Function of Sales Executives
Many sales executives get promoted into
their positions because of their previous performances as salespersons.
In some companies, outstanding sales persons have in inside track when
sales executives jobs are being filled. The assumption is that
outstanding salespersons will be outstanding sales executives. Nothing
could be farther from the truth. The sales executives job demands
administrative skills much beyond those required of salespeople.
Personal selling experience is not unimportant, as sales executives
manage people who do personal selling. But personal selling experience
and outstanding personal selling performance are two different things
most companies can recount instances where an outstanding salesperson
failed in a sales executive’s job.
Basically, the sales executive has two
sets of function: operating and planning. The operating functions
include sales force management, handling relationships with personnel in
other company departments and with the trade (middlemen and /or
customers), communicating and coordinating with other marketing
executives, and reporting to some superior executive (such as the
marketing vice president). In addition, in some companies and fairly
commonly in lower level sales executive sells some accounts personally
(to keep a “hand in “ and to keep abreast of current selling problems
and conditions).
The sales executive’s planning function includes those connected with the sale program. The sales organization and its control. The sales executive is responsible for setting personal selling goals,
for developing sales programs designed to achieve these goals, for
formulating sales policies and personal selling strategies, and for
putting together plans for their implementation. Sales programs are put
into effect through the sale organization, and the sales executive is
responsible for designing and shaping the sales organization, for
staffing it, for developing the skills of those who are part of it, and
for providing leadership to it. Achievement of sales departmental goals
requires controls over selling activities, sales volume, selling
expenses, and the like. The sale executive is responsible for these and
related control activities.
The relative emphasis that sales
executives give to the operating and planning functions varies with (1)
the type of products, (2) the size of company, and (3) the type of
supervisory organization. Customarily, sales executives at all
organizational levels devote more time and attention to sales force
management than they do to any other single activity. The significance
attached to operating and planning functions varies with the product. If
the product is a consumer good, sales executives attach the greatest
importance to planning function: development of sales programs,
coordination of personal selling with advertisings, and building and
maintaining relationships with dealers and customers. If the product is
an industrial good, sales executives attach the greatest importance to
the operating function managing and directing the sales force, making
calls with salespeople, and selling personal account. Consumer goods
sales managers, in general, spend more time on planning and less on
operating than do their counterparts in industrial goods companies.
The amount of sales executive’s time
devoted to planning and operating functions is influenced by size of the
sales organization. Sales executives in small companies spend less time
on planning and more on operating. As the size of the company
increases, the sales executive devotes more time to planning and less to
operating. Exerting important influences on the way sales executives
distribute their time and effort, too, is the type of supervisory
organization. When the sales executive supervises the field sales force
directly, he or she spends most of the time on operating function. When
the sales executive supervises the field sales force through subordinate
sales executives, more attention is devote to planning and less to
operating. Sales executives who have high caliber subordinates generally
are more willing to delegate most of the performance of the operating
functions to them and, consequently, have time left for planning.