Tag Archives: salesforce.com

The Importance of a Sales Forecast

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

If there is one thing that reps hate to do, it is to input and submit a forecast. How often have you heard “I should be out selling, not updating a sales forecast for my boss!”

The reality is that sales does itself a disservice by not having a sales forecast that drives value across the organization. To create a valuable sales forecast, you need a formalized process across the organization that is enforced at all levels of the company.

Often companies find themselves in the vicious cycle of sales forecasting without them even knowing it. They get sucked into a process that is tactical, time consuming and which, by the time it is complete, everyone in the organization ignores. It is ignored because no one trusts it, the output is seen to be subjective and cannot be relied upon.

Getting to Trust Your Forecast

The process of getting to a trusted sales forecast does not have to be complex, in fact it starts rather simply with getting the sales reps to input their forecasts. How do you get sales reps to regularly input and update the sales forecast on a regular basis?

First, you have to have an executive management team that is committed to the process (why on earth wouldn’t everyone be committed to it given the impact of a sales forecast?) and that clearly communicates and enforces the value of the process.

Without commitment you cannot expect reps to do it on their own!

Secondly: you have to make it really easy for the sales reps to update their sales forecasts. Many companies have shoehorned Microsoft Excel into being the answer. It is by far the most prevalent tool out there being leveraged for sales forecasting. But it’s not the best answer.

Tying the sales forecasting process to a CRM solution like Salesforce CRM, Oracle CRM-on-Demand or Siebel, does make it considerably easier for them. By doing so, the process of updating an opportunity and inputting a sales forecast becomes seamless to sales reps. You have to use the right application for the job.

Thirdly: you have to understand what is changing in the sales forecast and why — this will focus all your conversations during the sales forecast review process.

Lastly: you have to measure the sales reps’ accuracy over time to enable you to hold your sales reps accountable. If the sales reps know that you are monitoring and tracking their every move they may feel less inclined to play games with their forecasts. When sales reps are confronted with the results of their sales forecast submissions, their behavior changes, immediately!

You may never get sales reps to like updating their sales forecast, but at least you will get them to update it on a regular basis with more fact-based information than ever.

Announcing a Joint Webinar With salesforce.com

Monday, June 15th, 2009

Isn’t it time to put your CRM to work for you? When Right90 partners up with salesforce.com for a webinar on June 24, you can find out just how to combine a CRM with a sales forecasting application.

Learn from Patrick Morrisey, salesforce.com VP of Strategic Alliances; Southard Jones, Right90 VP of Products; Bruce Richardson, AMR Chief Research Officer; and Paul Kobos, the CFO of Cinterion, which is one of our customers.

What’s in it for you?

Ideal for companies looking to figure out how to make the most of their customer data and help establish a trusted, actionable sales forecast, this webinar brings together not only representatives from salesforce.com and Right90, but also customers and analysts to share their thoughts.

You will learn about the importance of having an effective sales forecast as part of a complete CRM strategy. Part of the goal for this is to help you make an educated decision about which applications to consider as your company grows. So, don’t hesitate, here is the webinar registration. Go on, sign up and we’ll see you on June 24.

Customer success in the real-time cloud with Right90 and Salesforce CRM

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Note: This is a guest post from Steve Lucas at salesforce.com. Many thanks to Steve and the teams over at salesforce.com.

We’re known as the enterprise cloud computing company. Our partners are also embracing that opportunity, and are extending cloud computing throughout every part of the enterprise to help customers gain the advantages of running their business in the cloud.

Managing sales forecasting is a key area for customers, especially in the manufacturing industry, ensuring that companies can act quickly on sales changes and trends and align with their production facilities. Our partner Right90 has been making customers successful with sales forecasting in the cloud for several years.

Manufacturing customers are now equipped with actionable forecasting

Right90’s newest offering, Change Analytics, enables customers to extend their baseline forecasting into product specific, custom forecasting for manufacturing, which is then tied to opportunities in Salesforce CRM. Many companies are still tracking forecasting processes in spreadsheets and are unable use their data effectively. Change Analytics and Salesforce CRM make it possible for manufacturing companies to manage complexity, eliminate paper-based processes, and take action with their forecasting to ensure customer success and satisfaction.

Customers already benefitting from Right90 and Salesforce CRM

Since 2007, SHARP Microelectronics of the Americas has used Salesforce CRM and Right90 as a base application platform for their Global Design Win Tracking and Sales Forecasting system. By leveraging Salesforce and Right90, SHARP significantly improved visibility and tracking of their business.

Change Analytics is a great addition to any company’s sales cloud. With this strategic solution, Right90 and salesforce.com bring the benefits of real-time cloud computing to the manufacturing industry. Customers benefit from Right90’s manufacturing domain expertise combined with salesforce.com’s leadership in cloud computing.

Change Analytics from Right90 is now available on the Force.com AppExchange.

Steve Lucas is the Senior Vice President of Force.com marketing and ISV recruitment at salesforce.com.