Managing Organizational Change
Cincom and Accountability of Sales Representative for Results
Cincom is a 43-year-old developer of enterprise software applications and by virtue of the designed-in nature of their applications, has been able to literally coast on a comfortable wave of recurring revenue for a decade. This recurring revenue stream is comprised of license payments, maintenance fees, and the continual need for updates to mission-critical systems the company sold, in some cases, decades ago. With the majority of revenue being generated through a recurring revenue stream, the urgency and intensity to sell which is often found in smaller, younger, and more cash-starved businesses is not as prevalent inside Cincom. The framework for change model provides an invaluable construct in which to analyze the complacency of Cincom, what contributed to that false sense of security, and the path back to being a competitor in their core markets (Kotter, 2008).
Analysis of Sales Representative Roles and Accountability
It was common before the change in sales accountability, organizational structure and quota re-alignment to have Cincom sales representatives who had not sold anything in two years or more. Having created an organizational culture that was more attuned to maintaining accounts and ensuring customers were satisfied enough to renew their maintenance and software licensing contracts, Cincom sought out sales people who were excellent at maintaining accounts. These sales teams were not however adept at prospecting, working on new opportunities and closing new business. As a result, the culture began to became more focused on relationships as tantamount in selling and less on results. The factors that also contributed to this culture was the rapid build-out of enterprise software globally, the increasingly balkanized...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now