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CHAPTER 13 SALES FORCE, INTERNET, AND DIRECT MARKETING STRATEGIES Sales Force Strategy Internet Strategy Direct Marketing Strategies McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. SALES FORCE STRATEGY SALES FORCE STRATEGY A company’s sales force strategy determines how the organization will use the personal selling function to maintain contact with customers and develop the relationships that management wants in order to achieve marketing and promotion objectives. 13-3 RELATIONSHIP FEATURE: The Vital Role of Selling at the Boeing Co. During the 2000s Boeing experienced an intense competitive battle against Airbus for control of the commercial jetliner market. Airbus was winning the battle until 2005 when Boeing’s Asia-Pacific jet sales were $26 billion compared to Airbus’ $9 billion. Under a new CEO management gave salespeople much more control over selling strategy compared to previous tight and rigid control by top management. Boeing lost many sales to Airbus because of top management’s unwillingness to give competent professionals flexibility in negotiating sales. Salespeople like Larry Dickenson, Boeing’s top salesman who covers the Asia-Pacific market, builds on over 18 years of relationships with airlines like Cathay Pacific, Quantas Airways Ltd., and Singapore Airlines, Ltd., to negotiate winning contracts. Importantly, Dickenson carefully plans and executes each sales campaign, overseeing every detail in the process that may span several years. The strategy is a combination of attractive pricing, Source: Stanley Holmes, “Boeing’s Jet Propellant,” BusinessWeek, December 26, 2005, 40. financing, and leasing arrangements in combinations with training and 13-4 service packages. Determine the role of Sales Force Strategy Sales Force Strategy the sales force in promotion strategy Define the selling process (how selling will be accomplished) Decide if and how alternative sales channels will be utilized Design the sales organization Recruit, train, and manage salespeople Evaluate performance and make adjustments where necessary 13-5 Challenges in Selling and Sales Management Challenges in Selling and Sales Management Two sets of ethical dilemmas are of particular concern to sales managers. The first set is embedded in the manager’s dealings with the salespeople. Ethical issues involved in relationships between a sales manager and the sales force include such things as fairness and equal treatment of all social groups in hiring and promotion, respect for the individual in supervisory practices and training programs, and fairness and integrity in the design of sales territories, assignment of quotas, and determination of compensation and incentive rewards. Ethical issues pervade nearly all aspects of sales force management. The second set of ethical issues arises from the interactions between salespeople and their customers. These issues only indirectly involve the sales manager because the manager cannot always directly observe or control the actions of every member of the sales force. But managers have a responsibility to establish standards of ethical behavior for their subordinates, communicate them clearly, and enforce them vigorously. th Source: Mark W. Johnston and Greg W. Marshall, Sales Force Management, 7 ed., Burr Ridge, IL: McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2003, 21. 13-6
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