Hello, Thank you for visiting my blog. I would greatly appreciate contributions in terms of new thoughts & concepts towards this blog. Please Click on the links above to access the different sections of the blog. If you want some perspective on how you or your company needs to enhance their Sales or Client Management Capabilities, please email me (Shubhanjan Saha) at shubhanjan.saha@gmail.com & do not forget to subscribe to my posts ! :-) .

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Friday, December 25, 2015

Proposals Part 6 (Drafting II)

Often I have seen people struggling with drafting proposals, so I have gone ahead and laid some points which one can keep in one's mind while dealing with this task 

This is the 6th part of the series

Qualifications and Experience
  • Reasons your company is best for the project
  • Your competitive strengths
  • Qualifying experiences you have
  • Additional qualified people who will be added 
Personnel Areas
  • Who will do what
  • Capabilities experience and training
  • Experience of key members
  • Previous successes
Policies and procedures
  • Assessments
  • Transparency
If you want some perspective on how you or  your company needs to enhance its Sales/Client Management Capabilities, please email me at shubhanjan.saha@gmail.com

Friday, December 11, 2015

Proposals Part 5 (Drafting)

Often I have seen people struggling with drafting proposals, so I have gone ahead and laid some points which one can keep in one's mind while dealing with this task 

This is the 5th part of the series

Time or Task Schedule
  • When will it start
  • How long will it take
  • Time breakdown for each step of the proposal
Cost or Budget
  • Direct Costs
  • Indirect Costs
  • Complete Breakdown showing all Computations
  • People Travel supplies
  • When and how will you bill your client
  • Income/Expense statement
Market Analysis
  • Competitors
  • Where your clients fit
  • What type of market share you believe your proposed idea can secure
  • Inventory
  • Workforce
  • Plans to market recommendations
  • SWOT
If you want some perspective on how you or your company needs to enhance its Sales/Client Management Capabilities, please email me at shubhanjan.saha@gmail.com

Friday, December 4, 2015

Proposals Part 4 (Solution)

Often I have seen people struggling with drafting proposals, so I have gone ahead and laid some points which one can keep in one's mind while dealing with this task 

This is the 4th part of the series

Proposed Solution 
  • Description of how your service is different
  • Specialized support services
  • Overall benefits of the proposal plan
Methods
  • Reference related studies
  • Quote individuals who are prominent in the field
  • Provide Statistics
  • Identify steps taken for primary research
  • Provide activities in the study
  • Describe the questionnaire development
Goals Objectives Benefits and Outcomes
  • The Goals of your proposal
  • Your understanding of the organization and its problems
  • What needs will be met
  • How will they be measured
  • How much money will be saved
  • What non-tangibles will be impacted
  • Benefits the clients will achieve
  • Direct Benefits
  • Indirect Benefits
If you want some perspective on how you or  your company needs to enhance its Sales/Client Management Capabilities, please email me at shubhanjan.saha@gmail.com

Friday, November 27, 2015

Proposals Part 3 (Pre-Drafting & Discussions)

Often I have seen people struggling with drafting proposals, so I have gone ahead and laid some points which one can keep in one's mind while dealing with this task 

This is the 3rd part of the series

  • Breaking a proposal into many time sections is easier
  • Scoring Charts : To Let know how the proposal will be evaluated
  • Review Chart -  Checklist
History and Mission Statement
  1. How long you have been in existence
  2. Your mission or vision statement
  3. General work of the organization
  4. What you excel at
  5. Any awards you won
  6. SWOT
  7. Similar projects
  8. Anything else to sell your credibility
Current situation and background
  • Explain the need you've identified
  • Current Situation
  • Why it needs to Change
  • Ideas that have been tried
If you want some perspective on how you or  your company needs to enhance its Sales/Client Management Capabilities, please email me at shubhanjan.saha@gmail.com

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Proposals Part 2 (What you need to do !)

Often I have seen people struggling with drafting proposals, so I have gone ahead and laid some points which one can keep in one's mind while dealing with this task

This is the 2nd part of the series

In RFP's 
  1. Look for key phrases
  2. Make an outline of the lettered sections
  3. Make sticky notes
  4. Brainstorm who should do what'
  5. Reorder the section
If you want some perspective on how you or  your company needs to enhance its Sales/Client Management Capabilities, please email me at shubhanjan.saha@gmail.com

Friday, November 6, 2015

Proposals Part 1 (Guidelines & Inclusions)

Often I have seen people struggling with drafting proposals, so I have gone ahead and laid some points which one can keep in one's mind while dealing with this task 

This is the 1st part of the series

I will try to post a new section every week.

Common Guidelines :
  • Focus on readers needs
  • Includes precise description of service
  • Include Market analysis
  • Describe experience of your key players
  • Financials
What they need to Include :
  • What's the course of action
  • How much will it cost
  • Benefits of accepting
  • Easy to read Information
If you want some perspective on how you or your company needs to enhance its Sales / Client Management Capabilities, please email me at shubhanjan.saha@gmail.com

Friday, May 22, 2015

KPIs - If you cannot measure it, you cannot improve it.


My two favorite decision support sayings are
1. “If you cannot measure it, you cannot improve it.” 
2. “Information without action is useless.”

These two sayings have been adopted for business, and is fundamental to understanding the importance of KPIs (key performance indicators). Developing and improving KPIs is the number one strategic action for growth.

For field-based organizations, KPIs are even more important. They are fundamental to evaluating field rep performance, allowing you to determine which reps are doing well and which may need help. Since reps do not work in an office, managers need to be able to see rep activity in the field and monitor performance.

KPIs also help you evaluate your business performance and see which areas you may need to work on. By using them, you can maximize your company’s efficiency and productivity. KPIs may vary from company to company, but they should all be simple, aligned, relevant, measurable, achievable, timely, and visible in order for them to be effective. 

Collecting data from KPIs merely gives you numbers. In order to understand each KPI and its impact on your business, you need to analyze this information. With cloud solutions like Salesforce & other mobile applications, it’s easy to analyze your data. So if KPIs are monitored frequently and analyzed often, it is easy to see areas in which your business performance may be lacking in comparison to others. After analyzing, you can reallocate your resources as needed and change your strategy to better fit your business objectives.

KPIs can be the key to increased business productivity, efficiency, and growth, but only if you measure them frequently and take the steps to analyze and adjust them because raw data can give you insight, but upon analysis, you will find that you will gain much deeper insights that will aid you in improving your business.

If you want some perspective on how you or your company needs to enhance their Sales/Client Management Capabilities, please email me at shubhanjan.saha@gmail.com

Saturday, April 4, 2015

Best PMO ROI metrics


Field Enablement sometimes involves working closely with the PMO for measuring project efficiency thus making it necessary for the PMO to establish their own metrics to show the PMO’s contribution to the success of the company. Typical ROI metrics that the PMO use include:

  • Percent of projects using/following the system/framework
  • Ratio of project manager to total project staff
  • Customer satisfaction ratings
  • Year-over-year throughput
  • Percent of projects at risk or in trouble
  • Number of projects per headcount (staffing tolerance for projects)
  • Ways to improve faster closure
  • Percent of scope changes per project
  • Percentage of projects completed on time
  • Percentage of projects completed within budget
It is important to understand that metrics management is an essential component of knowledge management and involvement by the PMO is essential. It is very difficult to improve processes and work flow without gathering metrics and storing the results for traceability.

If you want some perspective on how you or your company needs to enhance their Sales/Client Management Capabilities, please email me at shubhanjan.saha@gmail.com

Saturday, March 21, 2015

KPI Library methodology


Getting back to Field Effectiveness, nowadays companies maintain metric and KPI libraries the same way that they maintain libraries for best practices and lessons learned. The key is to use a methodology or framework.Firstly identifying the clients and stakeholders, we then input the requirements,business case, and accompanying assumptions.The methodology then guides us through the different process groups of initiation ,planning ,execution ,monitoring and controlling ,and closure .The methodology also provides us with guidance in the identification of metrics, KPIs and dashboard reporting techniques for a particular client.




If you want some perspective on how you or your company needs to enhance their Sales/Client Management Capabilities, please email me at shubhanjan.saha@gmail.com

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Causes of Failure in a Sales Support Project


Before starting a project I usually try to take a mental note of the causes of failure in a project, some of them are issues that could persist throughout the duration of the contract. So I have compiled a generic list of common causes of failure that I have encountered that I keep my eye out for !, They are :
  • End user stakeholders not involved throughout the project. (My biggest Gripe !)
  • Minimal or no stakeholder backing; lack of ownership.
  • Weak business case.
  • Plan asks for too much in too little time.
  • Poor estimates, especially financial.
  • Unclear stakeholder requirements.
  • Passive user stakeholder involvement after hand-off.
  • Unclear expectations.
  • Assumptions, if they exist at all, are unrealistic.
  • Plans are based upon insufficient data.
  • No systematization of the planning process.
  • Inadequate or incomplete requirements.
  • Lack of resources.
  • Assigned resources lack experience.
  • Staffing requirements are not fully known.
  • Constantly changing resources.
  • Poor overall project planning.
  • Missed deadlines and no recovery plan.
  • Budgets are exceeded and out of control.
  • Lack of re-planning on a regular basis.
  • Lack of attention provided to the human and organizational aspects of the project.
  • Project estimates are best guesses and not based upon history or standards.
  • Not enough time provided for proper estimating.
  • No one knows the exact major milestone dates or due dates for reporting.
  • Team members working with conflicting requirements.
  • People are shuffled in and out of the project with little regard for the schedule.
  • Each stakeholder uses different tools, which be incompatible with the tools of project partners.
  • Weak project and stakeholder communications
  • Poor assessment of risks if done at all.
  • Wrong type of contract.
  • Poor project management; team members possess a poor understanding of project management, especially virtual team members.
  • Technical objectives are more important than business objectives.
If you want some perspective on how you or your company needs to enhance their Sales/Client Management Capabilities, please email me at shubhanjan.saha@gmail.com

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Defining Complexity


Having been a part of meetings where level of complexity of a given project is often discussed, I prefer to usually clarify my stand by mentioning that complexity can be defined according to the number of interactions that must take place for the work to be executed. The greater the number of functional units that must interact, the harder it is to perform the integration. The situation becomes more difficult if the functional units are dispersed across the globe and if cultural differences makes integration difficult. Complexity can also be defined according to size and length. The larger the project is in scope and cost, and the greater the time frame, the more likely it is that scope changes will occur significantly, affecting the budget and schedule. Large, complex projects tend to have large cost overruns and schedule slippages. Complex projects can differ from traditional projects for a multitude of reasons, including:

◾ Size
◾ Dollar value
◾ Uncertain requirements
◾ Uncertain scope
◾ Uncertain deliverables
◾ Complex interactions
◾ Uncertain credentials of the labor pool
◾ Use of large virtual teams
◾ Other miscellaneous differences

There are numerous definitions of a complex project, based upon the interactions of two or more of the preceding elements. Even a small, two-month project can be considered complex according to the definition. This can create havoc when selecting and using metrics. The projects that you manage within your own company can be regarded as complex projects if the scope is large and the statement of work is only partially complete so before starting a project just try to thrash out this important issue as well, wherever required.


If you want some perspective on how you or your company needs to enhance their Sales/Client Management Capabilities, please email me at shubhanjan.saha@gmail.com

Friday, January 2, 2015

Points on Proposal Development


Often I hear Business Development Managers cribbing about Proposal development which can be quite a headache and prospective clients giving them a hard time, so I have gone ahead and placed some important pints on a list to help you differentiate you from your competitor by mentioning :
  1. Track record 
  2. Awards
  3. Endorsements
  4. Incumbent
  5. Patent technologies
  6. Influence
  7. Size
  8. Partnerships
I use a set of Microsoft Excel templates to do track these.

So start this process by :

Identify each strength, for example size and see:

Where this can be flipped around so that it becomes a disadvantage.

For example, size can imply inflexibility and red-tape. You can highlight your nimble work force and the speed of response. You can then work through all of the strengths and write your bid so that:

Each ‘strength’ is identified - but the risks are flagged next to it. You then show how you would resolve these and build trust in the proposal assessor’s mind.

Each ‘strength’ is identified - but the issues are discussed next to it. You then show how issues may arise if the grant provider chooses a larger firm and why selecting your firm may be a safer option. 


If you want some perspective on how you or your company needs to enhance their Sales/Client Management Capabilities, please email me at shubhanjan.saha@gmail.com