Thursday, May 24, 2007

A Valuable Source for New, Quality Sales Leads

Finding leads is a tough task. Finding quality leads is even more challenging. I want to share with you a service that you might find very useful for yourself, your sales team and even your business. It's called Jigsaw, and is a very unique way of finding leads that were created by other sales people, like yourself. So you know they are good.

Jigsaw is an online business directory that allows users to find, collect and trade business contacts through a subscriber built database. This directory has proven popular with recruiters, marketers, and sales professionals looking to expand their business contacts. Jigsaw makes for a kind of electronic rolodex, assembling information found on most basic business cards, including corporate email addresses, business address, and in some cases, direct phone numbers for individual contacts. To date Jigsaw has compiled 6 Million complete business contacts through the user community of 235,000+ mostly sales and marketing professionals. The Jigsaw community adds 10,000-15,000 contacts each day.

The directory also offers company information like address, website and phone numbers. Users can also search for companies by industry and geography, number of employees, and by Fortune 500 or 1000 ranking. The site’s fans see Jigsaw as filling a valuable niche, allowing sales professionals to bypass gatekeepers to contact prospects directly. Aptly named by Inc Magazine as “The World’s Biggest Rolodex.” Jigsaw is helping address the data concerns of companies and individuals. Whether it be avoiding single thread deals by mapping accounts, cleaning current CRM databases, or generating a list of target customers, Jigsaw is helping professional execute more efficiently through higher quality data.

The pricing is very attractive as well. You can either Play (earn points for every lead you post on Jigsaw) or Pay (for as little as $25. per month). You can even earn points by referring other users and challenging data that you believe is incorrect or not current. Not bad for access to over 6 million business contacts.

For more information on Jigsaw, click HERE.

Good Luck & Good Selling!
Russ

Friday, May 18, 2007

Sales Compensation

Compensating sales personnel in a manner that rewards them appropriately and that truly provides an incentive to stretch to higher levels of performance is sometimes a difficult balancing act. Some business owners and managers are reluctant to structure sales compensation plans that could allow sales reps to earn significant incomes. I believe that it is important to build sales compensation plans that reflect the effort expended. For example, to pay sales reps a straight salary, with a small bonus or none at all, doesn't really take into account the rep's effort. But paying sales reps for achieving certain thresholds or targets and creating a significant payout for exceeding reasonable, but demanding, expectations provides for a direct relationship between effort expended and compensation. It is important to avoid paying sales reps on a "coupon clipping" basis (this simply means that reps are paid handsomely regardless of their performance). Developing a sound sales compensation structure is dependent on the type of business you operate. But don’t be afraid to pay sales personnel for overachieving. And avoid over-rewarding sales reps that don't stretch to reach high levels of performance.

Good Luck & Good Selling!
Russ