PPT - Faculty Sites
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Transcript PPT - Faculty Sites
Personal Selling, Sales
Management, and Direct
Marketing
Chapter Objectives
• Understand the important role of personal
selling within the context of the promotion
mix
• List the steps in the personal selling
process
• Explain the role of the sales manager
• Understand direct marketing
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Real People, Real Choices
• IBM (Esther Ferre)
• IBM must prioritize investment of resources to
achieve revenue and profit targets.
Option 1: reduce sales and support resources for a specific
customer or business segment.
Option 2: maintain current level
of resources.
Option 3: evaluate lower-cost
ways to provide sales and
support resources.
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Personal Selling
• Occurs when a company representative
interacts directly with a (prospective) customer
to communicate about a good or service
“Personal touch” is more
effective than mass-media
appeal.
Selling/sales management
jobs provide high mobility,
especially for college grads
with marketing background.
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The Role of Personal Selling
• Personal selling is more important:
--when firm uses push strategy.
--in B2B contexts.
--with inexperienced consumers who need hands-on
assistance.
--for products bought infrequently (houses, cars,
computers).
• Cost per contact is very high.
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Technology and Personal Selling
• Customer relationship management
(CRM) software and partner relationship
management (PRM)
• Teleconferencing, videoconferencing, and
improved corporate Web sites
• Voice-over Internet protocol
• Assorted wireless technologies
SALESFORCE.COM
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Types of Sales Jobs
• Order taker
• Technical specialist
• Missionary salesperson (stimulate clients
to buy)
• New-business salesperson and order
getter
• Team selling and cross-functional team
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Approaches to Personal Selling
• Transactional selling:
Putting on the hard sell
High-pressure process that
focuses on making an
immediate sale with no
concern for developing longterm customer relationship
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Discussion
• Professional selling
has evolved from
hard-sell to
relationship selling.
--Is hard-sell still used? If so, in
what types of organizations?
--Can hard-sell still succeed –is
transactional
selling still appropriate?
--If so, when?
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Approaches to Personal Selling (cont’d)
• Relationship selling
Process of building long-term customers by
developing mutually satisfying, win-win relationships
with customers
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Figure 14.1: Steps in the Creative
Selling Process
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The Creative Selling Process
• Step 1: Prospecting and
qualifying
--Prospecting: developing a list of
potential customers
--Qualifying: determining how likely
potential customers are to become
customers
LINKEDIN.COM
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The Creative Selling Process (cont’d)
• Step 2: Preapproach
Compiling background information about prospective
customers and planning the sales interview
--Purchase history, current needs, customer’s
interests
--From informal sources, CRM system, customers’
Web sites, and/or business publications
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The Creative Selling Process (cont’d)
• Step 3: Approach
Contacting the prospect
Learning even more about prospect’s needs, create a
good impression, and build rapport
--“You never get a second
chance to make a good
first impression.”
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The Creative Selling Process (cont’d)
• Step 4: Sales presentation
Laying out benefits and added value of product/firm
and its advantages over the competition
Inviting customer involvement in conversation
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Group Activity
• Your group are field
salespeople for a firm that
markets university
textbooks.
• As part of your training, your
sales manager asks you to
outline what you’ll say in a
typical sales presentation.
--Write that outline.
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Step 5: Handling Objections
• Anticipating why prospect is reluctant to
make a commitment
• Welcoming objections
• Handling objections successfully to move
prospect to decision stage
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Step 6: Closing the Sale
• Gaining the customer’s
commitment in the decision
stage
--Last-objection close
--Assumptive or minor-points close
--Standing-room-only or buy-now close
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Step 7: Follow-Up
• Arranging for delivery, payment, and
purchase terms
• Making sure customer received delivery
and is satisfied
• Bridging to next purchase
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Individual Activity
• What are the pros and cons of personal
selling as a career choice for you?
--List them in two columns, and be as specific as you
can in explaining each.
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Figure 14.2: The Sales Force
Management Process
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Sales Management
• Setting sales force
objectives
What sales force is expected to
accomplish and when
Customer satisfaction, loyalty,
retention/turnover, new-customer
development, new-product
suggestions, training, reporting on
competitive activity, community
involvement
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Creating a Sales Force Strategy
• Establishing structure and size of a firm’s
sales force
• Sales territory: a set group of customers
Geographic sales force structure
Product-class sales territories
Industry specialization and
key/major accounts
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Recruiting, Training, and
Rewarding the Sales Force
• Recruiting the right people
Good listening and follow-up skills
Ability to adapt style from situation to situation
Tenacity
High level of personal organization
• Sales training: teaches salespeople about
firm, its products, how to develop skills,
knowledge, and attitudes to succeed
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Discussion
• Will sales training and development needs
vary based on how long salespeople have
been in the business? Why or why not?
• Is it possible (and feasible) to offer
different training programs for salespeople
at different career stages? Why or why
not?
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Recruiting, Training, and Rewarding the
Sales Force (cont’d)
• Paying salespeople well to motivate them
Straight commission plan
Commission-with-draw plan
Straight salary plan
• Running sales contests for short-term
sales boost
• Call reports: which customers were called
on and how call went
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Discussion
• Based on the compensation figures in the
chapter, do you think professional
salespeople are appropriately paid? Why
or why not?
• What do salespeople do that warrants the
compensation indicated?
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Discussion
• What is a sales manager’s best approach
for determining the appropriate rewards
program?
• What issues are important in developing
the program?
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Evaluating the Sales Force
• Is sales force meeting its objectives?
• What are possible causes of failure?
Measuring individual salesperson performance
Monitoring salesperson’s expense account for travel and
entertainment
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Direct Marketing
• Any direct communication to a consumer
or business recipient designed to generate
a response in the form of an order, a
request for further information, and/or a
visit to a store or other place of business
for purchase of a product
DIRECT MARKETING
ASSOCIATION
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Direct Marketing (cont’d)
• Mail order
Catalogs: collection of products offered for sale and
described in book form, usually consisting of product
descriptions and photos
Direct mail: a brochure/pamphlet offering a specific
good/service at one point in time
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Discussion
• Some experts think consumer catalog shopping
has increased because of poor service in retail
stores.
Evaluate the quality of most retail salespeople you meet.
How can retailers can improve the quality of their sales
associates?
LANDSEND.COM
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Direct Marketing (cont’d)
• Telemarketing: direct marketing conducted
over the telephone
More profitable for business than consumer markets
In 2003, FTC established National Do Not Call
registry
FEDERAL DO NOT CALL REGISTRY
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Direct Marketing (cont’d)
• Direct-response advertising: allows
consumer to respond by contacting the
provider with questions or an order
Direct-response TV (DRTV): short commercials, 30minute-plus infomercials, and home shopping
networks
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Direct Marketing (cont’d)
• M-Commerce: promotional and other ecommerce activities transmitted over
mobile phones/devices
Short-messaging system marketing (SMS)
Spim: instant-messaging version of spam
Adware: software that tracks Web habits/interests,
presenting pop-up ads and resetting home page
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Discussion
• M-commerce allows marketers to pinpoint
where consumers are and send them
messages about a local store.
--Do you think consumers will respond positively to mcommerce?
--What benefits do you think it offers them?
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Real People, Real Choices
• IBM (Esther Ferre)
• Esther chose option 3: evaluate lower-cost
ways to provide sales and support
resources.
Minimized impact to customer and improved cost
structure of sales team.
Maintained customer satisfaction with lower cost.
Resulted in increased revenue over time.
IBM.COM
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Marketing Plan Exercise
• In developing her marketing plan, Esther Ferre
at IBM must use marketing communication mix
elements (1) in an integrated way that (2) best
invests her promotional dollars.
• --Should personal selling be a high priority in
Esther’s marketing plan? Why or why not?
• --Is there a role for direct marketing in her plan?
If so, what is it?
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Marketing in Action Case:
You Make the Call
• What is the decision facing Eli Lilly?
• What factors are important in
understanding this decision situation?
• What are the alternatives?
• What decision(s) do you recommend?
• What are some ways to implement your
recommendation?
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Keeping It Real: Fast-Forward to Next
Class, Decision Time at Darden Restaurants
• Meet Jim Lawrence, Vice President,
Supply Management & Purchasing.
• Volatility in the supply chain threatened
food supplies to restaurants.
• The decision: A new model for supply
chain management?
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