Written by: William Johnson, Division Vice President, Sales and Channel
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The biggest challenge when launching a new sales lead-referral program is getting your customer-facing teams on board. If you can successfully motivate most of them to participate, you’re guaranteed to have an increase in revenue.
We worked with a major telecommunications company to launch a lead-referral incentive program and successfully inspired over 80% of their customer-facing technicians to participate. The program encouraged participants to identify up-sell and cross-sell opportunities when doing an in-home repair. They would then simply ask the customer if a sales representative could call them later to discuss additional products or services. As a result, they generated close to $70 million in incremental revenue for the organization.
Referral programs like this can add quite an impressive number to a company’s bottom line. If you’re considering starting a sales referral lead generation program, here are seven things to consider.
You will likely be asking both sales and non-sales employees to take on additional tasks. Including key influencers in the planning process will help them feel a sense of ownership and provide you with real “feet-on-the-street” information.
Spend time explaining to participants that additional revenue helps build job security, allows the company to expand and grow and creates opportunities for long-term career success.
The increase in sales will be incremental, so you have tremendous leeway to share the gain. Participants will be more willing to participate if they see you are being extremely fair to the point of generosity for their extra efforts.
Not every referral will result in a sale which can be discouraging for participants. Make sure you recognize and thank participants for their effort, regardless of the end result. Recognizing progress will keep participants engaged.
Keep the program fresh and interesting by offering the opportunity to earn more awards during key selling seasons, for new products, during slow times or for other situations in your business. Mix it up!
Provide information, updates and reminders about the program using a variety of media. Make content relevant, providing information on how to make referrals more successful.
You’ll gain valuable data during the program. Study it to see where improvements can be made and where successes can be repeated. Share the data with participants so they can provide additional insight and see how they are contributing on a company-wide basis.