Sales is all about helping customers shop for and get what they need or want. It places focus on finding leads, converting leads, and closing the deal. Once those three things are done, all you need to do is deliver the product. So if sales minded people are focused on these 3 things, why separate the sales and orders functions within a business?
The fact is many businesses, big and small, combine the sales and orders functions under one organization (usually called sales). Well this can work in some situations; there is an important case to be made for separating getting sales from taking orders.
Management Tips for Creating a WIN-WIN Scenario
A widely recognized key to long term business success is building long term relationships with your customers. The simple fact is that it takes longer and costs more to get a new customer than it does to repeatedly satisfy the needs of an existing customer who already trusts you.
It is very important to give your customers what they want to encourage them to come back to you again. It is equally important to give your business what it needs to survive, or you won’t be around long enough to help your new customers a second time. You need to satisfy your business needs and your customer needs at the same time. This is known as a Win-Win scenario. The customer wins by getting something they need or want. The business wins by getting something that they need or want. If either side does not get what it needs or wants from the relationship, or feels they were dealt with unfairly, there is no incentive to go back and do it again. The only way you can build healthy long term relationships is with Win-Win transactions.
So what does this have to do with separating Sales and Orders teams? Everything.
Win-Win scenarios don’t just happen. They require negotiation. In a simple business the negotiation can take place between the customer and the salesperson. As a business grows it quickly becomes too complex and time consuming for the customer to negotiate effectively without someone to look out for their interests and be their voice inside the business. Without people specifically working on behalf of the customer the customer’s voice would not be heard inside most businesses. We call the people who argue on behalf of the customer’s best interests, the Voice of the Customer. The Voice of the Customer inside the business is generally the Sales team and the Customer Support team. Their counterparts, the Voice of the Business, are the Orders team and the Delivery, or Fulfillment team.
The Voice of the Customer and the Voice of the Business must work together to ensure a Win-Win scenario. The Sales team brings the customer message to the table. The Orders team brings the business’s message to the table. The customer can be as involved as they like, but they don’t need to be at every meeting and every negotiation because the sales team is working on their behalf to ensure they get what they need.
Management Tips for Ensuring a Balanced Negotiation
So it’s great to say that the sales team is the Voice of the Customer, and the Orders team is the Voice of the Business, but aren’t they really both working for the business? What motivates the sales person to truly act on behalf of the customer instead of just trying to get the most for the business? The answer to this is in how people are measured. Sales people are (or should be) measured on sell price. Orders people are measured on margin (how much money is left after all the costs are paid). This means the sales person is not rewarded based on whether or not the business makes money. It also means the sales person is rewarded based on something the customer can clearly see: sell price. They are free to discuss it with the customer in a completely open and honest way.
As a customer, if your sales representative is being paid based on profit margin then you must simply trust that they are steering you towards a particular purchase because it’s good for you and not just because they know it has a higher profit margin (and hence a better commission). As a sales person in this situation the temptation is always there to push a higher margin product that may not be in the best interests of your customer.
As a customer, if you know your sales person earns commission based on sell price then you can be sure that you are getting the whole story. Many organizations do not even reveal their internal costs to the sales people so that they will be put in the same situation as the customer, and openly and honestly defend the customer’s interests. The sales person is rewarded solely on how much the customer spends, and everyone knows the situation. As a customer, you know exactly what the sales person’s motivation is, and can respect that. It is the best situation for you as a customer. It may seem like a small difference, but the effects are huge. Now the sales person is motivated to get the most for the customer so they will spend again. They are put in the same situation as the customer with regard to price. They don’t have costs floating around in their head to make them wonder about whether the business will make money or not. They only know what the customer knows. They are only motivated to get the most for the customer. It is only in this situation that they can truly become the Voice of the Customer.
The other side of the coin is the Voice of the Business. You can well imagine that if a business gave their customers everything they asked for whatever price they requested they would be out of business very quickly. So across the negotiation table from the Sales team and the customer sits the Orders team. The Orders team is rewarded based on how much money the company makes after costs are paid. They are not in the same shoes as the customer. They are in the shoes of the business. The Orders team is also looking for a Win-Win scenario. The Orders team also wants a long term relationship. But the Orders team is not willing to give anything away unless there is some benefit to the business. A balanced Voice of the Customer and Voice of the Business results in the very best balance between customer interests and business interests. Separating the Orders team from the Sales team is an important step in building the foundation for long term, mutually beneficial relationships between business and customer.
Summary
Separating the Orders team from the Sales team creates a balance that fosters solid, long term relationships between a business and its customers. The Sales team goes after what is best for the customer. The Orders team goes after what is best for the business. Worst case for both sides is a failure to reach an agreement (no sales, no margin). Best case for both sides is an agreement that leaves both sides happy, and ready to do more business in the future. And through it all the customer always has someone they can trust to look out for their best interests, because in large part their interests are shared.
Latest Management Articles
Using Targets to Set Your Success Trajectory
By: Stacey Barr | 07/10/2008
Clearly, the size of your target depends on the size of your organisation's belief in their ability to improve things, to make change happen, to decide on what to fix and execute that decision. But you don't have to have just one target. For any performance measure, you can lay out a path into the future using a series of targets paving the way to the level of success you want.
The Softer Side of Stretch Targets
By: Stacey Barr | 07/10/2008
People typically want to run for the hills when their managers announce new stretch targets. They think of all the stretch targets in the past that fell flat, and of the frustration and angst of aiming for heights so far beyond what they can believe is possible to achieve. Out comes the cynicism about doing more with less, and busting their gut to make the boss look good. But aren't stretch targets supposed to inspire people to outperform themselves, to strive for excellence?
Measuring: It’s the Power to Know
By: Stacey Barr | 07/10/2008
Think about something you really wish could change in your business. Something that matters because it impacts its success. Is it getting more customers? Or finding more time for your dream lifestyle? Or increasing your profit margin? Or reducing the proportion of your time that's non-billable? Or finding new leads? Whatever it is, this is where measuring has a role. Measuring gives you the power to know.
Executive Recruiting - Employers: Use Recruiting Methods to Improve Emloyee Retention!
By: Kimberly Schenk | 07/10/2008
Smart employers use the methods Executive Recruiters use to understand their workforce better. With this knowledge management can reduce turnover by helping employees feel heard while they acheive their own professional goals. Using the same tools Recruiters use makes them less vulnerable to Recruiters who want to take key employees away.
Tips for Going Green With Office Paper Recycling
By: Daniel Mummskey | 07/10/2008
Are you or your office staff looking to turn your office a little greener by recycling your discarded papers and documents. If you are then you are not alone, as it is a growing trend that is definitely here to stay. So how do you go about it? Is there some type of recycler that will come and pick your papers up?
Hipaa Document Destruction – the Highest Standards
By: Daniel Mummskey | 07/10/2008
Most people who visit a doctors office, hospital or medical clinic are completely unaware of what hipaa document destruction standards are. Briefly what hipaa standards are is a set of guidelines that were drawn up to provide a set of standards for how medical records are destroyed after they leave an office. Not adhering to these standards for medical record and document destruction can result in civil, as well as criminal penalties for any medical professional who is found to be in violation.
Secure Document Destruction – How Safe is Safe
By: Daniel Mummskey | 07/10/2008
You watch the trash truck pull away from your parking lot and breath a sigh of relief. Your dumpster is securely locked and your sensitive documents are now on the way to the dump to be buried. Now thats complete security from front to back or is it?
Medical Records Shredding – the Quest for Total Security
By: Daniel Mummskey | 07/10/2008
Of all the types of documents that have to be disposed of securely, medical records rank among the top with regards to required security. In this age of recycling, it is imperative that a person who is responsible for disposing of sensitive documents understand that a locked trash can is just not enough. This is due to the fact that once paper trash is hauled away in a trash truck, it is then sorted for recycling and can pass through several hands before it is finally destroyed.
More from Daryl Cowie
How to Use Contractors as Insurance for Staffing Risk Management
By: Daryl Cowie | 19/05/2008 | Management
Have you ever sat next to a contractor who you knew was making a better hourly rate than you for doing the same job? They have no long term commitment to the company, often less experience than you, and still you know they are being paid a premium for being there. It makes you wonder what the financial genius who hired them was thinking when they approved that plan doesn't it?
3 Alternatives to Hiring Full Time Staff
By: Daryl Cowie | 19/05/2008 | Management
How do you quickly turn up and down the amount of labor you pay for when your employees are relying on you for their livelihood? Here are some practical management tips for building a flexible, variable sized workforce...
How Top Managers Use Indirect Cost Control Strategies
By: Daryl Cowie | 25/04/2008 | Management
When you set out looking for ways to cut the cost of providing your products and services, take the time to look past the parts and pieces of what you provide to the equipment and resources used to create them. These components all contribute indirectly to your per piece costs, and represent opportunities to save money on the things you do repeatedly.
Shipping Cost Savings Goldmine Management Tips
By: Daryl Cowie | 25/04/2008 | Management
Packaging, shipping and handling costs represent a large portion of variable business costs and are often overlooked by inexperienced planners. As a result in many businesses this presents a fabulous opportunity to make changes that will have an immediate and noticeable effect.
Tackling the Cash Flow Problem - Part 3 of 3
By: Daryl Cowie | 08/04/2008 | Management
Let's look at the 4 big management tips to keep your cash flow situation running smoothly...
Tackling the Cash Flow Problem - Part 2 of 3
By: Daryl Cowie | 08/04/2008 | Management
Suppose now that our business gets an order for $100,000, ten times our usual monthly amount. This is a great problem to have, but it can also be very dangerous for a company if they don't manage it right.
Tackling the Cash Flow Problem - Part 1 of 3
By: Daryl Cowie | 08/04/2008 | Management
The biggest challenge in controlling variable costs is that you often need to make the decision to spend before the actual sale is made, and you often need to pay your bills before you can collect payment. To top it all off, if you guess wrong on your planned income you still need to pay your vendors and your staff.
Seeing the Total Cost Picture - Part 2 of 2
By: Daryl Cowie | 07/04/2008 | Management
For new managers and middle managers one of the best management tips you will ever learn is to start with the variable costs. Variable costs are everywhere, they are often the biggest business expense, and it is possible for managers at every level to influence spending in this area.