Sales is entrepreneurship, and your pipeline is your business — you should be reviewing and analyzing this on a regular basis to grow your business.  -  IMAGE: Getty

Sales is entrepreneurship, and your pipeline is your business — you should be reviewing and analyzing this on a regular basis to grow your business.

IMAGE: Getty

THE SALES EQUATION

There is a level of skill and personality that contributes to sales success, but the main ingredient to success is in the numbers. Many of the best salespeople you will meet found their success because they understood the equation, which in its most basic form is: You need to put enough into the funnel to get something back out. This isn’t water we’re talking about going into the funnel, where it all eventually drips out. On average you will find that salespeople close between 20-30% of the opportunities they uncover and prospect. 

So, how do you know how much to put into your sales funnel? You need to work the math backwards, and I encourage you to be conservative. For example, Jill is a salesperson that needs to close one deal each month. If Jill has a 25% closing ratio, she needs to do a minimum of four presentations each month to hit her one closed deal. To get four presentations scheduled, Jill needs to have initial meetings with 16 prospects. 

It’s typically much easier to schedule an initial, fact-finding meeting, or even to have one on the spot if you are prospecting in person, than it is to secure a presentation or signed agreement. Therefore, the 4-to-1 ratio may not apply to how many prospects you need to dump into your sales funnel each month. Let’s say 50% of the time you attempt to engage with a new prospect, you are successful in scheduling an initial meeting or gathering information that you can leverage to illustrate why they should meet with you. In that example, you would need to add 32 new prospects into your sales funnel each month. You will eventually get better at pinpointing these specific numbers based on your own individual sales skill and success. However, if you plan conservatively, you will be better off. The worst thing that would happen is closing more business than you anticipated. That’s a great problem to have.

IDENTIFYING GOALS

It is important for salespeople to have a solid understanding of what is expected of them. Each sales role is different and maintains different objectives and goals. It could be understanding a monthly quota of revenue or quantity of accounts generated, or this may be in quantity of presentations scheduled for executive management. Other scenarios include understanding the revenue generated by a team if you are in management, and so on. Regardless, if you are unclear of what goals you are shooting for, you must meet with your supervisor and get on the same page about what they should be. You can’t use the sales equation described above and work backwards from a goal if you don’t know what that goal is.

This can sometimes feel like a difficult conversation to have, especially if you are early in your career or new to sales. I promise you, the conversation you will have when you are not meeting the expectations you were unclear about or unaware of will be much more difficult. An effective phrasing you can use to request this meeting is: “I want to be sure I am managing my time appropriately and meeting your expectations. Can you please let me know your earliest availability so we can discuss my goals and/or quota to ensure we are aligned?” It is a conversation based on numbers. Once you understand the goals, you can use the sales equation and confirm with your manager that you are targeting the appropriate number of prospects compared to what other successful salespeople on your team are adding to their pipelines.

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STAYING ON TRACK

Once you have identified your goal and used the sales equation to determine the numbers, break it out into each sales stage to visualize your pipeline:

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It is important to review and analyze your pipeline frequently to make sure you have the appropriate number of opportunities in each deal stage to maintain consistency with closing business. If you go a couple of months without closing business, maybe you find you have not been adding enough opportunities to secure the necessary number of presentations. It could also mean your closing percentage may be slightly lower than the average salesperson, and you need more opportunities going into your pipeline to close the expected number of accounts. You also need to consistently replenish your pipeline to get your next closed account. 

In working with and training salespeople, I encourage them to analyze their pipeline backwards. The questions they need to ask include: Have I scheduled or completed enough presentations to actually close an account? Have I conducted enough initial meetings to ensure a percentage of them will convert into a full presentation or proposal? Am I finding (through research or leads) and reaching out to enough new prospects to continue having the number of initial meetings I need? If you notice a cork in the funnel where you are not moving opportunities onto the next stage, at the rate you expect, and are unsure why, you should reach out to your manager for strategic assistance.

KEY TAKEWAYS: 

  1. Be aligned with your manager about your sales goals or quota.
  2. Work backwards using the sales equation to determine how many prospects you need to be adding to your funnel.
  3. Never take your foot off the gas! Make sure to keep replenishing your funnel as you close business and/or determine what your closing percentage is over time.
  4. Sales is entrepreneurship and your pipeline is your business — you should be reviewing and analyzing this on a regular basis to grow your business.

Danielle Cumbee is director of sales integration at Spectrum Automotive Holdings.

Originally posted on F&I and Showroom

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