In this issue,
we talk about managing
your sales forecast.
I look forward to your
comments.
Just in case you missed last weeks
newsletter, It is also my pleasure
to announce an important change at
The CxO Group. While we are still
the same organization that has
advocated business growth for our
clients since 2006, we have chosen
a new name and are in the process
of updating our look. In late
April, we will officially become
Business Growth U.S.
(
http://www.businessgrowth.us ),
a name that more aptly
describes our work and our
mission. I look forward to your
comments....

Rick Erling
(972) 727-6880
Increase Your Success Through a Better
Sales Forecast
by Paul
DiModica
6
Reasons Why Most Sales Forecasts
Are Inaccurate and Why They
Hamper Corporate Profitability
One
success driver for companies to grow their
top line revenue is the accurate
management of their sales forecast. A
sales forecast is a leading business
driver that when used correctly, increases
corporate cash flow, accelerates
operational success, and allows companies
to manage their business model by
proactive metrics, not reactively emotion.
When
incorrect sales forecast data is collected
or improperly managed . . .
companies fail.
So
why do many companies manage their
business revenue sales forecast as if it was an
after-thought?
Sales
forecasts are incorrectly managed for
multiple reasons, including lack of
business understanding of their value
contribution, lack of sales management
controls and insufficient training and
guidance for the sales team of why
executive management needs accurate input.
When your
sales forecast is wrong, all of your other
departments are adversely affected.
6
Reasons Why Most Sales Forecasts
Are Inaccurate and Why They
Hamper Corporate Profitability
-
Management pulls unscrubbed sales
forecasts directly from their customer
management system (CRM) without their
senior sales manager giving input.
Sales forecasts are unfiltered human
data based on metrics, hopefully
supplied by positive business
professionals, which need to be
smoothed by the active sales manager
who understands the personal nuances
and selling capabilities of each sales
team member.
-
Salespeople just guess.
Some salespeople just fill up the
sales forecast with useless
information to look busy. They don't
understand that sales is a
premeditated process and their sales
cycle must be managed.
-
Management has no metrics on
determining what each sales step
represents quantitatively, no written
process of what a qualified sales step
is, nor guidelines on what should be
included in a forecast.
Often management does not understand
the intricacies of setting up and
managing sales forecasts. Their lack
of leadership just confuses and at
times alienates the sales team when
forecasts are requested. It is easy to
blame salespeople for inaccurate sales
forecasts, but if management does not
set down specific criteria for
defining what a qualified lead is and
is not, then inaccurate sales
forecasts are not the fault of the
sales team.
-
Salespeople insert data into their
customer management system weekly
instead of daily.
Sales forecasts are snapshots of time
that change constantly. Prospects
rapidly move from being qualified to
not being qualified based on new
management decisions as well as
national economic changes. Due to this
volatile nature of decision making by
prospects, sales forecasts must be
updated continuously.
-
Salespeople premeditatedly exaggerate
the sales forecasts opportunities to
look busy.
Sales forecasts are visible
reflections of sales team members'
activity. Some salespeople outright
misrepresent their sales forecasts (or
hide deals often called bluebirds) to
management so they can maximize their
commissions by bundling deals for
higher commission payouts at the end
of the year or end of the quarter.
-
Management does not link accurate
forecasts to company objectives (i.e.,
bench utilization goals, marketing
budgets, capital investments, etc.).
Sales forecasts are not secular data
reviewed once a week in a sales
meeting. It is a living, breathing
business tool that must be managed
proactively and linked to all other
department actions, investments, team
staffing and implementation goals.
To
increase your revenue, manage your sales
forecast like it's the amount of cash you
have in your checking account. Know
exactly what is in your account and run
your business by it.
"Business
growth is a premeditated process -- not a
haphazard guess!" --Paul DiModica
I welcome
your comments.
To your success,

Rick
Erling
Top-performing organizations are
increasing their companies'
revenue, within a constricted
economy by investing in business
growth acceleration strategies.
For more on increasing your
revenue capture effectiveness,
subscribe to my
Email
Newsletter, follow me
on
Twitter,
connect to me on
LinkedIn,
or friend me on
Facebook.
If I can help you or your firms
revenue growth acceleration
strategies, check out my coaching
and consulting firm,
Business
Growth U.S. / The CxO Group,
email me,
or call me at (972) 727-6880.
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The Guided Progress Success (GPS) System is a 12-month planned business success program designed to give growth directed clients a step by step architectural blueprint and business development process on how to increase their company performance.
By creating a detailed, written action list implementation outline, we work with the management team in tandem to make business design and operational framework changes that will maximize their corporate success.
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More Info (pdf)
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