Plan for Meeting Sales Goals

11/01/2022 | Roger and Susie Engelau

Is your company’s plan for meeting sales goals for 2023 already done?

  • Are you confident your sales people know how to meet sales goals?
  • Are you worried about the economic environment?
  • Do you know for sure you have enough profit to grow the company?

 

The time is right now to identify any weaknesses in your 2023 sales plan. In just a handful of hours, you can be confident that you have a strong sales plan in place that 1) focuses on growth and profitability, and 2) identifies the exact right sales activities that you and your salespeople need to engage in to insure your plan works.

Because the sales leaders of small and mid-size businesses are often the owners too, they’re typically managing not only sales, but finance, operations, HR, and everything else! So here’s our guidance—

First meeting sales goals requires that you determine what activities will lead to that sales goal… and how many of those activities it takes to reach the overall desired sales goal.

You’ve heard us say “identify and measure the activities that will lead to your desired results.” Another way we’ve said the same thing is “identify and focus on the lead measures vs. fixating on the lag measures.” Any way you say it, break down your sales goal into small steps in order to:

  • Make them easier to manage on a daily basis and
  • Allow you to track them on a weekly and monthly basis

 

Ways to break down your sales goal

The way you break down your sales goal depends on the type of business you’re in. You might break down your sales goal by sales per product, per type of service, or per type of customer.  For some businesses it makes sense to break down your sales goal by geography or by salesperson.

Whatever initial breakdowns you choose, the path to each one will be different so you’ll want to break each down into the activities necessary to achieve the goal. Some goals might require a certain number of phone calls, in-person calls, referrals, quotes, maintenance calls, repair calls, surgical procedures, or projects.

Here’s an example. Let’s say that a heating and cooling company’s overall sales goal is $2 million. They want 60% of that $2 million to come from new installations. The average revenue per installation is $12K so they need 100 installations. Next they expect that 60% of those installations come from service call referrals and 40% come from the marketing and sales effort.  Since 75% of service calls results in an installation, they need to make 80 sales calls. And since 40% of their marketing leads close, they need to generate 250 appointments.

Sales goal diagram

Meeting sales goals doesn’t require you to break your sales goal down into a perfect, intricate plan to start

It can be complicated to break your sales goal down into the activities necessary to achieve the goal so start this year with a first level breakdown and refine it as you go. That’s the kind of work you want to do in your sales planning. Track each month and make adjustments and additions as you go.

If you’d like to spend some dedicated time making a solid plan for meeting sales goals in 2023, we invite you to attend our 6-hour Sales Growth Plan Workshop on Thur., Nov. 10.

Test out your unique strategies and discuss your toughest sales issues with fellow small and mid-size business salespeople and owners, and walk away with a sales plan that:

  • Sets realistic sales goals & identifies how much new business you need to accomplish them.
  • Insures your sales goals support how much profit you want & overhead you need to cover
  • Balances results goals with activities goals
  • Creates accountability & insures that your salespeople are engaged & organized
  • Sets up a tracking methodology that makes monitoring & adjusting quick & easy.

Click here to learn more and register.