“You need to define success before you can know if you’ve achieved it.”
-Richard Branson
There’s no questioning the fact that sales and marketing KPIs are leading indicators for any business. Why? Because they help you plan and evaluate past data to drive future (hopefully better) results. Sales leads to business growth, and more sales is usually driven by marketing and biz dev efforts.
Mastering this interdependent relationship between departments is an often untapped method to growing faster and being more profitable. The next logical step for a CEO, then, is to start by determining “What causes sales in my business?”
This is achieved by defining your sales steps and asking the right strategic questions. Let’s start with the sales step formula and segue into KPIs:
In one form or another, every company follows a defined sales-process that usually looks something like this:
lead generation---> proposals ---> closed sales
The specific steps will vary; and there may be more or less steps for different industries or verticals, but all sales processes should follow a uniform formula that’s both iterative and methodical.
Depending on the size of the company, the CEO must set sales and marketing goals and objectives to follow or work with their marketing team to develop them. Then, the sales team needs to outline how those goals will be met. From there, you can figure out what needs to be measured.
What are the demand generation activities you need to achieve your sales targets? Those are the metrics to share with everyone in the sales organization so you can figure out whether the right people are in place to achieve those goals.
The following are some valuable charts to follow in the sales and marketing scorecard:
This sample KPI chart follows this progression of a sale:
By studying the sales KPI charts, a CEO can make predictions by asking:
Using the Sales and Marketing Scorecard TTM KPIs allows you to see where these KPIs are trending over time. In any given month leads, proposals and sales may be up or down, giving a false sense of fear or security.
TTM (Trailing Twelve Months) trend shows you what’s really happening in the business.
If these KPIs are trending down, that usually means lead generation should be the focus of sales management and the CEO. If your pipeline is full and leading indicators of leads and proposals are trending in the right direction, the CEO can then focus elsewhere.
If you're a service business, these leading indicators become extra important as it helps forecast hiring plans and when to bring on new people.
In a service business, having the right employees is the key to success. To get them, you must have the lead time to be able to hire right. You get that extra lead time by looking at leading sales indicators to forecast when you will need more people.
Doing this gives you more time to find someone who has the behaviors that match the core values of the company. That’s exactly how you lower turnover, as well! After all, 80% of turnover comes from bad hires. You'll be better able to hire “A” players, if you don’t have to rush into hiring employees!
CEOs should focus not just on total sales, but also sales efficiency. CEOs should ask themselves:
How many steps does it take to close a sale?
What are our percentages of qualified leads that become clients?
What is the percentage of proposals that become clients?
By understanding your sales funnel conversion metrics and comparing over time you can learn where to put energy into improving that part of the process. Tracking activity and profitability by each sales rep, team, office or region is possible so you can see which offices have the best activity and closing ratios.
You should also be analyzing your marketing spend ROI and the number of leads and closes being driven by any given marketing source.
Undoubtedly your business is unique – so customize your KPIs for your business model. You’ll need to test what works best in coordination with your marketing and sales departments, and ascertain what will provide the most comprehensive reports without being overly granular.
Need motivation? We found this snippet from Lead Forensics to prove the point on the importance of consolidating data and isolating the right knowledge:
Data is constantly being churned out and it’s a highly valuable resource for any business. However, if it’s just left as a heap of bits and bytes, then it will have no meaning. But if you use it properly then it will lead to knowledge that you can then learn from and apply, encouraging even greater business success.
To understand how to get actionable financial intelligence for making data driven decisions, we invite you to check out the CEO’s Guide to Keeping Score: