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Product and
Professional Services
Sales Quota Calculation Services
Calculating
accurate sales quotas is
an important business variable for your firm to succeed. By implementing
a sales quota based on market research, market gap size and
definable business sales metrics, you can manage your firm profitably,
satisfy your investor and funding sources, fund your growth,
and capture sales at a lower cost.
When incorrectly
calculated based on guesswork or industry estimates, your firm can
fail.
Today, there
are ten sales quota calculation methods currently in use by many
firms. They
include:
- Last year's
territory sales numbers;
- Cost of
the salesperson times a multiplier (sales costs x 3);
- Cost of
corporate General Administrative (G and A) plus a gross margin;
- Revenue
goals committed to Wall Street or VC's;
- Total of
the sales department's goals divided by the number of salespeople;
- Salesperson's
success the previous year;
- An imaginary
compensation number that was sold to the salesperson as their
income potential if he/she hit 100% quota;
- What the
trade press says is the annual growth rate
this year (up 12%, quotas are up 12%);
- The VP of
Sales' experiences at other companies; and/or
- A percentage
of what the top salesperson did in their territory.
The above ten
techniques represent the vast of majority of sales calculation
methods used today.
These impractical
and unscientific quota determination methods are used over and
over in both public and private firms. More times than not,
the sales quota number is created based on commitments to investors,
bankers or Wall Street, combined with the perception of accounting
regarding what the cost of sales should be.
The short-term
losers are the sales reps as they struggle to make their
monthly numbers.
The long-term
losers are the companies and the operating departments because
business models have been budgeted on these inaccurate sales quota
calculations.
What do these
measurements have to do with the potential of a particular salesperson's
territory? The
fact is none of these methods are accurate.
These quotas
are based on outside influences and expenses not related to the
sales potential of the salesperson's product or service
in an assigned territory. When
these quota determination models are used, more times than not,
they just frustrate everybody.
The Operations
Department is upset because their bench utilization is low
and management is forced to reduce payroll.
The Accounting
Department is upset because the company's business budgets
are inaccurate causing operating expenses to be disproportionate
to forecasted corporate revenues.
The Sales
Department is frustrated because they can't hit their targeted
numbers and no one is making their commissions.
Investors
and Stockholders become disenchanted, lowering their commitment
to your senior management team.
So,
How Does Value Forward Network Calculate Sales Quotas?
At Value Forward Network,
we use a four-step process.
- Step
One
First, we analyze your firm's current sales model metrics and
your corporate revenue objectives and growth goals.
- Step
Two
We then research and review the current market's size and growth
potential nationally to understand your industry's market demand.
- Step
Three
After this process is completed, we then investigate and analyze
the market potential of your product or service in
each salesperson's territory.
- Step
Four
Lastly, we integrate the data into an operating model where we
then calculate each salesperson's sales quota as well as a cumulative
sales quota for your whole sales team.
Where
Do We Get The Data For Both
Local and National Market Gap Potential?
Value Forward Network
collects data from multiple local, national and government business
market sources both directly and indirectly and through data
research aggregators including but not limited to:
Thomas Register,
Yankee Group, Emarketer.com, Forrester Research, Boston Consulting
Group, International Data Corporation (IDC), Gartner DataQuest,
national credit bureaus, state and federal agencies, Bureau
of Tax Statistics, Library of Congress, National Archives, US
Census Bureau, SEC, Global Computing Agency, Info USA, national
trade publications, Direct Marketing Association (DMA), Computer
Economics, iLogos Research, AM Best Company, US Census Bureau,
Better Business Bureau, Reveries Research, Net Ratings, Manhattan
Research . . . and many more.
So,
is your firm interested in having a third-party independent
calculation of what your sales forecasts should be?
If so, give
us a call at 770-632-7647 or click
here to submit a request for more information and
a representative will contact you.
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