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What is a “Selling System” and why is it so vital to my success?

A “system” is something that has two vital characteristics:

  1. It provides predictable results
  2. It is duplicatable. I could teach others how to use it.

A “Selling System” answers the simple question, “how do we want our representatives to sell our products and opportunity”?  It needs to be duplicatable and provide predictable results.

What are the most effective selling systems in the industry?

Party Plan is an extremely effective system because it has several advantages over most other systems in use today:

1)     It leverages the power of group selling. Instead of one-on-one selling, we have one-on-many selling. This increases the dollar-per-hour proposition a rep can earn for the time they spend on their business even more so if they use pay per click services.

2)     It has a built in prospecting system called the “booking”. A booking occurs when a guest at the party agrees to be a host or hostess at a future date and invite their friends to their home for a party.  They do this because some compelling hostess benefits are offered.  Through bookings, a rep can perpetuate their business indefinitely, never running out of people they can talk to.  Companies that do not use party plan like this Seo toronto company,must create some other prospecting system that helps their reps stay in business after they’ve contacted all of their friends. This is one reason party plan companies have better retention than non-party plan companies.

3)     The party has proven to be an excellent recruiting venue such as Roofing SEO plan strategy. The guests who enjoy the party experience often consider becoming a rep themselves.

One-on-One selling can be an effective way for reps to earn a healthy income for the time they spend on their business.  This selling system is simple and easy – talk to your friends about the product and the business.  With the appropriate tools and training, this can be a powerful system people learn to build their business.  Read more about marketing strategies in the Library newsletters.

In conclusion, every direct selling company needs an effective selling system. It overshadows even the compensation plan. It’s what new recruits will focus on in the earliest stages of their business. It’s the elephant in the room.

Recruiting based on the opportunity is a selling system of sorts but is not product centered. The rep is not looking for customers, but for other reps. Many highly successful MLM companies follow this model. The rep leads with opportunity and follows up with product.  The other selling systems do the opposite.

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  • Placing Reps Frontline to the Company

    Placing Reps Frontline to the Company

    Every year, Dan Jensen Consulting helps over 40 new startup companies launch their business. Each one faces the challenge to find leaders who know how to build a team and motivate them to get to work. A common question our clients ask is:

    “How many people should we place frontline to our company?”

    While there is no “one size fits all” answer, there are some principles and guidelines that I would call “best practices” to consider:

    Never have just one leader at the top of the lineage tree

    When one single individual has all of your sales force beneath them, you add considerably to your risk of future failure for several reasons. First, if you ever have a falling out with that leader and they join another direct selling company, many or all of your leaders could be influenced to follow them causing your business to fail. I have seen countless examples of this tragic end to what started as a great relationship with the business owners. Second, that one leader will quickly advance to the top rank of your compensation plan career path causing your plan payout to rise faster than you expected. That would be costly. Third, they might not end up being the leader you expect them to be. What if they don’t perform? What if they eventually stop working and just want to collect their mailbox check? There are few things in our industry more frustrating to business owners than paying egregious amounts of money to people who are not working the business.

    The company makes a very poor upline

    If you place people frontline to the company who do not already know how to succeed in this business, they will require huge amounts of your time and mentoring. Their failure rate will be high due to the lack of time and resources you have. You need, instead, low maintenance people – people who will not be calling your mobile phone at all hours. You need people who will not need lots of your attention and time. As a business owner of a new company, your plate will already be overflowing. The last thing you need is lots of people demanding your time who don’t know how to build their business. Those needy people should be placed under competent team managers and leaders in your organization.

    Never compete with your sales force

    As you seek out leaders who will help you build your sales organization it is imperative that you never compete with your existing people. If you do, they will no longer trust you. Applying this principle means that the only leaders you will place front line to the company will be leaders YOU find somehow – not leaders your sales force has found or referred. When a prospective leader contacts you directly you must carefully find out if they have spoken to another representative. If so, always respect that relationship and  place them under the rep who has spoken to them. If not, they are a candidate for your frontline team.

    What are the best practices to follow?

    1. Find at least six front line leaders who are placed directly under the company. The more the better as long as they are low maintenance people. Only two or three are not enough. Diversify!
    2. Make it clear to your field that you will continue to actively look for leaders for the first year of business. Or 2 years.  Just set their expectations. After that, any new leaders that join will be placed under existing leaders who can coach and mentor them.
    3. Do NOT offer any special “joining fee” deals with prospective leaders no matter how tempting. Doing so creates a very slippery slope. You must always assume that anything you do with one sales rep will eventually be known by ALL sales reps. If you find a prospective leader willing to engage in the business on a full time basis, it is acceptable to offer to reimburse them for expenses with limits you are comfortable with. Get receipts.
    4. Do NOT appoint them to a leadership rank or title in your compensation plan. Do not “grandfather” them in to a high rank or exempt them from performance requirements. They must work their way up the career path like everybody else. If they know how to do it they will advance rapidly. Some will move up several ranks in one month! You will find their performance to be much higher if they don’t get a free ride and they will be better able to lead their teams by example.
    5. Do NOT allow them to sell their own training materials (if any). Instead, enlist their help to develop or improve your generic “best practices” training system for your sales force. Never lose control of your training system and tools.
    6. Listen to them but don’t let them control you. Leaders who are given too much influence with the business owners will often expect that to continue forever. They will eventually start making demands of you that will only benefit them and possibly weaken your business. YOU be the leader.
    7. NEVER let your leaders determine how your compensation plan and incentive programs are designed. In my entire career I have met only a handful of leaders (out of thousands) who really understand the vital principles and best practices of compensation plan design. They see the world through their own glasses as a field leader. They do not see it through the eyes of a business owner. They don’t sign the checks. You do. Never let them design your compensation plan.

    Conclusion

    I have seen too many tragic stories of companies (some of our clients included) who have violated these principles and best practices and later regretted it. By following these simple guidelines you can avoid the pitfalls and landmines that others do not see.

  • Incentives to sail through the summer

    andi_business copyIncentives have long been used as a crutch for MLM and Direct Sales companies to get through the difficult summer months. Sometimes they are effective and sometimes they are not. Here are some tips to creating a great incentive program:

     

    Incentives should support your Compensation Plan.

    Incentives are not supposed to fix a Compensation Plan, they are supposed to support it. If your Comp Plan needs to be fixed, then fix it. If you rely on Incentives for that, you venture down a very slippery slope. Use incentives as a way to spotlight areas of your Compensation Plan that need a little bit more focus. Additionally, identify what behaviors tend to decline during the summer and use an incentive program to motivate those.

     

    Avoid “Top 10” Programs

    I will never forget an experience I had early in my career. I was assigned a handful of the top “founding” distributors of the MLM company I was working for at the time and I was given the responsibility to help them be successful, acting as a liaison between them and the company. I was speaking to one of the distributors I was responsible for and they asked me to check on their status for the Incentive Trip. The qualification period had just closed and they were eagerly awaiting the results to see if they were one of the top 20 qualifying distributors that would be going on an all-expense paid trip to a tropical island. When I checked on their status, I found that the distributor I worked with was number 21 on the list. Again. For the third or fourth time. This real-life example shows why “Top X” programs don’t work: there are winners and losers.

    When you structure your Incentive Program to be based on a criteria and allow all who meet that criteria to receive the reward, you give the control for achievement to the distributors. Programs that limit the number of distributors that can achieve really remove the control from the distributor because no matter how hard they work, there is always the opportunity that someone else will do more. Make sure that your incentive program allows anyone that takes responsibility for their actions to receive the associated reward.

     

    Give it Time

    Remember that behaviors and habits take time to develop. Incentive programs are most successful when enough time is given for distributors to develop and implement the strategies the program is trying to develop. That doesn’t mean that every incentive program has to be 12 months. Consider running a three-month incentive program for the summer time or a back to school incentive program that runs for August and September. Remember that if you really want long-term results, you need to give it time.

     

    To learn more about creating an effective Incentive plan, click here or go to our “Learn” page and download Incentives that Sizzle.