This post is Part One of a four-part series on how to accurately and objectively measure your sales funnel from your prospects' points of view. The four parts will be:
Part One: Introduction, Definition And Establishing Your Target Sales Funnel
Part Two: Measuring Your Current Sales Funnel And Determining What To Change
Part Three: Getting Inside Your Prospects' Heads
Part Four: Keeping Your Sales Manager Off Your Back
This series will be most appropriate for people who:
- Sell business to business and salesperson to buyer
- Have a multistep sales process and hardly ever close a deal in one meeting
- Have a sales cycle that usually takes four weeks or longer
- Must close one to six sales per month to hit their quotas or income goals
Each new part will be posted on Friday mornings starting today and continuing for the next four weeks. Note: You might want to subscribe (see right) to ensure you don't miss any of this series.
If you follow along and apply the concepts as I outline them:
- Your wasted time will disappear.
- Your frustration with prospects will greatly diminish.
- You will always have the answer to the question: "What should I be doing right now?"
- Your relationships with prospects and clients will be strengthened.
Definition: What Is A Sales Funnel?
For the purposes of this series, a sales funnel is defined as the period of time beginning with your first actual sales appointment with the prospect and ending when the prospect either stops buying or buys. Marketing (ads, networking, writing articles, etc.) and prospecting (cold-calls, cold-letters, drop-ins, etc.) activities happen before the sales funnel even starts, and we will not be covering how to measure those activities here (although you should measure those also).
Is The Prospect Even In Your Funnel?
While you may be selling, if your prospect is not buying, you have no chance of closing the deal, and you should stop wasting your time!
So the first question you must answer is: "Is the prospect really buying?" If the answer is "Yes," then the prospect is in your sales funnel. If the answer is "No," then you are still in the marketing or prospecting phases with this prospect, he or she is not in your funnel at all, and you should be tracking your progress with this prospect elsewhere.
Determining the answer to this question is actually quite simple, if you use this brutally objective measurement rule:
The prospect is buying only if all three of the following conditions have been met:
- You have a firm appointment set with the prospect (meaning your name is in the prospect's calendar) at a future, specific date and time. ("Call me sometime next week" is not what we mean by a firm appointment. What we're after is more like the prospect's saying, "I'll expect your call at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, August 29." Or, perhaps, "I'll meet you at Luciano's for lunch at 11:30 Wednesday, August 30.")
- The date of your next appointment is within 21 days of today. (For example, if you have an appointment set 22 days from today, then that prospect is not in your sales funnel. However, tomorrow when you look at your sales funnel, he or she will be in it, since it will then be only 21 days.)
- The prospect knows it's a sales appointment, and knows he or she is the one who is buying. (Not a chat. Not a "get to know each other" meeting. Not an appointment where the prospect tries to sell you something instead.)
If these three conditions are not met, then according to our rules, the prospect is not buying and is not in your funnel at all.
Establishing Your Target Sales Funnel
To accomplish anything great, you must have a clear description of your goal. In this measurement system, you'll set a target sales funnel, then work to make your actual funnel look exactly like your target.
To determine your target sales funnel, we'll work backwards from your sales quota or personal sales goal and apply some assumptions that have been proven to be good starting points. Then, as you measure your funnel through the coming months, you can adjust your target based on your real-world results.
We're going to use four levels to establish your target sales funnel and to track your actual sales funnel. here is how we define each of those levels:
Level One: First Appointment -- This is the where you track prospects with whom you've set a first-time appointment to discuss a new sales opportunity. After the appointment, the prospect is then moved to level two, three or four, or removed from your funnel completely.
Level Two: In Progress -- This is the where you track prospects with whom you've had the first appointment but have not yet delivered a contract for signature. So if your name is in the prospect's calendar for a second, third, fourth, etc. appointment, you track that prospect here.
Level Three: Contract Out -- Once you've delivered a contract to a prospect to sign and have an appointment set for the prospect to tell you his decision, hand you the signed contract, or, possibly, start the engagement, the prospect is tracked here.
Level Four: Closed Deals -- This is the level where you track success -- the deals you've closed. In this case you won't have a future sales appointment set. So instead of tracking future sales appointments, we'll track deals that have closed within the last 30 days.
Using an asterisk to indicate a single opportunity, and a goal of two closed deals per month, a perfect sales funnel might look something like this:
L1: | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | 8 first-time appointments set |
L2: | * | * | * | * | * | * | 6 next appointments set | ||
L3: | * | * | * | * | 4 contracts out -- waiting for signatures | ||||
L4: | * | * | 2 deals closed in the past 30 days |
To get started, set your sales funnel target by building it backwards from Level Four. To calculate your Level Four number, answer the question: "How many average sales must you close per month to meet your quota or to earn the level of income you want to earn?"
Once you have your Level Four target, do the following to set your target numbers for your remaining levels:
- Your Level Three target = Level Four x 2
- Your Level Two target = Level Four x 3
- Your Level One target = Level Four x 4
We use these numbers, because to close, for example, two sales per month, most salespeople must send out four contracts for signature. And to get to the point of delivering four contracts, most salespeople must go through the entire sales process with at least six prospects. And to get six prospects to fully engage in a sales process, most salespeople must meet for the first time with at least eight prospects. These are only averages, of course -- you will adjust your own numbers in the coming months as you track your sales funnel this way.
So, determine your target sales funnel this week, and next week, we'll get started measuring your actual sales funnel against this target.