Etude
Revving Up Sales ROI for a Downturn
Revving Up Sales ROI for a Downturn
B2B commercial organizations should respond to the coronavirus crisis with short-term moves to act on now and medium-term moves to plan now.
Etude
B2B commercial organizations should respond to the coronavirus crisis with short-term moves to act on now and medium-term moves to plan now.
The breadth of risk and uncertainty due to the Covid-19 pandemic ranges from health threats and financial hits for households to the stresses of new working environments at home. All companies face management challenges, but this downturn has different characteristics, and the effects vary across departments and functions.
Commercial organizations, especially in business-to-business markets, face a dual challenge of a sputtering economy and less contact with clients than before the pandemic. Each week brings more canceled orders, departed customers, dried-up pipelines, demands for immediate price concessions, and pressure to reduce commercial costs.
The magnitude and type of response required will vary by industry, region and the severity of the company’s situation. Yet companies must take care to avoid two harmful tacks with their commercial teams in a downturn. One tack involves sweeping, uniform cuts to all sales and administrative functions. This hits commercial teams in the form of cuts to variable compensation, slashed travel and expense budgets, or indiscriminate layoffs born out of desperation. The other, equally dangerous tack follows the opposite impulse: doing nothing out of fear of unintended consequences to revenue.
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A more effective approach consists of securing the current revenue base, selectively playing offense to set up medium-term growth, defending profit margin, and optimizing the commercial cost base in a surgical, systematic and often transformational manner. This will shore up the return on investment (ROI) for sales operations. But before a company can execute the right moves, it must define specific goals for the evolving situation.
Leading commercial organizations plan scenarios based on a deep understanding of what drives customer lifetime value and ultimately shareholder value. They ask: What affects valuation more, profit margin or revenue growth? The answer guides how companies make smarter trade-offs as cost pressures increase.
This exercise enables commercial leaders to develop a clear strategy on where to cut and where to invest in a downturn. The strategy also informs how to adjust as liquidity and cost pressures evolve. Based on the overarching strategy, companies then address four aspects of their commercial organization to improve both efficiency and effectiveness, setting themselves up to gain share during and coming out of a downturn:
Companies that excel in all of these areas can meaningfully improve their commercial return on investment (see Figure 1), both with near-term cost actions and long-term revenue growth that stems from better resource allocation.
In each area, there are moves to act on now and medium-term moves to plan now. The goal is to structurally reset and realign the commercial cost base and position a company to gain market share, while avoiding maneuvers that would be difficult to unwind when the economy eventually recovers.
Like all economic disruptions, today’s crisis will ease off at some point. In any scenario, the right playbook allows companies to meet their immediate needs by increasing their commercial teams’ efficiency without undue risk to revenue, employees and customer relationships, and with an eye to gaining market share throughout the economic cycle.
That playbook hinges on measuring and growing sales ROI in each customer segment, each channel and each industry. This tool kit offers companies design options for improving sales ROI based on their unique situations. At one extreme, companies can use the playbook primarily to take cost out of commercial functions and reduce the denominator. At the other extreme, they can reinvest all of the savings into the highest-return areas to increase the numerator. Most companies should land somewhere in between, reinvesting some of the savings in high-potential areas of growth.
The global Covid-19 pandemic has extracted a terrible human toll and spurred sweeping changes in the world economy. Across industries, executives have begun reassessing their strategies and repositioning their companies to thrive now and in the world beyond coronavirus.
David Burns, David Schottland, Justin Murphy and Tom Whiteley are partners with Bain & Company’s Customer Strategy & Marketing practice. They are based, respectively, in Chicago, New York, San Francisco and London.