Channel Engagement Essentials
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In the desire to hit sales goals with dealers and distributors with a simple do-this, get that plan, it’s tempting to focus on rewards instead of program design and implementation. Unfortunately, the do-this, get-that approach is not sustainable and can have unintended consequences, including “program addiction” and sales “sandbagging,” or manipulating timing of sales. Take these basic steps to ensure success of your channel program.
1. Be Strategic—Have a Formal Plan
- Consider hiring an expert with experience in distributor engagement who can learn and understand your business.
- Identify all obstacles standing in the way of hitting the sales goal and how you can best address them in your communications, training, or other plans.
- Involve select channel partners in planning to identify risks and encourage buy-in through a “customer council.” Make voice a part of your strategy.
- Identify technology needs: do you have a channel engagement technology and is one needed?
- Set realistic goals. Has your organization hit those goals before? Why should it now?
- Determine the degree to which you can reach the distribution partner salespeople—do you have their contact information, or can you get it? (Your program can offer incentives for salespeople to sign up and report sales.)
- Make sure to reward the top 20% but don’t forget the middle-60%.
- Know your audience: What will move whom to put in that extra effort in a way that is clearly distinguished from cash to keep incentive separate from pricing? Make sure to involve not only the ownership/top management; but all customer-facing people.
- Get CEO buy-in if possible by having him or her participate in the communications program. Actions speak louder than words.
- Make sure your plan includes all the training, sales enablement, and other actions to support sales so they always have fresh information to help their prospects.
- Include both quantitative and qualitative goals and measures; i.e., a sales goal but also measures such as successful participation in sales training; number of qualified presentations, or mentoring, to encourage actions that lead to success.
- Make sure you have established the value of incremental performance to your organization in terms of dollars, so you can calculate how much of the incremental performance to share with sales employees.
- You can use a “closed-end” approach with a fixed number of winners to reward top performers, but make sure to have an “open-ended approach” to reward the middle-60% for incremental gains.
- Set the rules so that the program is essentially self-liquidating by reward salespeople for incremental performance.
- Give salespeople a chance to participate in their own goal setting.
- Identify and address how your program could be affected by other stakeholders or external factors out of your control.
- After determining the potential return on investment, set a fixed budget for the communications, training, and technology, if any, required to support the program.
- Otherwise, the rewards should be paid out of incremental performance, so that the only fixed costs are the communications and training.
- Involve dealers and distributors in identifying the rewards that will have the greatest impact, meaning and that are buzz-worthy, i.e., they tell a story about your own brand; involve significant others in your thinking. Customize as much as possible the reward selection and the method of presentation to reflect the individuals preferred methods of appreciation.
- Use your dealer communication platform or sales incentive technology to regularly provide useful information and to get feedback from salespeople, including: case studies of success stories; facts and figures to address client questions; standing reports, etc.
- Bringing together proven leaders with newer or up-and-coming salespeople or dealers can not only help develop leadership skills for salespeople and learning opportunities for new dealers, it helps build a sense of community, especially when tied to a desirable incentive travel program.
- Regularly analyze quantitative versus qualitative goals and use of the dealer engagement technology, if you have a platform, which can include surveys, communications, recognition, feedback, and more.
- Look for regional or other differences correlated with use of the engagement app, if one is used.
- Compare quantitative with qualitative results and engagement app usage if possible to find trends.
- Regroup with the channel partner council and sales team; evaluate general feedback from customers and other stakeholders.
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Education, Certifications, and Information to Activate
Brand Media and Enterprise Engagement
A complete learning, certification, and information program and a course syllabus for educators.
Resources: The Brand Media Coalition, the only guide to the story-telling power of brands and where to source them for business, event, promotional gifting, and rewards and recognition. Enterprise Engagement Solution Provider Directory. The only directory of engagement solution providers covering all types of agencies and tactics as well as insights on how to select them.
Communities: The Enterprise Engagement Alliance and Advocate and the Brand Media Coalition free resource centers offering access to the latest research, news, and case studies; discounts, promotions, referrals, and commissions, when appropriate to third-party solution providers from participating coalition solution provider members.
Training and Certification
Enterprise Engagement Alliance Education: Certified Engagement Practitioner; Advanced Engaged Practitioner, and Certified Engagement Solution Provider learning and certification programs on how to implement Stakeholder Capitalism principles at the tactical level.
International Center for Enterprise Engagement: The only training and certification program for ISO 30414 human capital reporting and ISO 10018 quality people management certification.
The EEA offers a complimentary course syllabus for educators.
In Print:
This is the definitive implementation guide to Stakeholder Capitalism, written specifically to provide CEOs and their leadership teams a concise overview of the framework, economics, and implementation process of a CEO-led strategic and systematic approach to achieving success through people. (123 pages, $15.99)
The first and most comprehensive book on Enterprise Engagement and the new ISO 9001 and ISO 10018 quality people management standards. Includes 36 chapters detailing how to better integrate and align engagement efforts across the enterprise. (312 pages, $36.)
Online:
10-minute short course: click here for a 10-minute introduction to Enterprise Engagement and ISO standards from the Coggno.com learning platform.
Services:
• The Engagement Agency at EngagementAgency.net, offering: complete support services for employers, solution providers, and technology firms seeking to profit from formal engagement practices for themselves or their clients, including Brand and Capability audits for solution providers to make sure their products and services are up to date.
• C-Suite Advisory Service—Education of boards, investors, and C-suite executives on the economics, framework, and implementation processes of Enterprise Engagement.
• Speakers Bureau—Select the right speaker on any aspect of engagement for your next event.
• Mergers and Acquisitions. The Engagement Agency’s Mergers and Acquisition group is aware of multiple companies seeking to purchase firms in the engagement field. Contact Michael Mazer in confidence if your company is potentially for sale at 303-320-3777.
Enterprise Engagement Benchmark Tools: The Enterprise Engagement Alliance offers three tools to help organizations profit from Engagement. Click here to access the tools.
• ROI of Engagement Calculator. Use this tool to determine the potential return-on-investment of an engagement strategy.
• EE Benchmark Indicator. Confidentially benchmark your organization’s Enterprise Engagement practices against organizations and best practices.
• Compare Your Company’s Level of Engagement. Quickly compare your organization’s level of engagement to those of others based on the same criteria as the EEA’s Engaged Company Stock Index.
• Gauge Your Personal Level of Engagement. This survey, donated by Horsepower, enables individuals to gauge their own personal levels of engagement.
For more information, contact Bruce Bolger at Bolger@TheEEA.org, 914-591-7600, ext. 230.