Developing strategic priorities focused on the customer, an organization should encourage its sales people to work in a collaborative style to leverage business potential within the marketplace. Jeanne M. Liedtka suggests, in her research on how collaborating across lines of business gain competitive advantage, that by establishing a collaborative approach, a focus on internal organizational strengths and on the needs of the customer, there is then potential for gaining (or pulling) a larger segment of market share. Customers have to deal with external influences, their own preferences and multiple competitive choices in order to make informed decisions.
Organizations that can take a holistic, collaborative approach to
identifying and satisfying customer needs will more likely obtain a
greater share of the market.
The sales manager’s role is therefore to ensure they optimize their
sales person’s performance against the customer. For example, while
sales managing a unified sales force targeted at providing holistic
solutions for our customers, while the organization had multiple
product lines fighting for shelf space, I found myself spending a lot
of time preventing our internal silos from looking like our competition
- fragmented and confusing.
Create a mental image of a tug of war with the customer in the
center – Not just one rope being pulled at both ends but many ropes
pulling in all directions. First, they have their own established
preferences and habits. Given we are creatures of habit these can be
well anchored and difficult to move. Second, they have external
influences coming at them all the time by way of marketing, subliminal
messaging and information highways to name a few. Thirdly, there is
your competition trying to influence them and attempting to pull them
in multiple directions. Hopefully they are fragmented and more
confusing than your own value proposition. Lastly, there is your own
organization and in my own situation various lines of business or
products attempting to secure the customer through a single sales
force.
You can either look like your competition and be pulling your customer
in multiple directions or you can collaborate and unify yourself to be
the power line that wins the customer’s heart, mind and soul then
ultimately their business. For collaboration to exist, Liedtka suggests
that shared goals and partnerships are important and the sales
manager’s role is an integral part in developing these relationships.
Sales managers and sales leaders today should use a less directive
approach to obtain commitment and manage the risk of forfeiting control
of what often has been ownership of outcomes for many managers of the
past. This is consistent with humanistic-encouraging behaviours in
sales managers as described by Dr. Clayton J.C. Lafferty as these sales
managers believe that they can assist others in fulfilling their
potential by providing a supportive climate that inspires
self-improvement, motivation and confidence.
Certainly with my own experience when we were unified, all pulling
for the customer to win we had double digit growth, business leaders
that were exceeding plan, sales people making more money than they had
ever contemplated and we had established brand recognition that clients
wanted to be associated with. When we were not unified all of these
indicators slipped away and more quickly than it took to establish
them.
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