radically change the behaviors of the salespeople! If they kept doing what they had always done, pretty soon they would fail. As much as the VP had tried to get the salespeople to shift their behaviors through training and some sales contests, they weren’t changing as quickly as they needed to.
We decided to change the sales/performance management metrics. (Well duggh, people do what they are measured to do.)
What's Your Revenue Mix?
Revenue was still a key driver, but salespeople had a couple of other metrics. Their performance would be evaluated by the mix of that revenue. That is, a certain percent of the revenue had to come from the new products. Another percent of the revenue had to come from new customer acquisition.
Revenue was no longer the key metric... the “right” revenue was critical. We could have changed the comp plan a little to support this, in this case we didn’t–the company had a strong performance management culture, so simply changing the metrics was what was needed to shift behaviors.
Many of you probably thought I was describing your company–I see so many companies facing the same thing.
It’s critical that we align our sales performance goals and metrics with the strategies of our company. If we want to drive changes in focus and behaviors, we have to change the metrics. We have to align our metrics with the strategies and goals of the company.
If we want to drive rapid behavioral change with our sales teams, we have to have metrics that are aligned with the changes we want to see–along with the training, programs and support to help people be successful.
People do what they are measured to do. We just have to make sure we are measuring the right things! For a free peek at Sales Manager Survival Guide, click the picture or link. You’ll get the Table of Contents, Foreword, and two free chapters. Free Sample.
David Brock is president of Partners in EXCELLENCE, a management consulting firm focused on sales productivity, channel development, strategic alliances and more. Read more of his blogs here.