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Posts Tagged ‘insidesales.com’

A Chance to Give Something Back – The CWCIC

April 7th, 2011 Ken No comments

A few months back, I mentioned that we had started on the process of doing a project for a local Utah non-profit, the Center for Women and Children in Crisis (see their Web site here).

And last week, we put the “rubber to the road” and actually did it.

We feel extremely blessed to have had the opportunity to participate in this project. InsideSales.com CEO Dave Elkington and I have made a specific commitment to finding opportunities like this, and giving back to the community, particularly to at-need and at-risk groups.

If any of you have knowledge of other opportunities like this one, please don’t hesitate to contact me. Call in to the company, and ask to talk to me directly about a charitable work opportunity.

Inside Sales Tips: Specialize

February 27th, 2010 Ken No comments

The Kellogg Survey that was done by Dr. James Oldroyd in 2007 showed a statistically higher close rate for companies that break apart their sales model into specialties.

Internally at Inside Sales.com we have several specialties in our sales and lead generation departments:

  1. Lead Research
  2. Website Auditor
  3. Lead Response (Fronter)
  4. Lead Qualification (Appointment Setter)
  5. Small Account Closers (Account Executive)
  6. Large Account Closers (Senior Account Executive)

A company that leaves their inside sales reps to find and close their own leads follow what Dr. Oldroyd called a Generalist Model. Even in the early survey by Kellogg there was a close rate that was 7% higher for companies with a specialist model over a generalist model.

As we have perfected our own internal processes we have found the difference to be much higher.

You don’t need to start as complex we have done.

We recommend that you start by separating the Appointment Setters from Closers; just two positions. In fact, we have roles, not just positions.  Some positions carry several roles.

Appointment Setters focus on quantity of calls and appointments set. Each of our Appointment Setters averages 350 calls a day and sets 4-5 appointments each day.

Our Closers focus on quality of calls and specifically on accounts closed. We just had a record month with 40 accounts closed and the highest new revenue growth by 26.4%. One Closer closed 15 accounts in February; also a new record. We were excited to add 7 new Salesforce accounts in one month. This is done by Specialists.

Inside Sales isn’t Just a Department Anymore, it’s the Fastest Growing Industry in all of Sales and Marketing

February 27th, 2010 Ken No comments

Five years and four months ago on Monday I officially started working at InsideSales.com. Actually it was called Sales Team Automation at the time. We were still a few weeks away from buying the InsideSales.com domain from a guy who needed money just before Christmas in 2004.

We paid three thousand dollars. Now it is arguably our single greatest asset.

We had the website up by the first week of January, and the first day we generated 8 leads, now we get 50 a day. Back then you typed in “Inside Sales” to Google and you found us and 10,000 companies trying to hire inside sales reps.  There may have been a lot more but I stopped scrolling through the pages to see how many.

Now there is more, much more.

I used to be concerned when I noticed that we have several competitors mimicking our every move and driving adword costs up, then I realized that is the best thing that could be happening; Inside Sales is becoming an industry… it is an industry.

American Association of Inside Sales Professionals

American Association of Inside Sales Professionals

We just became a Member and a major sponsor of the American Association of Inside Sales Professionals, AA-ISP. Industries have associations.

Every morning I have an email that comes to my inbox from Monster.com and CareerBuilder.com of new job listings from companies that are trying to hire Inside Sales jobs.  It keeps getting bigger.

We knew that inside sales would become Inside Sales. What had been a 2nd class department that generated leads for Outside Sales and took all the scraps off the table would one day grow up.

For sixteen years I have watched inside sales evolve.  From my years at Franklin Quest when we had to find our own leads and hand off every large corporate sale we caused that turned into something big (and we caused a LOT of sales.) It wasn’t fun being a second class citizen under the thumb of Field Sales and the Great Generation sales leadership and Baby-Boomer sales management who only know one way to sell. We were the fastest growing department at the 2nd fastest growing company in America.

Just recently our joint research with infoUSA, SKKU, and MIT has shown that Inside Sales is growing at a rate that is 15 times higher than Outside Sales, which really isn’t growing at all (7.5% annually versus .5% annual)

It hasn’t been a revolution like I sometimes hoped it would be. It just became the default way to sell for hi-tech companies who did everything over the web.  All of B2B and the big ticket business to consumer companies that live off of web-based leads like mortgage, insurance, online education, debt consolidation, and even automotive before the crash have all gone to outbound call centers with professional sales reps who sell remotely… That’s Inside Sales. In fact, our definition of Inside Sales is simply remote sales (see “What is Inside Sales? Our Definition of Inside Sales“)

I think much of it came about because of technology: The phone, the fax, the internet, email, WebEx and GoToMeeting. Then hosted CRM, dialer tools, voice messaging, presence detection or “Sales 2.0″ as so many call it took it to a new level. The crash and the down economy has actually accelerated the growth of Inside Sales. Travel costs and savvy buyers who would rather meet by web conference have increased the effect. Companies just aren’t replacing the attrition of Outside Sales, while actively staffing up their Inside Sales teams.

Mostly I just think it is the coming of age of every generation after the Baby-Boomers. They are more comfortable interacting, communicating, and selling remotely.

We have stopped hiring old-timers, they can’t seem to keep up. I’m forty-four, two years shy of being in the Baby-Boomer Generation and I’m the oldest person at InsideSales.com. LinkedIn says our median age is 25 years old. My partner, our CEO, just won Forty under 40, top 40 entrepreneurs under the age of 40 in Utah.  He can keep winning it for 3-4 years. I’m a geezer; the only one with grey hair. Even my son Josh and one of my old Boy Scouts Scott Gardner works here.

Inside Sales isn’t just a department anymore… it’s an industry. And it is the fastest growing industry in all of sales and marketing.

Top 20 Articles on www.KenKrogue.com

  1. What is Inside Sales? Our Definition of Inside Sales – 15,262 Views
  2. Inside Sales Best Practices - 1,445 Views
  3. Inside Sales Tips by Ken Krogue - 923 Views
  4. KPI – Key Performance Indicators – 822 Views
  5. Inside Sales versus Outside Sales – 489 Views
  6. Is Leaving a Voicemail Worthwhile? – 408 Views
  7. 6 Reasons Salesforce Users Need Hosted Dialer Technology - 370 Views
  8. Behind the Cloud – Ken’s Notes – 305 Views
  9. Inside Sales Tips – No Vacations Last Week of the Month – 275 Views
  10. Funny Inside Sales Videos – 247 Views
  11. Demand Generation Tactics and Strategy – 245 Views
  12. Inside Sales Tips – Skip to the Beep – 245 Views
  13. Inside Sales Tips – Interest is The Counterfeit of Need – 220 Views
  14. Inside Sales is Top Method of Lead Generation – 205 Views
  15. Inside Sales Tips – How LinkedIn Gives you 3 Free SEO Backlinks - 189 Views
  16. Inside Sales Training – 179 Views
  17. Marketing B2B 4 Quick Email Tips – 154 Views
  18. Inside Sales Tips – Specialize – 140 Views
  19. Leadscon East Vendors Need to Drink their Own Medicine - 133 Views
  20. What is Lead Response Management – 127 Views

    Inside Sales Top Method for Lead Generation in 2009 according to Forrester and MarketingProfs

    February 8th, 2010 Ken 2 comments

    Laura Ramos is perhaps the most recognized expert in lead generation research for B2B. She is a Vice President and Principal Analyst for Forrester.

    Laura has been studying what she calls the “Marketing Effectiveness Index” which are the most effective methods used by B2B businesses to generate leads since early in 2006.

    She uses responses from surveys to give grades from 1 to 5, with 5 the highest, for different methods of lead generation. Click here to see a chart of her results for the last three years.

    Another study for 2010 is coming out soon, but her most recent rankings in 2009 are as follows:

    1. Inside Sales / Telemarketing
    2. Executive Events
    3. Trade Shows
    4. Webinars
    5. Email Marketing
    6. Search Marketing
    7. Direct Mail
    8. Video, Podcasts, etc.
    9. Blogs
    10. Other Web 2.0

    The big news in 2009 was that Inside Sales surpassed Executive Events and Email Marketing moved ahead of Search. Trade Shows hung strong even with significant cutbacks in corporate travel budgets.

    The rankings for 2008 were:

    1. Executive Events
    2. Inside Sales
    3. Search Marketing
    4. Trade Shows
    5. Webinars
    6. Email Marketing
    7. Direct Mail
    8. Video, Podcasts, etc.
    9. Blogs
    10. Other Web 2.0

    What is Inside Sales? — Our Definition of Inside Sales

    January 30th, 2010 Ken 11 comments

    The most pragmatic definition of Inside Sales is simple:

    Inside Sales is “remote sales,” most lately called “virtual sales,” or professional sales done remotely. Where Outside Sales or traditional Field Sales is done face-to-face.

    Taken in this context, the majority of all sales is done remotely, and the numbers are growing. A recent study done by SKKU and MIT, in conjunction with infoUSA, found that over the next three years, Inside Sales is growing at a fifteen times higher rate (7.5% versus .5% annually) over Outside Sales, to the tune of 800,000 new jobs.

    More evidence: if you don’t believe it, grab a list of 10 traditional or “Outside Sales” people and call them. 7 out of 10 will be sitting in front of their computer, working in their cubicle, office, or home office—just like the Inside Sales people.

    The term “Inside Sales” originally came about in the late 1980s as an attempt to differentiate “Telemarketing” (or “Telesales in the UK) from the more complex, “high-touch,” phone-based business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) selling practices.

    Telemarketing is often believed to have begun in the 1950s by DialAmerica Marketing, Inc., reported to be the first company dedicated to telephone sales and services. By the 1970s telemarketing was a common phrase used to describe the process of selling over the telephone. It often included both outbound and inbound, but later became much more synonymous with the types of outbound calling we’re all familiar with—large-scale “blasts” to lists of names to try and drum up quick sales, usually while the family is sitting around the dinner table.

    By the late 1990s/early 2000s, Inside Sales was the term used to differentiate the practice from Outside Sales—the traditional face-to-face sales model where salespeople went to the client’s location of business to engage in the sales process.

    Companies found the new channel of Inside Sales to be undeniably effective, but often didn’t know what to do to solve the conflict between the younger, disruptive, more technically savvy upstarts who sold over the phone, and their more senior counterparts who wielded incredible political power in their organizations as the entrenched source of revenue for nearly a century.

    For years Inside Sales has been relegated to generating leads for the more senior Outside Sales reps or merely closing the smaller accounts. This is now no longer the case. Many companies are already using a hybrid form of Inside Sales, with reps calling from their company’s home office, then traveling occasionally to client locations and merely calling it “sales.”

    By Marc Benioff’s own admission in his book “Behind the Cloud, salesforce.com “grew their company for the first five or six years with a telesales or Inside Sales model.” They added Outside Sales or Field Sales to go upmarket when they wanted to sell to Enterprise-class companies, but the company still does a majority of their sales work remotely.

    Another way of defining “Inside Sales” is to also state what it is not.

    Inside Sales is not Telemarketing.

    Let me repeat: Inside Sales is NOT Telemarketing. Telemarketing is a scripted, single-call-close, almost always targeting a small-ticket, business to consumer (B2C) model.

    Inside Sales is not scripted. It requires multiple calls or “touches” to create a sales close, involves medium or large ticket goods and services, and targets business-to-business (B2B) or high-end business-to-consumer( B2C) transactions.

    Inside Sales is professional sales done remotely. It is not the mindless “phone drone” that calls at dinner time and won’t hang up until you have said “no” seven times.

    Inside Sales is also not Customer Service. Though Inside Sales frequently involves an element of inbound call handling like a customer service department, in its pure form it is not customer service.

    Some companies erroneously describe their inbound call centers as “inside sales,” but this does not fall within the boundaries of our definition unless the agents’ primary function is selling.

    Inside Sales is professional sales done remotely . . . it is remote sales.

    Top 20 Articles on www.KenKrogue.com (with total views)

    1. What is Inside Sales? Our Definition of Inside Sales | Ken Krogue – 16,115 Views
    2. Inside Sales Best Practices - 1,623 Views
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    10. Funny Inside Sales Videos – 290 Views
    11. Inside Sales Tips – Skip to the Beep – 273 Views
    12. Demand Generation Tactics and Strategy – 258 Views
    13. Inside Sales Tips – Interest is The Counterfeit of Need – 252 Views
    14. Inside Sales is Top Method of Lead Generation – 231 Views
    15. Inside Sales Training – 214 Views
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    17. Inside Sales Tips – Specialize – 174 Views
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