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  • Add You - The Dirty Little Secrets Of The Failure To Leverage The Inside Sales – Customer Service Potential

    Guru by Design: Sell Your Self Image
    Confidence sells. Ever wonder if those geeks with wrinkled shirts, greasy hair, and pocket protectors will make it out of the high school commons?They didn’t, they’re still there snorting at bad jokes, pointing at girls in short skirts, and slapping their legs with that hideous thud of ignorance. They think they know where they want to go, but they’ll never arrive there, because they haven’t achieved the level of confidence required to step outside their limited circle of friends.Power hungry zuits in suits with wire rimmed glasses and attitude can get where they want to go because the portray confidence. Their image is clean lined, well combed, cared for, and presentable. The voice they speak with is well modulated, speaks of education, and promotes their own self-value.Choose where you want to be, dress the part, act th
    ompensation practices. If the distributor cannot measure individual productivity, it is not possible to recognize it much less compensate for it. If management wants to take advantage of the Inside Sales/Customer Service opportunity, the first step in this process is to evaluate what exists in that department today. Questions managers need to answer include:

    1. Are existing personnel so busy handling incoming calls that the mind-set is to get off each call as fast as possible so they can take the next call? Conversely, do staff have time to sell on inbound calls? If not, what do we need to do to make time available to them?

    2. Do we have the necessary base measures in the department to prove there is or is not time available to increase productivity? What measures do we need to install?

    3. Have we trained our people to know:

    • our products, value-added services, and what questions to ask customers to identify their needs and interests in using them?

    • what promotions are available?

    • what direct mail materials are available for them to mail to customers? What questions sh

    Article Thieves
    Something happened to me this week that really took me by surprise but made me stop and think. An online acquaintenance of mine “borrowed” an article I had written and posted it on her blog as her own. Needless to say, I was shocked to see my article on her site with no credit given to me, and I felt violated, not unlike how I felt when my home was robbed many years ago. Not only that, her business is in direct competition with mine, so I saw that as a double “slap in the face”. I’m certain that I was not meant to see that blog, but alas, the online community is really not as vast as it appears to be!I feel compelled to write about this because I have a feeling my situation is all too common. Articles are a dime-a-dozen on the net, and what’s stopping anyone from taking something they did not write and posting it on their site or blog as
    How can the distributor take advantage of existing relationships between Inside Sales/Customer Service personnel and customers? This age-old question has caused managers to implement a variety of approaches in the attempt to tap perceived potential, but many fail and the question persists. Why?

    Most firms do not have adequate measures installed to determine who does what within an Inside Sales/Customer Service group. For lack of measures, it is not possible for management to define department productivity or level of activity much less individual productivity.

    1. Without consideration for the level of inbound call activity, it is common for management to want Inside Sales/Customer Service personnel to use suggestive selling techniques during inbound calls. Further, some firms also assign outbound sales call responsibility.

    2. The reality of many Inside Sales/Customer Service operations is: they are very busy handling inbound calls from customers. Their motivation is to handle each call as quickly as possible so they can get off the phone with the customer and take the next inbound call that is waiting for them. In a given day, one individual may handle upwards of 50-100 inbound calls and related tasks, e.g., taking and processing orders, mailing requested literature, preparing bids or quotes, expediting, providing price and delivery information, checking inventory, and so forth.

    3. Although some Inside Sales/Customer Service people are better than others at using suggestive selling techniques during inbound calls from customers, this practice depends upon:

    • product and applications knowledge, probing skills, knowledge of suggestive selling techniques

    • having others in the department who are available to handle other inbound calls Even experienced personnel will stop this practice when incoming call levels peak. Why? Because they do not want to take the time during calls to talk with the customer, identify needs and interests, discuss options available, and make recommendations. In other words, they switch to a different mode during peak incoming call periods. Their motivation is driven by the need to handle each call as quickly as possible so they can take the next call.

    One strategy used by some managers is to remove Inside Sales/Customer Service personnel from the 'order desk' so they can make outbound calls to customers assigned to them. For example, an hour a day is set-aside for several days a week for them to make these calls. However, when they return to the 'order desk,' they are faced with callback messages from customers who requested them. Although management may perceive this strategy as a method for increasing Inside Sales/Customer Service productivity, this approach must be well managed. Again, the lack of measures of this function is a direct cause of problems here.

    Desired increases in productivity within the Inside Sales/Customer Service group have also prompted the installation and use of Voice Mail systems. Taken from the customer's perspective, what this often means is: the customer cannot get orders and other information requests handled at the customer's convenience. The customer has several options: 1) wait for a return call from the distributor; 2) FAX the order or request if possible; or 3) locate a different supplier who is organized for the customer's convenience.

    The effect of many Voice Mail systems is to cut the distributor off from customers. In today's service economy, the practice of organizing the company for its own convenience can be the cause of lost orders and customers. Further, installing Voice Mail may preclude analysis, definition, and solutions to the real problem. A staff deployment problem may exist. Although Voice Mail appears to solve the problem by smoothing out peak incoming call times, customer inconvenience is at issue. The lack of appropriate Inside Sales/Customer Service measures is also the cause of:

    • management misperceptions about the Inside Sales/Customer Service primary function. This is the distributor's front line. It is the customer's primary interface with the company. Through this job function, the distributor proves or disproves a commitment to service excellence.

    • management tactics designed to increase productivity without consideration for their impact on existing customers. Any decision that cuts the distributor off from customers must be seriously evaluated.

    • inappropriate compensation practices. If the distributor cannot measure individual productivity, it is not possible to recognize it much less compensate for it. If management wants to take advantage of the Inside Sales/Customer Service opportunity, the first step in this process is to evaluate what exists in that department today. Questions managers need to answer include:

    1. Are existing personnel so busy handling incoming calls that the mind-set is to get off each call as fast as possible so they can take the next call? Conversely, do staff have time to sell on inbound calls? If not, what do we need to do to make time available to them?

    2. Do we have the necessary base measures in the department to prove there is or is not time available to increase productivity? What measures do we need to install?

    3. Have we trained our people to know:

    • our products, value-added services, and what questions to ask customers to identify their needs and interests in using them?

    • what promotions are available?

    • what direct mail materials are available for them to mail to customers? What questions sho

    Free Resume Examples: More Is Better
    If you ever studied any probability theory in high school or college, you probably remember the marbles.Most introductory probability books talk about drawing different colored marbles out of a bag. What's the probability of getting a particular color?Let's say the bag has 20 marbles, 15 red and 5 blue. The probability of drawing a red one is 15/20, or 3 out of 4. The probability of drawing a blue one is 5/20, or 1 out of four 4.The principle should be obvious. Given a certain total number of marbles, the probability of drawing a particlar color goes up as the number of marbles of that color goes up.Simple right?Yes, but almost every job seeker forgets that simple rule when it comes to free resume examples.You want your resume to stand out. So you copy a free resume example you consider "unique." Imagin
    is waiting for them. In a given day, one individual may handle upwards of 50-100 inbound calls and related tasks, e.g., taking and processing orders, mailing requested literature, preparing bids or quotes, expediting, providing price and delivery information, checking inventory, and so forth.

    3. Although some Inside Sales/Customer Service people are better than others at using suggestive selling techniques during inbound calls from customers, this practice depends upon:

    • product and applications knowledge, probing skills, knowledge of suggestive selling techniques

    • having others in the department who are available to handle other inbound calls Even experienced personnel will stop this practice when incoming call levels peak. Why? Because they do not want to take the time during calls to talk with the customer, identify needs and interests, discuss options available, and make recommendations. In other words, they switch to a different mode during peak incoming call periods. Their motivation is driven by the need to handle each call as quickly as possible so they can take the next call.

    One strategy used by some managers is to remove Inside Sales/Customer Service personnel from the 'order desk' so they can make outbound calls to customers assigned to them. For example, an hour a day is set-aside for several days a week for them to make these calls. However, when they return to the 'order desk,' they are faced with callback messages from customers who requested them. Although management may perceive this strategy as a method for increasing Inside Sales/Customer Service productivity, this approach must be well managed. Again, the lack of measures of this function is a direct cause of problems here.

    Desired increases in productivity within the Inside Sales/Customer Service group have also prompted the installation and use of Voice Mail systems. Taken from the customer's perspective, what this often means is: the customer cannot get orders and other information requests handled at the customer's convenience. The customer has several options: 1) wait for a return call from the distributor; 2) FAX the order or request if possible; or 3) locate a different supplier who is organized for the customer's convenience.

    The effect of many Voice Mail systems is to cut the distributor off from customers. In today's service economy, the practice of organizing the company for its own convenience can be the cause of lost orders and customers. Further, installing Voice Mail may preclude analysis, definition, and solutions to the real problem. A staff deployment problem may exist. Although Voice Mail appears to solve the problem by smoothing out peak incoming call times, customer inconvenience is at issue. The lack of appropriate Inside Sales/Customer Service measures is also the cause of:

    • management misperceptions about the Inside Sales/Customer Service primary function. This is the distributor's front line. It is the customer's primary interface with the company. Through this job function, the distributor proves or disproves a commitment to service excellence.

    • management tactics designed to increase productivity without consideration for their impact on existing customers. Any decision that cuts the distributor off from customers must be seriously evaluated.

    • inappropriate compensation practices. If the distributor cannot measure individual productivity, it is not possible to recognize it much less compensate for it. If management wants to take advantage of the Inside Sales/Customer Service opportunity, the first step in this process is to evaluate what exists in that department today. Questions managers need to answer include:

    1. Are existing personnel so busy handling incoming calls that the mind-set is to get off each call as fast as possible so they can take the next call? Conversely, do staff have time to sell on inbound calls? If not, what do we need to do to make time available to them?

    2. Do we have the necessary base measures in the department to prove there is or is not time available to increase productivity? What measures do we need to install?

    3. Have we trained our people to know:

    • our products, value-added services, and what questions to ask customers to identify their needs and interests in using them?

    • what promotions are available?

    • what direct mail materials are available for them to mail to customers? What questions sh

    You May Never Know What’s Really Going On
    We meet people face-to-face, at counters, in meetings, in writing and over the phone. Often our moments of contact are brief, fragmented, and mere snapshots in the longer movie of their lives.We form impressions based upon these moments, and act upon those feelings. But we may never know what’s really going on.The next time you encounter someone who triggers a negative reaction by their tone of voice, body posture, odd request or persistent misunderstanding, take a moment to pause and consider.This other person may have health or financial difficulties you will never know about. This other person may be in the middle of a crisis or some unanticipated trouble. This other person has a life that is not revealed by your short moment together. This other person may be a lot like you.Given that I may never know ‘what’s rea

    One strategy used by some managers is to remove Inside Sales/Customer Service personnel from the 'order desk' so they can make outbound calls to customers assigned to them. For example, an hour a day is set-aside for several days a week for them to make these calls. However, when they return to the 'order desk,' they are faced with callback messages from customers who requested them. Although management may perceive this strategy as a method for increasing Inside Sales/Customer Service productivity, this approach must be well managed. Again, the lack of measures of this function is a direct cause of problems here.

    Desired increases in productivity within the Inside Sales/Customer Service group have also prompted the installation and use of Voice Mail systems. Taken from the customer's perspective, what this often means is: the customer cannot get orders and other information requests handled at the customer's convenience. The customer has several options: 1) wait for a return call from the distributor; 2) FAX the order or request if possible; or 3) locate a different supplier who is organized for the customer's convenience.

    The effect of many Voice Mail systems is to cut the distributor off from customers. In today's service economy, the practice of organizing the company for its own convenience can be the cause of lost orders and customers. Further, installing Voice Mail may preclude analysis, definition, and solutions to the real problem. A staff deployment problem may exist. Although Voice Mail appears to solve the problem by smoothing out peak incoming call times, customer inconvenience is at issue. The lack of appropriate Inside Sales/Customer Service measures is also the cause of:

    • management misperceptions about the Inside Sales/Customer Service primary function. This is the distributor's front line. It is the customer's primary interface with the company. Through this job function, the distributor proves or disproves a commitment to service excellence.

    • management tactics designed to increase productivity without consideration for their impact on existing customers. Any decision that cuts the distributor off from customers must be seriously evaluated.

    • inappropriate compensation practices. If the distributor cannot measure individual productivity, it is not possible to recognize it much less compensate for it. If management wants to take advantage of the Inside Sales/Customer Service opportunity, the first step in this process is to evaluate what exists in that department today. Questions managers need to answer include:

    1. Are existing personnel so busy handling incoming calls that the mind-set is to get off each call as fast as possible so they can take the next call? Conversely, do staff have time to sell on inbound calls? If not, what do we need to do to make time available to them?

    2. Do we have the necessary base measures in the department to prove there is or is not time available to increase productivity? What measures do we need to install?

    3. Have we trained our people to know:

    • our products, value-added services, and what questions to ask customers to identify their needs and interests in using them?

    • what promotions are available?

    • what direct mail materials are available for them to mail to customers? What questions sh

    The Four Influencers In A B2B Sale
    Are you touching base with all of the buying influencers in your prospect’s account?There are four groups of people you have to pay attention to in any B2B sales situation. Each of these groups – it may be only one person in any of the groups, depending on the size of the organization – has an influence on whether you will close the sale or not.To disregard any one of these influences will probably mean you will not make the sale. This is the real difference between consumer sales and B2B sales. An enterprise sale becomes more complex, because each of these influencing authorities has two agendas they need fulfilled.Each of these people or groups is influenced by how your product or service will affect them in their job. They are also looking at how your product or service affects their company. They need to know they are m
    e customer's convenience.

    The effect of many Voice Mail systems is to cut the distributor off from customers. In today's service economy, the practice of organizing the company for its own convenience can be the cause of lost orders and customers. Further, installing Voice Mail may preclude analysis, definition, and solutions to the real problem. A staff deployment problem may exist. Although Voice Mail appears to solve the problem by smoothing out peak incoming call times, customer inconvenience is at issue. The lack of appropriate Inside Sales/Customer Service measures is also the cause of:

    • management misperceptions about the Inside Sales/Customer Service primary function. This is the distributor's front line. It is the customer's primary interface with the company. Through this job function, the distributor proves or disproves a commitment to service excellence.

    • management tactics designed to increase productivity without consideration for their impact on existing customers. Any decision that cuts the distributor off from customers must be seriously evaluated.

    • inappropriate compensation practices. If the distributor cannot measure individual productivity, it is not possible to recognize it much less compensate for it. If management wants to take advantage of the Inside Sales/Customer Service opportunity, the first step in this process is to evaluate what exists in that department today. Questions managers need to answer include:

    1. Are existing personnel so busy handling incoming calls that the mind-set is to get off each call as fast as possible so they can take the next call? Conversely, do staff have time to sell on inbound calls? If not, what do we need to do to make time available to them?

    2. Do we have the necessary base measures in the department to prove there is or is not time available to increase productivity? What measures do we need to install?

    3. Have we trained our people to know:

    • our products, value-added services, and what questions to ask customers to identify their needs and interests in using them?

    • what promotions are available?

    • what direct mail materials are available for them to mail to customers? What questions sh

    The Most Important Role Of The Manager
    How often have you heard a manager complain that communication is not effective because no one seems to be taking any notice of the memos or directives? Well, we are always tempted to believe that there is ineffective communication within some organisations but replace one of the usual memos with one saying that each person has won a million dollars and then sit back and look at just how effective that communication is!The usual manner of communicating is not as effective as it could be because many managers have the wrong priorities to make their communication effective so staff gradually become selective in what they react to. The highest priorities for a leader of others should be the following, and in the order stated:* To give a sense of purpose and vision to their team. * To set high standards. * To plan strateg
    ompensation practices. If the distributor cannot measure individual productivity, it is not possible to recognize it much less compensate for it. If management wants to take advantage of the Inside Sales/Customer Service opportunity, the first step in this process is to evaluate what exists in that department today. Questions managers need to answer include:

    1. Are existing personnel so busy handling incoming calls that the mind-set is to get off each call as fast as possible so they can take the next call? Conversely, do staff have time to sell on inbound calls? If not, what do we need to do to make time available to them?

    2. Do we have the necessary base measures in the department to prove there is or is not time available to increase productivity? What measures do we need to install?

    3. Have we trained our people to know:

    • our products, value-added services, and what questions to ask customers to identify their needs and interests in using them?

    • what promotions are available?

    • what direct mail materials are available for them to mail to customers? What questions should be asked customers to determine their needs for our materials? What questions should be asked to identify if others at the customer's location need our materials besides the buyer?

    4. Have we installed computer support systems that help prompt people to use suggestive selling techniques?

    5. What measures do we need to install to identify individual performance and productivity so we can recognize individual contributions and reward accordingly?

    Inside Sales – Customer Service is no longer just sales support and order takers of the past, Inside Sales - Customer Service has taken center stage with customers. It is the front-line to the customer, the back bone of the business, and the primary influence that proves your commitment to service excellence. Management needs to evaluate existing operations. Everything from corporate culture to attitudes, reporting relationships, support systems, recruiting specifications, to training needs are the proper focus of management attention. A new business model may be warranted to meet changing customer demands and expectations of your front-line. (Thanks go out to Peg Fischer & Associates for much of the information supplied in this article)

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