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Personal Selling and Direct Marketing

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Discuss the role of a company's salespeople in creating value for customers and ... range of positions from order taker to order getter responsible for relationship ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Personal Selling and Direct Marketing


1
Personal Selling and Direct Marketing
  • MGT 252, lecture 11a

2
Learning Goals
  • Discuss the role of a companys salespeople in
    creating value for customers and building
    customer relationships
  • Identify and explain the six major sales force
    management steps
  • Discuss the personal selling process,
    distinguishing between transaction-oriented
    marketing and relationship marketing
  • Define direct marketing and discuss its benefits
    to customers and companies
  • Identify and discuss the major forms of direct
    marketing

3
Personal Selling
  • The Nature of Personal Selling
  • Salesperson covers a wide range of positions from
    order taker to order getter responsible for
    relationship building

4
Personal Selling
  • Salespeople have many names
  • Agents
  • Sales consultants
  • Sales Representatives
  • Account Executives
  • Sales Engineers
  • District Managers
  • Marketing representatives
  • Account Development Representatives

5
Personal Selling
  • The Role of the Sales Force
  • Two-way personal communication
  • More effective than advertising in complex
    selling situations
  • The sales force plays a major role in most
    companies
  • The sales force works to represents the company
    to customers
  • They also represent the customers to the company

6
Learning Goals
  • Discuss the role of a companys salespeople in
    creating value for customers and building
    customer relationships
  • Identify and explain the six major sales force
    management steps
  • Discuss the personal selling process,
    distinguishing between transaction-oriented
    marketing and relationship marketing
  • Define direct marketing and discuss its benefits
    to customers and companies
  • Identify and discuss the major forms of direct
    marketing

7
Major Steps in Sales Force Management
?
  • Pharmaceutical companies have extensive sales
    forces which visit/sell to physicians.
  • What would be the challenges in each step of
    sales force management for the sales force of a
    pharmaceutical like Viagra?

8
Managing the Sales Force
  • Designing Sales Force Strategy and Structure
  • Sales Force Structure
  • Territorial sales force structure
  • Product sales force structure
  • Customer sales force structure
  • Complex sales force structure

9
Managing the Sales Force
  • Sales Force Strategy and Structure
  • Sales Force Size
  • Many companies use the workload approach to
    set sales force size
  • Other Issues
  • Outside and inside sales forces
  • Team selling

10
Managing the Sales Force
  • Recruiting and Selecting Salespeople
  • Careful recruiting can
  • Increase overall sales force performance
  • Reduce turnover
  • Reduce recruiting and training costs
  • Traits of Successful Salespeople
  • Intrinsic motivation
  • Disciplined work style
  • The ability to close a sale
  • Ability to build relationships with customers

11
Managing the Sales Force
  • Training Salespeople
  • Training period can be anywhere from a few weeks
    to a year or more
  • Training is expensive, but yields strong returns
  • Many companies are adding Web-based sales
    training programs

12
Managing the Sales Force
  • Training Salespeople
  • Training programs have many goals
  • Identify with the company and its products
  • Know about customers and competitors
  • The basics of the selling process

13
Managing the Sales Force
  • Compensating Salespeople
  • Compensation elements salary, bonuses,
    commissions, expenses, and fringe benefits
  • Basic compensation plans
  • Straight salary
  • Straight commission
  • Salary plus bonus
  • Salary plus commission
  • Compensation plans should direct the sales force
    toward activities that are consistent with
    overall marketing objectives.

14
Managing the Sales Force
  • Supervising Salespeople
  • Supervision is used to direct and motivate
    salespeople
  • Companies will vary in how closely they supervise
    their salespeople will vary depending on the
    skill level and maturity of the sales force, and
    type of selling
  • Tools used
  • Annual call plans and time-and-duty analysis can
    help provide direction
  • Sales force automation systems assist in creating
    more efficient sales force operations
  • The Internet is the fastest-growing sales
    technology tool

15
Managing the Sales Force
  • Evaluating Salespeople
  • Several tools can be used
  • Sales reports
  • Call reports
  • Expense reports

16
The Personal Selling Process
  • The goal of the personal selling process is to
    find new customers and sell them something
  • Most salespeople spend their time maintaining
    existing accounts and building long-term customer
    relationships
  • Not all steps required in every sale

17
The Personal Selling Process
  • Prospecting and Qualifying
  • Identifying customers that may have a need for
    the product or service being sold
  • Only a small number of prospects become customers
  • Prospecting requires effort, time, and commitment

18
The Personal Selling Process
  • Preapproach
  • Learn as much about the prospective customer as
    possible, prior to approaching them to ask for a
    meeting
  • Use all resources to learn before meeting
  • Setting call objectives is important to being
    productive and not wasting the customers time

19
The Personal Selling Process
  • Approach
  • Meeting and greeting the customer for the first
    time
  • Involves salespersons appearance, opening lines,
    and the follow-up remarks
  • Listening to the customer is crucial

20
The Personal Selling Process
  • Presentation and demonstration
  • What happens during the sales call
  • Purpose is to uncover needs and then attempt to
    satisfy them
  • Questioning and listening skills are important
  • Technology can help or get in the way
  • Customers value empathy, honesty, punctuality,
    reliability, thoroughness, and follow through

21
The Personal Selling Process
  • Handling objections
  • The salesperson seeks out, clarifies, and
    overcomes customer objections to buying the
    product or service
  • Customers object for different reasons no need,
    lack of information, product limitation, or as a
    negotiating tactic
  • Handling objections is important, but preventing
    them is more effective need to look at
    qualifying skills and use of features,
    advantages, and benefits

22
The Personal Selling Process
  • Closing the sale
  • Asking the customer to buy (order) the product
  • The only step that produces revenue most
    important
  • Fear of rejection makes this step the most
    difficult
  • Keep it simple, honest, and direct different
    types of closing techniques make assumptions that
    can be dangerous if used improperly

23
The Personal Selling Process
  • Follow-up
  • What takes place after the sale
  • To ensure customer satisfaction
  • To keep the door open for repeat business
  • Ask for referrals

24
Personal Selling and Customer Relationship
Management
  • The principals just described are
    transaction-oriented
  • Companies want to encourage repeat purchasing
    because it is more efficient than trying to
    replace lost customers
  • It takes different skills to build relationships
    with customers
  • Mutually profitable relationships are built on
    creating value, offering packaged solutions to
    problems, and improving products and processes

25
Learning Goals
  • Discuss the role of a companys salespeople in
    creating value for customers and building
    customer relationships
  • Identify and explain the six major sales force
    management steps
  • Discuss the personal selling process,
    distinguishing between transaction-oriented
    marketing and relationship marketing
  • Define direct marketing and discuss its benefits
    to customers and companies
  • Identify and discuss the major forms of direct
    marketing

26
Direct Marketing
  • Direct Marketing consists of direct one-to-one
    connections with carefully targeted individual
    consumers to both obtain an immediate response
    and cultivate lasting customer relationships.

27
Direct Marketing
  • The new Direct Marketing Model
  • Direct Marketing is both, a direct marketing
    channel and an element of the marketing
    communications mix
  • Technology has made of direct marketing a new and
    complete model for doing business.
  • Firms employing this direct-marketing model (such
    as Dell Computer) use it as the only approach

28
Forms of Direct Marketing
  • Telephone marketing outbound and inbound,
    suffers from consumer burnout, technology to
    block calls
  • Direct mail marketing flexible, personalized,
    but suffers from junk mail image
  • Catalogue marketing the big winners in the rise
    of the Internet huge cost efficiencies by moving
    catalogue offering online
  • Direct-response television marketing
    infomercials work, despite a poor reputation
  • Kiosk marketing going where the customers are

29
Benefits of Direct Marketing
  • For buyers
  • Convenient
  • Easy to use
  • Private
  • Access to a wealth of information
  • Immediate
  • Interactive

30
Benefits of Direct Marketing
  • For Sellers
  • Powerful tool for building relationships
  • Allows for targeting of small groups or
    individuals with customized offers in a
    personalized fashion
  • Can be timed to reach prospects at the right time
  • Offers access to buyers that couldnt be reached
    via other channels
  • Low-cost, effective alternative for reaching
    specific markets

31
Customer Databases andDirect Marketing
  • Customer database organized collection of
    comprehensive data about individual customers or
    prospects, including geographic, demographic,
    psychographic, and behavioral data
  • Databases include comprehensive data including
    geographic, demographic, psychographic and
    behavioral
  • Databases can be used to identify prospects,
    tailor products, and maintain customer
    relationships
  • Database marketing requires substantial
    investment in hardware, software, personnel
  • Build customer loyalty by tailoring new offers to
    their specific interests
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