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Each sales rep provides his manager his forecast with his best guess as to what will close this month. Taking this information, the sales manager prepares her forecast and submits it to her VP sales Americas. He turns around and prepares his forecast to his VP worldwide sales. When the forecast gets to the CFO, CEO, and the Board, the forecast has been touched by many with their own guesses, biases, and wishful projection to attain Nirvana this month. (This story applies to quarterly forecasts too, as many sales people know.) The month comes to a close and suddenly the sunshine, smiles, and optimism disappear as time comes to justify what transpired. Revenue was missed by 20% to 40%, less than 50% of the sales reps met their quotas, and the expenses and inventory increased significantly based on the original forecast. Does this sound familiar? If you have been in such a situation, and if you were the VP sales (worldwide, Americas, or regional), how did that make you feel? It is funny how the results and responses of the CFO and CEO are similar in such a scenario:
What we have found is that in most cases, companies share the following stats:
Where do we go from here? First and foremost, establish a uniform pipeline grading system that includes stages and milestones. Ensure that each milestone has at least one objective deliverable to the prospect in line with their buying cycle. Remembering the traditional sales funnel, each stage of the buying cycle should be reflected into your sales cycle and not the other way around. Here is an example of a pipeline grading system you can all use. It can also be customized to reflect your own industry, market, business engagement model, and specific situation. Call us if you need help with this.
You can assign probability-to-close percentages to each of the stages, with the Evaluating Stage representing the only one that can carry a 50% chance to close. Getting a verbal will bring you to 90%, while delivering the proposal and being in a no decision phase will bring you back down to a 10% probability-to-close. What’s next?Is there a light at the end of the funnel? There is, if you are diligent at creating a pipeline grading system that mirrors your buyer’s buying cycle, if it is auditable, and if it is diligently enforced, by the management team.The results are that you no longer rely on the opinions of sales people when preparing your forecast, you can inspect what you expect, you can retire what sales people call the “sunshine pump”, and you can significantly reduce the amount of time and resources spent on preparing your forecast. When I was VP sales for a software company, I reduced the time spent on forecasting from ten hours a week to two hours a week after implementing such a system. In summary Design a sales process that mirrors your prospect’s buying cycle. Develop a pipeline grading system with stages and milestones that mirror the process with auditable and measurable deliverables. Document all major conversations between your prospects and your company whether by the sales rep or the sales management. Audit these communications and these deliverables. Make forecasting the responsibility of the sales management, not the sales rep. As many of our clients have experienced, your accuracy and reliability of your pipeline, and hence your forecast will be in the 90th percentile at the opportunity level, the right measure of a healthy sales force. If you would you like to minimize the struggle and equip your sales people with the skills that are required to sell more effectively in this new technology marketplace, contact us at www.keyroad.com or call us at 415-934-1449 to determine if we can assist you in achieving your sales enhancement goals.
Philippe Lavie is president of KeyRoad Enterprises (www.keyroad.com). KeyRoad teaches organizations how to sell by delivering organizational sales processes, sales ready messaging, and sales skills development workshops, in addition to consultation in the areas of leadership, marketing, messaging, value justification (ROI), pipeline management, as well as on-going strategic sales planning both domestically and internationally. KeyRoad became a licensed affiliate to CustomerCentric Systems in 2002. He operates out of San Francisco and can be reached at plavie@keyroad.com or by calling 415-934-1449 More articles by Philippe Lavie More articles on Forecasting & Budgeting |