HGGFD
HGGFD
HGGFD
Total no. of present & potential customers: 200 (20% are A class, 36 % are B class and
remaining are C class)
Length of time per sales call:
A class
60 minutes
B class
40 minutes
C class
30 minutes
No. of calls per account per year :
A class
B class
C class
50 calls
30 calls
20 calls
Assume that total work time available per sales person is 40 hr. per week and works 45
weeks per year (allowing seven weeks for vacations, holidays, illness and the like).You
further want them to apportion their time in this manner:
Selling tasks
Nonselling tasks
Travelling
40%
25%
35%
Seeks challenge, enjoys being creative, is able to work as an individual developing &
building market share
Demonstrates communication skills
Possesses the maturity to plan time judiciously so that maximum potential can be
realized from sales effort
Shows personality traits considered most desirable : extrovert, resourceful, confident,
adaptable, imaginative & shows initiative as a self-starter
YOU have just gone through a very challenging recruiting season, and you realize the
mounting difficulty of finding good sales people. However, you were particularly
impressed by a very confident , intelligent individual with good communication skills.
The only problem is that this guy appears a very sloppy dresser and a bit overweight.
Your company does not have a formal policy about employee appearance but you know
that these kind of candidates have been rejected in the past because they did not show
the energy and the effort required for a sales position. Although you want to hire this
person , you know that your company employs only salespeople who fit the corporate
image.
What would you do? Analyse the implications.
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Caselet : Samuels time
Samuel is a Regional Sales Manager of a large industrial marketing company and he led
his sales engineers by setting example. Some 12 people report to him, of which three are
outstanding performers, six average, and two poor. Most of the sales is contributed by the
average performers.
Samuel, however, likes the smart performers, and is indifferent to the average performers,
as they are doing just what is expected of them. He tries to bring the poor performers up
to the mark by spending a lot of time in training them. But this leaves the average
performers neglected. As there is disproportionate allocation of time, it affects sales.
Please advise Samuel about what he should do now and discuss implications.