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Salesperson Performance in Motivating the Sales Force

Salesperson Performance in Motivating the Sales Force. SALESPEOPLE. Prefer novel, non-routine situations and Like unique, and different situations and novel solutions, especially if seen as a break through. Tend to have a high tolerance for failure.

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Salesperson Performance in Motivating the Sales Force

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  1. Salesperson Performance in Motivating the Sales Force www.AssignmentPoint.com

  2. SALESPEOPLE • Prefer novel, non-routine situations and • Like unique, and different situations and novel solutions, especially if • seen as a break through. • Tend to have a high tolerance for failure. • Welcome the challenge of trying or creating a new or different • approach. • Enjoy field-testing a new solution or method by trial and error, make • adjustments as necessary, and get momentum started while the idea • or technology is still fresh and exciting. • See the opportunities to be gained rather than the potential for loss. • Management Tip: Encourage individuals to explore new challenges so that the salesperson does not feel like he or she is stuck in a rut or stuck in the same routine. Giving them freedom to try something different even though it may be risky or turn out to be a failure may keep them engaged. Continued….. www.AssignmentPoint.com

  3. SALESPEOPLE • 2. See meeting people as opportunities and • Prefer to ask questions of people who know rather than spend time reading a • book. They like to surround themselves with people who they think are • better at something than they are so they can ask questions of them. • Like opportunities to learn from people who have different opinions or • perspectives to share. • Like opportunities to broaden their circle of acquaintances. • Seek out people to have conversations with. • Management Tip: Provide opportunities to meet and interact with new • people that may not always blosom into a business relationship, but may • have benefits in keeping a salesperson engaged. • 3. Prefer a participative style and • Look for solutions that work for everyone involved. • Favor meetings where everyone can participate. • Management Tip: Involve salespeople and give them a voice. Decisions • handed down without input are not likely to be followed, and may lower • morale. www.AssignmentPoint.com Continued…..

  4. SALESPEOPLE • 4. Take pride in the depth of expertise acquired for their job. • Management Tip: Give them an opportunity to develop their expertise. • Coaching, training, and professional development opportunities are likely to • be appreciated. • 5. Prefer to avoid or minimize confrontation and • Prefer to smooth over conflicts rather than choose a side. • Would rather keep opinions to themselves rather than risk alienating power • holders. • Management Tip: Don't force salespeople to adopt one approach, rather, • look for a "win-win" approach that leads to mutual satisfaction. You may get • better compliance this way. • 6. Enjoy sharing their expertise and • Find gratification in the success of those who benefit from their assistance. • Derive satisfaction from giving encouragement and support to others. • Seek opportunities to volunteer information, knowledge, and expertise. • Take pride in being a role model. • Like serving as a mentor and personal coach to those needing individual • guidance. • Management Tip: Create opportunities for salespeople to experience how • their expertise has benefited customers. www.AssignmentPoint.com

  5. Level of effort expended • Job activity task (e.g., developing sales presentations, calling o potential new accounts, servicing existing customers, etc.) • Expectancy • Perceived linkage between increased effort on task and improved performance on some performance dimension • Motivation • Level of performance on some performance dimension (e.g., sales volume, new account sales, profitability of sales, etc.) • Instrumentality • Perceived relationship between improved performance on some dimension and attainment of increased rewards • Valence for performance • Instrumentality multiplied by valence • Increased attainment of reward(s) • Intrinsic • Extrinsic • Valence for Reward • Perceived desirability of receiving more of a particular reward • The psychological determinants of motivation • THE PSYCHOLOGICAL PROCESS OR MOTIVATION www.AssignmentPoint.com

  6. Important questions and management implications of salespeople's expectancy estimates www.AssignmentPoint.com

  7. Level of effort expended Personal and organizational variables ExpectancyPerceived effort/ performance probability Job activity or task Role perceptions Level of performance on performance dimension Salesperson's Valence for PerformanceInstrumentality multiplied by valences for rewards Motivation Company's compensation plan Role perceptions InstrumentalityPerceived performance/ reward probability Increase in attainment of reward (s)Internally mediatedExternally mediated Personal and organizational variables Salesperson's Valence for Reward (s) Salesperson's job satisfactionIntrinsicExtrinsic Factors influencing the motivation process www.AssignmentPoint.com

  8. Important questions and management implications of salespeople's instrumentality estimates www.AssignmentPoint.com

  9. THE IMPACT OF A SALESPERSON'S PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS ON MOTIVATION Satisfaction Is it possible to pay a salesperson too much? After a salesperson reaches a certain satisfactory level of compensation, does he or she lose interest in working to obtain still more money? Does the attainment of nonfinancial rewards similarly affect the salesperson's desire to earn more of those rewards? The basic issues underlying these questions are whether a salesperson's satisfaction with current rewards has any impact on the desire for more of those rewards or on different kinds of rewards. The evidence is mixed concerning whether salespeople who are relatively satisfied with their lower-order rewards have significantly higher valences for higher-order rewards than those who are less satisfied, as the theories would predict. Demographic Characteristics Demographic characteristics, such as age, family size, and education, also affect a salesperson's valence for rewards. At least part of the reason for this is that people with different characteristics tend to attain different levels of rewards and are therefore likely to have different levels of satisfaction with their current rewards. Although there is only limited empirical evidence regarding salespeople, some conclusions can be drawn from studies in other occupations. Generally, older, more experienced salespeople obtain higher levels of low-order rewards (e.g., higher pay, a better territory) than newer members of the sales force. A salesperson's satisfaction with their current level of lower-order rewards may also be influenced by the demands and responsibilities he or she must satisfy with those rewards. Finally, individuals with more formal education are more likely to desire opportunities for personal growth, career advancement, and self-fulfillment than those with less education. Consequently, highly educated salespeople are likely to have higher valences for higher valences for higher-order rewards. www.AssignmentPoint.com Continued…..

  10. THE IMPACT OF A SALESPERSON'S PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS ON MOTIVATION Job Experience As people gain experience on a job, they are likely to gain a clearer idea of how expending effort on particular tasks affects performance. Experienced salespeople are also more likely to understand how their superiors evaluate performance and how particular types of performance are rewarded in the company than their inexperienced counterparts. Consequently, a positive relationship is likely between the years a salesperson has spent on the job and the accuracy of his or her expectancy and instrumentality perceptions. Psychological Traits An individual's motivation also seems to be affected by psychological traits. The degree to which individuals believe they have internal control over the events in their lives or whether those events are determined by external forces beyond their control also affects their motivation. There is evidence that intelligence is positively related to feelings of internal control. Those with higher levels of intelligence-particularly, verbal intelligence-are more likely to understand their jobs and their companies' reward policies quickly and accurately. Thus, their instrumentality and expectancy estimates are likely to be more accurate. Finally, a worker's general feeling of self-esteem and perceived competence and ability to perform job activities (task-specific self-esteem) are both positively related to the magnitude of expectancy estimates. www.AssignmentPoint.com Continued…..

  11. THE IMPACT OF A SALESPERSON'S PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS ON MOTIVATION Performance Attributions People try to identify and understand the causes of major events and outcomes in their lives. These are called performance attributions. A given individual might attribute the cause of a particular event-such as good sales performance last quarter-to the following: 1. Stable internal factors that are unlikely to change much in the near future, such as personal skills and abilities. 2. Unstable internal factors that may vary from time to time, such as the amount of effort expended or mood at the time. 3. Stable external factors, such as the nature of the task or the competitive situation in a particular territory. 4. Unstable external factors that might change next time, such as assistance from an unusually aggressive advertising campaign or good luck. Management Implications The relationships between salespeople's personal characteristics and motivation has two broad implications for sales managers. First, people with certain characteristics are likely to understand their jobs and their companies' policies especially well. Second, and more important, some personal characteristics are related to the kinds of rewards salespeople value. www.AssignmentPoint.com

  12. CAREER STAGES AND SALESPERSON MOTIVATION Promoted to management Exploration stage Establishment stage Maintenance stage Disengagement stage Frustration; disenchantment Dropouts; terminations Sales career path www.AssignmentPoint.com

  13. Characteristics of different stages in salesperson's career www.AssignmentPoint.com Continued…..

  14. Characteristics of different stages in salesperson's career www.AssignmentPoint.com Continued…..

  15. Characteristics of different stages in salesperson's career www.AssignmentPoint.com

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