Scaling New Heights

Craig Saphin

A collection of vignettes & expert opinions for successful SMEs and leaders You are a successful, energetic and intelligent entrepreneur You have grown one or more businesses to a critical mass You are turning over several million dollars and hired five or more people You are working too hard and would like to redefine your role in the business Your business growth has stagnated or not growing as quickly as you would prefer You have the energy and motivation to Scale New Heights Your motivations can include: ► scale a business to grow, ► the desire to own a bigger business

  1. Expert Opinion: Nick Johnston

    11/01/2021

    Expert Opinion: Nick Johnston

    Nick Johnston is a serial entrepreneur, a leading sales professional and a successful business owner. He started his career in London’s competitive financial sector before being lured to Hong Kong by a business acquaintance. Using his financial services experience, the recruiting company, Wall Street Associates, was established with his business partner in Hong Kong before Nick decided to go it alone and focus on the Japan market. In 2010 Wall Street was sold to en Japan, and Nick moved to Singapore to start the next phase of his life. Nick is now a private investor and business advisor and has a keen interest in HR technology solutions and HR business processes.  Craig: Can we start by talking about your experience as a sales executive; when you were an individual contributor and also when you owned a business.  Nick: I was a recruiter, and I set up a recruiting business, but a lot of the sales practices apply in many sales strategies, especially B2B. I learnt from an early mentor who told me: “Talk to decision-makers”. It’s the most common sense and logical piece of advice, however, it has been a challenge through my whole career in managing sales teams.  Getting sales professionals to talk directly with decision-makers is more difficult than it should be. People forget its importance. The decision-maker is in the best position to understand the requirements and the subtleties required to close the deal. For example, in the recruiting process, the decision-maker or hiring manager is in the best position to identify whether the candidates are technically strong or a great fit for their business. As well as this, some candidates undersell themselves. Therefore, my job was to get a great candidate in front of the decision-maker. This gave the best outcome.

    23 min
  2. Who owns and controls the company Assets – Sales Territory Planning?

    10/18/2021

    Who owns and controls the company Assets – Sales Territory Planning?

    Executive summary:  • The best sales professionals are outstanding at intensive farming of a territory.  • The best sales leaders apply a comprehensive territory management plan across their team. • Have a communicated rule on how often key accounts need to be engaged.  • Have communicated criteria on how accounts are graded.  • Insist on account management plans from the front-line account managers.  • Have multiple account managers working for large clients.  Who owns the relationship with your biggest clients?  If one of your key account managers leaves tomorrow does the relationship also leave the business? Are new members in your sales team given a warm set of relationships or starting from the deep freeze? What are your criteria for sales activity in your top 20 accounts?  Many years ago, I studied agricultural science at the University of New England in the northern tablelands NSW city of Armidale. As part of my studies, I learned the stark difference between the intensive farming that is found in horticulture or pork manufacturing compared with the broadacre requirements found on some beef properties in central Queensland. In the latter, the stocking rate could be where one beast requires 10 or 12 hectares on which to graze.  Related to this, I have found that the best sales professionals are outstanding at intensive farming of a territory. The less skilled requires a broad acre approach. This is also akin to “picking the low hanging fruit” without too much sweat or application.

    8 min
  3. Culture and Values are the Compass – Challenges and Risks in Building a Sales Function

    10/10/2021

    Culture and Values are the Compass – Challenges and Risks in Building a Sales Function

    Executive summary:  • All organisations are looking for sales professionals. Develop a comprehensive talent acquisition strategy.  • The training curriculum should cover onboarding, relevant professional development as milestones are achieved and leadership training. • It is a very high risk to have too much of the budget depending on one individual.  • Fraud in the sales process is more common than most people think.  • Protection of intellectual property (IP) can be achieved by including a data protection clause in employment contracts and reinforcing the company confidential nature of critical client data.  One of my trusted business advisors has a breath-taking level of confidence in the importance of marketing in scaling a successful business to new heights. Our discussions are always energetic, and we don’t agree on everything. He acknowledges the importance of the sales function in a fledgling organisation but enthuses about marketing’s potential and power. I find his strong viewpoint counterintuitive because he comes from a finance and accounting background and specialists from this area of the business are not the usual enthusiasts for elaborate marketing plans  Depending on your perspective: finance & accounting, marketing, sales, comprehensive operational excellence or people & culture; you are likely to have a preferred bias and focus.  At some stage, some focus for a founder wishing to build a business will be a comprehensive and professional sales function. If this is executed competently, then the sales function will be able to deliver the orders necessary to achieve the strategic revenue plan.

    9 min

About

A collection of vignettes & expert opinions for successful SMEs and leaders You are a successful, energetic and intelligent entrepreneur You have grown one or more businesses to a critical mass You are turning over several million dollars and hired five or more people You are working too hard and would like to redefine your role in the business Your business growth has stagnated or not growing as quickly as you would prefer You have the energy and motivation to Scale New Heights Your motivations can include: ► scale a business to grow, ► the desire to own a bigger business