• Can AI Really Help You Sell?

    Many salespeople today are struggling; only 57% of them make their annual quotas, surveys show. One problem is that buying processes have evolved faster than selling processes, and buyers today can access a wide range of online resources that let them evaluate products before even meeting a salesperson. AI tools can help organizations close the gap, but most don't know how to use them effectively. In this article the authors describe how sales AI has been a real game changer at a few companies. They also provide a self-assessment tool, the Sales Success Matrix, that will show sales leaders where to start or improve their AI journeys. The matrix has two dimensions: relationship level (which runs from transactional vendor on the low end to trusted co-creator at the top) and process level (which runs from ad hoc to customized). At the lower levels of both relationships and processes, simple AI that decreases costs and improves efficiency works best. In the mid levels, advanced AI increases sales effectiveness by analyzing opportunities and customer needs. At the highest level, cutting-edge technologies help firms generate deep insights about customers. No matter where a firm falls on the matrix, AI can help it boost sales. And the sooner and more broadly it applies AI tools, the better they work.
    詳細資料
  • Wiikano Orchards

    Wiikano Orchards, a family-owned business, faces declining demand in a commodity industry. The president is considering rebranding Wiikano's apple juice, increasing its prices and promotions. If this proposal succeeds, wholesalers and retailers would be more likely to distribute and pay more for Wiikano's juice. The Wiikano case focuses on challenges related to product differentiation and can be used to discuss branding, pricing, and marketing communications. It also addresses issues that small- and medium-sized business owners face, by employing a product and distribution system that are easy to understand. The case is recommended for upper-level undergraduate students or first-year MBA students. It may also be used as an exam case.
    詳細資料
  • Wiikano Orchards, Student Spreadsheet

    Spreadsheet supplement for case 918517.
    詳細資料
  • Macy's: Evolution in the Sunshine State

    In 2009, Lee O'Rourke was promoted to District Vice President in charge of Macy's newly created North Florida district. This district consisted of 11 stores located in the greater Orlando area and in the east coast towns of Daytona, Melbourne, Merritt Island, and Vero Beach. The performance of these stores had lagged in recent years, and O'Rourke was charged with building a cross-functional district team to support these stores and with improving their overall performance. O'Rourke and her team were able to drive almost immediate improvement in the district's sales growth and profitability and in other key areas such as customer service scores. How can O'Rourke ensure that these stores continue to perform well going forward?
    詳細資料
  • StepSmart Fitness

    StepSmart Fitness, a manufacturer of exercise equipment, is undergoing a sweeping reorganization. The new CEO has terminated the District Sales Director and Regional VP and promoted 30-year-old Benjamin Cooper to manage the underperforming New England district. A first-time manager with no one to train him or explain the causes of the district's underperformance, Cooper has 10 weeks to diagnose the problems and make recommendations that will ensure a turnaround in the territory in less than 16 months. Left to his own devices, Cooper must review the sales data, the incomplete notes left by his predecessor, and his own thoughts after spending a day in the field with each sales person. Then he must make decisions about termination or probation for current employees, the hiring of additional salespeople, ways to increase productivity, and potential new methods of evaluating salesperson performance. He is set to present his conclusions to his also-newly-appointed manager, the Regional VP for the Northeast, in a few days.
    詳細資料
  • StepSmart Fitness, Spreadsheet Supplement

    Spreadsheet Supplement for Product #914509.
    詳細資料
  • SafeBlend Fracturing

    The CEO of SafeBlend Technologies must set a price for the company's environmentally friendly fracturing fluid additive. The firm is negotiating a new contract with its biggest client, Bristol Natural Gas. For the past two years, SafeBlend has been the sole provider of additives to Bristol due to aggressive negotiation and limited competition. New competitors are entering the market, and the CEO believes one competitor is prepared to offer Bristol a chemical-free additive for 50% less per gallon than SafeBlend. Anticipating lower bids from competitors, he considers reducing the price in the new contract to maintain the relationship with Bristol-despite the impact on revenue. However, the competition may not be able to supply enough additive to meet all of Bristol's needs, so he also considers the impact of setting a more competitive and profitable price that assumes losing only a portion of Bristol's business.
    詳細資料
  • SafeBlend Fracturing, Spreadsheet Supplement

    Spreadsheet Supplement for Product #914513
    詳細資料
  • Pricing, Profits and Customer Value

    This note discusses how some firms (start-ups and established companies) maximize customer value and profits via their pricing processes. It is aimed at companies that compete on the basis of performance initiatives rather than absolute cost advantages and low price. It is suitable for use in courses or modules in Pricing, Entrepreneurial Management, Strategy, or Marketing.
    詳細資料
  • Curled Metal Inc.--Engineered Products Division

    Curled Metal Incorporated has declining sales, but has developed a new product (curled metal pile driver pads) that, in field tests, deliver customer benefits that are many times CMI's manufacturing costs. Joseph Fernandez and Rajiv Sanwal of CMI's Engineered Products Division are responsible for formulating a strategy for the new product. A key issue is the price to charge for the pads. The case raises issues of analyzing market potential, aligning price with business strategy, and the implications of a price on development and execution of integrated strategic options.
    詳細資料
  • Hearts on Fire--Brand Development Manager

    Hearts On Fire, a successful branded diamond producer, established the position of Brand Development Manager (BDM) to build the company's presence, sales, and relationships with its retail customers. After 1 year, the CEO, CFO and President must evaluate the impact of the BDM on retail customers, the type of person required to be successful in this position, internal coordination issues with the company's sales force, and the financial returns versus other uses of capital for the company. The case raises issues in aligning business strategy and sales management systems, motivating and managing resellers, people selection, and financial analysis of alternatives.
    詳細資料
  • Ti-Tech (A)

    This case concerns the selection and scheduling of orders by a small industrial titanium fabricator that recently has been plagued by poor deliveries and a lack of capacity. At the time of the case, Ti-Tech must decide which of four orders to accept, with capacity making it impossible to accept all four. Each order represents a different mix of labor, revenues, and potential future work. The case forces the student to choose among the four orders, given limited capacity available, other business likely to come along, and the requirements of each order. The case is an updated version of Fabtek (A).
    詳細資料
  • Ti-Tech (B)

    This case concerns the selection and scheduling of orders by a small industrial titanium fabricator that recently has been plagued by poor deliveries and a lack of capacity. At the time of the case, Ti-Tech must decide which of four orders to accept, with capacity making it impossible to accept all four. Each order represents a different mix of labor, revenues, and potential future work. The case forces the student to choose among the four orders, given limited capacity available, other businesses likely to come along, and the requirements of each order. The case is an updated version of an earlier supplement, Fabtek (B). It should be distributed in class after discussion of the (A) case.
    詳細資料
  • Olympia Machine Company, Inc

    The management team of an industrial equipment supplier is debating the company's method of compensating salespeople. Different executives have offered different alternatives to the current method of straight salary plus expenses. Each option has different implications for business strategy, organization, control systems, and sales management requirements. As a result, the case raises issues and analytics relevant to topics such as aligning strategy and organization, strategy implementation, and cross-functional incentive systems as well as sales management.
    詳細資料
  • Schweiz Aluminum Alloy Division

    In January, 2008, Schweiz Aluminum Alloy Division is preparing to introduce its new GH 1000 alloy. The Division was a worldwide leader in the marketing of high strength, relatively exotic aluminum alloys. Recently, one of its talented metallurgists had developed a new formulation for one alloy in the 7000 series of high strength, hard alloys. The formulation was significantly lower in cost than the previous one used, but had absolutely no impact on the performance characteristics and appearance. For all practical purposes, it was identical to the existing more expensive alloy that it would replace. Andrew McAndrews, product manager for high strength aluminum alloys, was responsible for setting a price for the new alloy.
    詳細資料
  • Making the Major Sale (HBR Classic)

    Many companies today are faced with large, complex selling situations--they sell expensive equipment that affects many parts of a customer's company, they work on sales that may take several years to consummate, or they arrange mergers with other organizations. These major sales need special handling: They are more complex than smaller transactions, their potential profit is larger, and they have a more lasting effect on both buyer and seller. In this article, first published in 1976, the authors develop a systematic approach that companies can use not only to facilitate the sale but also to ensure the long-term account relationship. Their eight-step procedure shows how to open a contact, "separate the suspects from the prospects," develop a profile of a company's needs and key personnel, justify the purchase to the buyer, make the sales pitch, coordinate company resources, close the sale, and maintain the account. Before they can engage in strategic selling, most companies will have to revise the makeup of their sales forces according to the kind of sales they want to make, which may include different types of nonrecurring sales. To help solve these more complicated selling problems, the authors provide organizational guidelines for companies to use in their specific operations. Among these are creating a senior sales force to service a multitude of major accounts, assigning a field sales manager to one or two accounts for regional sales management, and having top executives take charge of the large sales.
    詳細資料
  • Revitalize Your Mature Company to Sustain Market Leadership

    Provides a detailed process to revitalize a mature company whose growth is abating. Includes a disciplined, analytical approach as well as helpful advice on the human and organizational aspects of the revitalization process.
    詳細資料
  • Sustainable Marketing Leadership--Workshop II: Managing Performance and Marketing Controllership

    This case presents the second of two workshop descriptions and templates for the Sustainable Marketing Leadership (SML) executive program. It enables a top management team to approach the last two steps in the four-step SML process: managing performance and marketing controllership.
    詳細資料
  • Sustainable Marketing Leadership--Workshop I: Strategic Visioning and Integrated Planning

    This case presents the first of two workshop descriptions and templates for the Sustainable Marketing Leadership (SML) executive program. It enables a top management team to focus on the first two steps in the four-step SML process: strategic visioning and integrated planning.
    詳細資料
  • Staple Yourself to an Order (HBR Classic)

    It's fashionable to talk of being "customer oriented." But regardless of how companies attempt to flatten their organizations or empower frontline workers, the simple truth is that every customer's experience is determined by the order management cycle (OMC): the 10 steps, from planning to postsales service, that define a company's business system. Every time the order is handled, the customer is handled. And every time the order sits unattended, the customer sits unattended. To find the gaps in an OMC--those places where a customer's order is dropped or shunted to the wrong department--managers should try what authors Benson Shapiro, V. Kasturi Rangan, and John Sviokla did in their research. They "stapled" themselves to an order in the 18 companies they studied, literally following it through every stage of the OMC. Based on this practical approach, the authors point out potential gaps throughout the OMC. For example, marketing and production battles can erupt even during order planning, and some of the fiercest fighting can break out during scheduling, when the sales force may want quick turnarounds that are unrealistic for manufacturing. Most companies don't see the OMC as a whole system, especially because each phase may require a bewildering overlap of functional responsibilities. However, when managers take the time to track each step of the OMC, they'll come into contact with customer service representatives, production schedulers, shipping clerks, and other critically important people. In this article, first published in 1992, the authors contend that managers who "staple themselves to an order" will not only move horizontally across their own organizations, charting gaps and building information bridges; they'll also see the company from the customer's perspective.
    詳細資料