Strategic Management for Independent Insurance Agents & Brokers: Positive Change for Sustained Excellence
Showing posts with label Sales Planning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sales Planning. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Retention & New Sales

Let's talk about what's keeping you up at night.

We need more new sales. Retention has been better than expected, so we stayed almost flat, revenue-wise, but new sales are harder than ever to make. No one wants to change and there are no new accounts. How do we get back on a positive growth path?

Start by asking yourself a few questions. The answers can tell you what you're doing right and what you could do better.
  • Why did your toughest account renew their account?
  • Why did you lose that great account?
  • Why did your newest account move their insurance to your agency?
If you can answer these questions, thoroughly and analytically, then you know what your competitive advantage is. And that's the key to sales success - leveraging those things that you do better than the competition. If you can't answer those questions, then your sales team - in fact your entire business - is at a disadvantage. 
Business and personal insurance buyers have a lot of choices. And there is always someone who is willing to provide a lower price. When you can demonstrate that the lower price comes with a cost and you can provide added value in terms of something important to the customer, you have something to sell.
For growth and profitability, it's all about competitive advantage. Make sure every member of your team is able to talk convincingly about why customers buy from you and stay with you.
If you don't know what sets you apart from your competition - if you can't answer those critical questions - let's have a conversation. 

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Choose Your Customer

Competitive advantage requires that you know who your customer is. And who your customer is not.

Business owners are often afraid that choosing who their customers are and are not will limit their profitability. The fear is that, if you narrow your customer demographic, you’ll miss out on a lot of business. The opposite is true, though. When you don’t target a specific demographic, your staff wastes a lot of time and money going after business that will not be profitable and, probably, won’t stick. In fact, choosing who your customers are and are not will free your staff to respond to your most profitable customers and get more customers like them.

Choosing who your customers are and are not doesn’t confine or lock you into a strategy. Rather, it keeps you steady, focused and able to respond -- rather than react -- in an ever-changing environment.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Ultimate Sales Planning

Sales Planning is both strategic or tactical. It is indeed a critical part of any strategic plan but the plan itself has to include all the tactical elements as well.
Frequently

The sales planning process should help each producer set personal goals and the action plans to achieve them. And, each individual sales plan should support the overall agency goals and objectives.

Sales isn’t a department–it’s an attitude!
The most profitable and successful businesses are highly focused on new business sales. In the face of economic turmoil, increased competition, and alternative distribution systems, every business needs a genuine sales focus built into its culture. Business development should be part of every individual’s job description. This is the ultimate in sales planning.

Read more about Sales Planning here.