Developing salespeople-achieving organizational success

Assignment Help Operation Management
Reference no: EM131420162

Reach for the Stars—Developing Salespeople, Achieving Organizational Success

As he read the email from his company's CEO, Ravi Verghese rolls his eyes and whispers to himself, "Oh boy, here we go again….":

To celebrate PRME's fortieth year in business, and our successful customer expansion from "seniors" to all ages served by a burgeoning sports and active lifestyle market through our new PRMESport line, I invite you, our invincible, "take-charge" marketing and sales units, to REACH FOR THE STARS! The goal is to increase PRMESport sales by 10% by the end of this year….

Ravi, sales director at New Jersey-based Providence Rehabilitation and Medical Equipment (PRME, or "Prime" as employees liked to say) remembers all too well the challenges he and his coworkers weathered 18 months ago when PRME expanded its product line from aging-related to sports injury-related medical supplies and equipment. The new products are branded PRMESport, developed to grab a share of a fast-growing medical and rehabilitation supply and equipment market segment. To achieve this, PRME bought a small, thriving manufacturing enterprise created by a couple of sports orthopedic surgeons—however no salespeople came with the acquisition. PRME executives decided to up-skill and retrain its existing sales force—"no sales associate will jobs will be lost because of PRMESport," they reassured—rather than recruit additional people. Ravi, whose stellar sales performance caught the attention of company executives, was promoted to director of the sales unit, a group of twenty-five people. Task one, executives said, is to reorganize the unit, establishing self-managed teams to penetrate the new market segment rapidly, efficiently, and effectively.

In spite of Ravi's initial eye-rolling reaction to the CEO's email, he rereads the message with an open mind and restored positive attitude. We can do this, Ravi acclaims. Bottom line, he is grateful that at age 35—young for a PRME senior manager—he has the opportunity to hone new management skills, focus more on his interest in strengthening PRME's human/intellectual capital, solve harder problems, and do his part to make his organization a top competitor. He was proud to work for PRME. The company's rags-to-riches founder, James Cleavon Jefferson, who started the business in a run down New Jersey warehouse with Chapter 8 support in 1974 and grew it into today's well-respected, successful global supplier, serves on the board as a conscience to the new owner, a multinational company. Ravi's own hard working parents, immigrated from southern India to the US, opening a family-run restaurant in Trenton—also with Chapter 8 help—that flourished in their diverse community.

While he loses no time moving forward with a strategy to reorganize into self-managed teams, he's determined to know more about the individual associates that make up his sales force before making final decisions. Right off, he conducts an all-hands meeting to brief the unit on the impending reorg, and, under the circumstances, he thinks it went well. Ravi's known as a straight shooter and consensus builder, although rapid company growth, headquarters relocation, top-down pressure to implement an electronic enterprise data system, along with increased travel to meet new customer needs, are taking a toll on the sales staff. He needs to identify and tackle—individual by individual—PRME's sales force "soft spots" (his gentle way of saying "weak links") before forming teams, hoping to optimize human capital and meet—hey, maybe exceed!—the CEO's sales goals.

After reviewing annual appraisals and quarterly reviews, talking to trusted senior sales associates who report directly to him, examining statistical reports sales records, observing the unit's daily activities, and collecting his thoughts and checking his instincts (his MBTI "N" makes this easy), Ravi's can-do enthusiasm is tempered by reality. He calls his close colleague and friend, Portia Kingston, a fellow MBA student at Rutgers, presently teaching organizational behavior at a college in Boston, to advise him on where to begin. Portia laughs saying he surely knows how to manage the reorg from reading the first five chapters of her just-published OB e-textbook! Always an appreciator of Portia's sharp wit, dynamic intelligence, ambition, and immigrant roots and experience (she was born in Jamaica), Ravi laughs too, congratulating his friend on her publication and promising to download the information as soon as they hang up. "Seriously," Portia continues, "look at the stuff on analyzing—by that I mean understanding better—the individuals in your unit. Get a handle on how they act, what they do or don't do—in other words, on their behavior within the organization. For example, my friend, examine learning styles, generational, demographic, cultural and fault line factors, and the role of perception, attribution, personality, motivation, emotion, values, attitude, and ethics." "Will do, Portia. And thanks a million," Ravi signs off, deciding to begin with his notes and records on the lowest sales performers, described below.

Tom

-Mid 50s

-Introverted, yet good listener, speaking up when prodded

-Jokes about being "the token old white guy"

-Over lunch recently shared his resentment about PRME's latest "bonus" programs, employee wellness and counseling, and sales incentive awards, sales incentive awards, free gym memberships and Knicks tickets

-Not a natural networker, can be temperamental, moody

-More than held his own in company until higher tech systems introduced

-Last couple of years, productivity flat lined

Lydia

-Late 20s

-Cut sales teeth in pharmaceutical sales

-Gun-ho when hired, exceeded sales goals

-Passionate marathoner

-Proactive, confident, ambitious, competitive

-Bristled when company implemented more formal HR policies regarding work hours, telecommuting, regular staff meetings, and dress code performance began to falter

Jamal

-Mid 20s

-James Jefferson's grandson

-Star athlete in college

-Outgoing, thrives on immediate interaction

-Well educated, razor sharp mind, gifted sales communicator

-Consistently falls behind in record keeping, customer data collecting, and monthly reports

Carmen

-Late 50s

-Worked up through the ranks at PRME, starting as an admin temp when PRME first founded

-Superb customer service skills, widely recognized as solid organizational citizen

-Warm, convivial, conciliatory—"Oh, ask Carmen to handle that customer's complaints—she never says no"

-Quick learner—consciously compensates for no college education

-Increasingly heavy care-taking responsibilities of extended family resulting in absenteeism, frequent rescheduling, declining productivity and performance

Brad

-Early 40s

-Promising engineering-oriented career selling precision medical equipment and service in Iowa before moving "back East" with a young family because his spouse got an coveted promotion in -VP at a large hospital

-Hired two years ago, just before company announced the PRMESport acquisition

-Good naturedly teased by co-workers about being a "techie geek"

-Strong work ethic, conscientious, though takes full advantage of PRME's work-life balance options

-Overly meticulous, uncomfortable dealing with big picture concepts, strategy, ambiguity, and rapid change

-Struggled to get a foothold with new product line—"I assumed I'd be working more with customers through the new software system than cold calling and pounding the pavement…."

Reference no: EM131420162

Questions Cloud

Calculate average interface pressure in the contact zone : A screw thread is cold rolled on a 1015 low-carbon steel bolt of 6.25 mm diameter. Observation shows that the length of the contact zone between die and screw blank is L= 1.25 mm. The average strain hardening during rolling corresponds to a strain..
Determine the design issues with this new system : Analyze the new system and determine the design issues with this new system. Describe how you would correct the design issues with the system to make the restaurant managers happy
Discuss the database administrator for department store : The Strayer Oracle Server may be used to test and compile the SQL Queries developed for this assignment. Your instructor will provide you with login credentials to a Strayer University maintained Oracle server.Imagine that you have been hired as t..
What is tje temperature drop of the air : Air expands adiabatically through a nozzle from a negligible initial velocity to a final velocity of 325 ms-1. What is tje temperature drop of the air, if ar is assumed to be an ideal gas for which Cp= (7/2)R?
Developing salespeople-achieving organizational success : To celebrate PRME's fortieth year in business, and our successful customer expansion from "seniors" to all ages served by a burgeoning sports and active lifestyle market through our new PRMESport line, I invite you, our invincible, "take-charge" mark..
Explore the american anthropological association website : Please read Chapter 11 in Skull Wars and explore the American Anthropological Association's website on race and racism, and then answer the following questions in a few paragraphs each:
Why do we care about human-computer interaction : WHY DO WE CARE ABOUT HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION? In this course, the SLP assignments for each Module will involve a couple of approaches. Some will entail description and assessment of your own experiences with different kinds of software
Prepare journal entries to give them accounting recognition : In each of the following scenarios, an organization receives a contribution in-kind. Prepare journal entries, as necessary, to give them accounting recognition.
Explain the factors that have caused customer relationship : Critique the idea that the CIO can be a bridge between enterprise finance, marketing, and sales functions. Justify the legitimacy of the statement.Explain the factors that have caused customer relationship management to become a priority for many C..

Reviews

Write a Review

Operation Management Questions & Answers

  Example of how your personality and values have influenced

Next, provide an example of how your personality and values have influenced your actions and / or decisions in your current or past organization. Be specific as to the particular action or decision that your personality and values influenced

  Explain how a diffusion process relates to adoption process

Explain how a diffusion process relates to an adoption process and Explain why diffusion and adoption processes for different products vary in length. Please elaborate in-depth

  Design a performance appraisal program to assess your job

Imagine this is the only position of its kind in the organization. From this perspective, design a performance appraisal program to assess your job performance.

  Regarding performance appraisals

Regarding performance appraisals, which of the following statements is NOT true?

  Staffing tools to help forecast later job performance

There are many possible-staffing tools to help forecast later job performance. How do you decide which ones to use?

  Minimize concerns about negligent hiring

Will you do a background investigation on applicants to minimize concerns about negligent hiring? If so, what type(s)? If not, why not?

  Which option should the company pursue

which would increase sales by $20,000 under both good and bad conditions. Suppose that good conditions are twice as likely as bad conditions. Which option should the company pursue if developing a system costs $25,000?

  What skills and traits do you believe make a good manager

What skills and traits do you believe make a good manager. Do you think these skills and traits are learned or innate, and why. Search the internet for an article that supports your position and post the link in your thread for fellow students to ..

  Think of time when you were on team

Think of a time when you were on a team (work team or school group). What was the task, how were roles developed, and what was the outcome? Please use your book to help further explain the details of your team. Please incorporate Tuckman's group deve..

  Why is lean important in the retail industry

Why is Lean important in the retail industry? Why is Lean important for healthcare? Why does an administrative profesional need to develop presentation skills? Discuss the concepts of value, margin, and value as defined by Porter's model? Determine h..

  Identify techniques you can implement to improve likelihood

Identify what techniques you can implement to improve the likelihood that your communications will be received and understood as you intended.

  Net increase in cash from operating activities

Jacks Company had a net increase in cash from operating activities of $8,600 and a net decrease in cash from financing activities of $1,900. If the beginning and ending cash balances for the company were $3,600 and $12,200, then net cash change from ..

Free Assignment Quote

Assured A++ Grade

Get guaranteed satisfaction & time on delivery in every assignment order you paid with us! We ensure premium quality solution document along with free turntin report!

All rights reserved! Copyrights ©2019-2020 ExpertsMind IT Educational Pvt Ltd