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| Account
Planning Account planning is a process of planning for a strategic account that provides an understanding of the customer / suppliers position, compiles and analyzes data, sets goals, establishes responsibilities, allocates resources and sets measurable objectives. Unlike most traditional account planning, strategic account planning is meant to be a flexible, collaborative and ongoing activity that is both comprehensive and linked to the day-to-day management of a strategic / key account. Account planning usually involves the strategic / key account manager, account team and customer, and the focus of an account plan will differ according to the go-to-market strategy developed for that account. Components of a plan frequently include: a joint customer/supplier mission statement, industry / market / customer overview, business objectives alignment, position / performance in the account, resource allocation, strategic opportunities and value-based account plan objectives. The account planning process is best facilitated using analytic technology and virtual communications for fast and agile response between the supplier and customer stakeholders. | Home | Back to Top | Account
Selection, Segmentation & Portfolio
The process of account selection requires the
supplier to first define a strategic account. For example, one company
defines strategic accounts as those accounts that are managed
separately from the organizations traditional sales channels,
by account managers who have total responsibility for the sales, business
processes, value proposition and customer satisfaction.
The account teams perspective and input contribute
to objective evaluations of accounts, helping to match the suppliers
comparative capability to customer opportunities. Importantly, the
process can determine in which accounts a supplier is over-invested
or under-invested, a critical determinant of business success. Proper
account selection is considered a critical step in the design of a
Strategic account program.
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Top |
Business
Case for Strategic Account Management The launch and implementation of a strategic
accounts program necessarily requires a significant investment of
time, money and corporate resources over an extended period of time;
it requires not only the approval of senior / top management but their
sustained commitment to, and involvement in, the process.
The business case for strategic account management
is rooted in a convergence of compelling factors most often related
to: economic and supply chain trends, key customers, competition,
return on investment, value to the strategic account, company organization
and culture. | Home
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Channel
Conflict More and more, technology and the Web are facilitating
the integration of multiple channels to optimize the selling process.
Channels are often selected in varying combinations depending upon
the stage of the sales cycle and customer preference.
In the context of strategic accounts, channel communication
must be integrated and realigned with the overall strategy for the
key account.
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Communications The quality of communication can build upon
or detract from the social relationships between a customer and supplier.
The different modes of communication cover
three categories: 1) Face-to-face; 2) Voice-to-voice; and, 3) Transcript-to-transcript.
There are factors affecting the choice of communication mode and specific
guidelines that can be developed for their use.
The content of ongoing communications with
the CUSTOMER frequently focuses on value of the companys global
program, data standards & quality, customer applications, value-added
products and customer satisfaction. Within the SUPPLIERS company
the focus is on customer messages, YTD results, account strategies
/ activities, presentations / templates, success stories / applications,
and the global customer management matrix.
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Top | Compensation Compensation plays a critical role in a strategic
account program to help drive specific relationship and team behaviors,
and to establish a reward system consistent with the goals and objectives
of the program and account plans. SAMAs annual Survey of Strategic
Account Management Compensation Practices monitors compensation plan
designs including the mix of salary, bonuses and incentives as well
as the criteria used for performance measurement.
Compensation issues relevant to strategic
account management include determining how sales should be credited,
i.e. double-credited vs. split-credited as well as how compensation
correlates with the job responsibilities of the strategic account
Manager. Companies differ in assigning SAMs responsibility for targeting
new accounts, growing existing accounts, servicing accounts, or combinations
of all of the above. The expectations and skill sets required for
these different positions impact compensation.
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Top | Contracts
& Agreements Frequently, agreed long-term relationships are
documented in less formal, more flexible terms than a typical contract.
An example is a global umbrella agreement that overlays
existing local contracts and/or provides options for country-specific
terms.
In a trust relationship, an agreement will reflect
mutual commitment to a profitable partnership; partnering terms may
extend to sharing of sensitive information, shared expenses and resources
and new product development.
Customers benefit from the dedicated services of
the account manager, enhanced service and support, and faster problem
resolution; Suppliers benefit from satisfied customers that generate
increased revenue and profit.
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Top | Critical
Success Factors for Strategic Accounts Examples of acknowledged critical success factors
for strategic account management include: top management involvement,
selecting strategic customers, organizational alignment, securing
and growing strategic customer business, locking out the competition,
realizing the benefits of strategic customer relationships, the role
of technology, and identifying key issues for the future.
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Top | Cultural
Issues A suppliers corporate culture will
manifest itself in almost every aspect of planning and implementing
a strategic account program from communications and compensation
to organizational structure and the role of technology. What is your
companys response to change? Is your company customer-focused?
A customers corporate culture will
impact the strategic account relationship according to its established
patterns of engagement with suppliers, its vision of growth, its views
on trust and partnerships and so on.
A countrys culture permeates business
ethics and behaviors, communication habits and relationship expectations.
Research into global account management has identified cross-cultural
competencies that facilitate effective international account management
practices. Global account managers have worldwide responsibilities
but must possess local sensibilities.
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Top | Customer
Satisfaction The criteria used for measuring strategic account
satisfaction are, optimally, jointly developed with the customer.
Measurable components of a mutual relationship can include results
such as decreasing expenses, improving profitability, expanding market
share and increasing capacity, among many others.
In addition to the company, the performances of
the strategic account manager, sales and executive management and
account team are evaluated. Current methods of gathering customer
information include face-to-face interviews, top-to-top discussions,
customer surveys (phone, online, mail), and complaint systems.
Leading-edge companies utilize customer satisfaction
measurements as an actionable agenda to produce improved business
results. Customer information may be incorporated into account planning,
the CRM (Customer Relationship Management) or sales automation system,
proposals, sales training, and selection of personnel. Innovative
companies often use predictive modeling to manage customer loyalty
and retention.
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Top | E-commerce In a strategic account relationship, the supplier
utilizes e-commerce as a way to create value. One-to-one e-commerce
facilitates real time tracking of order / fulfillment and services
at the customer interface, saving money, time and paper at both ends.
Customer relationship management systems support the online management
of procurement, fulfillment, logistics, accounting, scorecard reporting,
and communications. e-commerce also enables the supplier to efficiently
manage and leverage its own supply chain for strategic accounts.
E-commerce currently takes three basic forms: Private
eMarkets, Industry Consortia, and Independent Trading Exchanges. Private
eMarkets are Web sites belonging to individual companies to sell its
own products and services. Industry Consortia are formed when a group
of companies in a single industry build a Web site to sell their competing
offerings to a common customer. Independent Trading Exchanges are
independently owned online marketplaces designed to bring buyers and
sellers within markets together in one location.
Challenges for strategic account e-commerce initiatives
include integrating the e strategy with overall account
strategy, connecting account decision-making for products, services,
pricing, brand management and sales channels to decisions for e-business,
integrating new Web-based technologies with existing systems, understanding
changing product-service-price relationships and acting strategically
in an auction environment.
According to some estimates, B-to-B e-commerce
is expected to reach 42% of total B-to-B trade in the U.S. by 2005.
As E-commerce continues to evolve, technology experts have predicted
that e-commerce will eventually be used to link entire supply chains
from raw material suppliers through distribution channels to
the end consumers.
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Top | Executive
Sponsorship Executive sponsorship is considered a critical
success factor for any organized strategic accounts effort. The responsibilities
of executive sponsors (frequently including CEOs) include assuming
a lead role in securing and maintaining long-term corporate-wide commitment,
driving program measurement, results and recognition as well as empowering
and supporting the strategic account managers (SAMs).
An executive sponsor should enable the SAM to report
at a very high level within the organization and also take direction
from the SAM regarding the key customer. The sponsor has a role in
account planning and solidifying strategic relationships with customer
counterparts and opening customer doors at a higher level
for the SAM.
Occasionally, the term executive sponsorship
is used also to refer to senior executives within the customers
organization who provide top-level support for the strategic account
relationship. More often, however, these individuals are referred
to as customer champions.
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Top | Executive
Suite Issues (C-Level) Support of a SAM Program by a suppliers top
company executives, including the president and CEO, is essential
for long-term success. These corporate officers play a critical role
in leading their companys efforts to create value for their
most important customers and to incorporate a SAM Program within overall
corporate strategy. The CEO reinforces the customer-centric focus
needed to effectively manage strategic accounts, encouraging multi-level
and multi-functional compliance and collaboration to present one
face to the customer. Consequently, the suppliers C-level
executives need to understand, and commit to, the rationale of utilizing
a strategic account management approach to achieve corporate goals.
Likewise, strategic account managers (SAMs) and
their manager / director of strategic accounts need to understand
the higher duty and fiduciary obligations of their top executives
in order to successfully plan for and produce a profitable return
on the long-term investments and resources deployed for strategic
accounts. Accountability is a requirement for meeting the CEOs
expectations.
On the customer side of the relationship, the priorities
and business concerns of top officers within the customers organization,
e.g. the CFO, CEO, VP of operations and VP of logistics, are of supreme
interest to the SAM selling high in a strategic account. The suppliers
value to this customer will be the measurable, positive impact on
their financial health. For this reason, the suppliers strategic
account group must have intimate knowledge of its customers
business and the burning issues of these C-level customers.
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Top | Financial
Analysis Reciprocally, the value brought to the customer
must be conveyed in financial terms that explicitly demonstrate how
the suppliers products, services and solutions are helping their
strategic partner cut costs and / or increase revenues.
Financial expertise is a core competency of the
strategic account manager (SAM). As the SAM sells higher in an organization,
the ability to speak to the prime financial concerns of the senior
procurement officer becomes paramount. It is the SAMs job to
position his company as business resource rather than a vendor.
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Top | General
Business Issues Areas of business of relevance to strategic
account professionals include U.S. and global economics, global politics,
the financial markets, globalization, corporate mergers and downsizing
and new and evolving technologies.
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Top | Global
Account Manager Toolbox A GAMs toolbox contains the political know-how
to simultaneously implement the companys global corporate strategy
as well as execute effective solutions at the local level in remote
corners of the world. The role of a GAM has been aptly described as
an entrepreneur, one who can independently and creatively manage mutually
profitable multi-dimensional relationships across his own company,
and the customers.
The GAMs toolbox includes: communications
skills, global team leadership and management skills, business and
financial acumen, relationship management skills, strategic vision
and planning capabilities, problem-solving capabilities, cultural
empathy, selling skills (internal and external), industry and market
knowledge (self and customer) and product/service knowledge.
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Top | Global
Account Programs A global account program is an integrated, multinational
framework for implementing a strategic, global account management
(GAM) process. The critical requirements of a GAM process include:
securing senior management support, creating the appropriate internal
systems to coordinate activity globally, building the global product
/ service delivery model, account planning, program / account metrics,
training and educating the right people, designing a shared reward
system to achieve global account objectives and optimizing technology
and IT systems for GAM communications and knowledge management.
A closer look at global account programs in practice
reveals the difficulty in both defining and understanding what exactly
constitutes a global program versus a national, regional, international
or multinational program, and what is a global account. Companies
use varying criteria of geography and customer characteristics in
classifying their accounts and programs. Yet, in-depth research with
individual companies suggests that factors such as a high level of
process / systems integration, geographical spread, and worldwide
coordination of resources and operations distinguish the global account
programs.
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Top | Hiring,
Retaining & Performance Evaluation Interviewing and hiring potential strategic account
professionals includes an assessment of their capabilities against
a competency model encompassing: ability, personality, knowledge,
skills and critical behaviors. The desired combination of capabilities
depends on the primary function of the position.
In practice, companies are known to assign SAMs
to target new accounts only, service accounts only, grow existing
accounts only or some combination of the three. The competencies required
to seek out and acquire new accounts are different from the skills
needed to manage and grow a customer relationship. Moreover, different
types of individuals will be attracted to, and uniquely suited for,
these alternate roles.
In addition, companies have discovered that the
skills of a top salesperson do not always prove effective in the position
of strategic account manager. Where individualism and autonomy were
previously valued and rewarded, team leadership and collaboration
are core competencies; and where transactional selling ability was
key, the ability to find and drive value for strategic customers is
paramount. So, while companies continue to hire from within, they
are advised to develop unique profiles and training for the SAM.
Compensation is a key factor in retaining high-caliber
strategic account professionals, as is training and executive support
for the SAMs position of authority in the customer relationship.
The performance evaluations of the strategic account
manager and Program VP / director are based on the achievement of
both hard and soft measures. SAM measures
are directly tied to individual customer accounts while program VP
/ director measures are usually tied to overall Program results and
goals. Hard measures may include revenues, profitability, share of
wallet, etc. Soft measures may cover customer satisfaction ratings,
completion of an account plan, reaching higher selling levels within
the customer account, etc.
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Top | Internal
Alignment Internal alignment goes hand in hand with internal
selling by the strategic accounts group to make the business case
for strategic account management among all the stakeholders in the
corporation. The sales force architecture that has territory and division
salespeople staking claim to accounts and turf is deeply rooted in
many corporate cultures.
Research and case studies document a significant
first-year effort spent on educating, selling and aligning the program
internally. Best practices also cite the need for ongoing communication
of strategic account successes and the realization of the shared rewards
of sustaining corporate-wide support for a customer-focused program.
Ongoing training also plays a role in emphasizing the importance of
the specific skills needed to implement strategic account management.
Organizational alignment for global account programs
presents an additional set of alignment challenges stemming from geography,
the sheer logistical coordination, and diversity of cultures required
to meet the expectations of global key customers.
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Top | Knowledge
Management Knowledge treated as an organizational asset is
a managed process of acquiring, capturing, interpreting, transferring
and applying information that is both explicit and tacit. Explicit
knowledge is information that can be easily written down such as policies,
procedures and data; explicit knowledge can be strategic (i.e. market
activity), tactical (i.e. profit margins) or operational (i.e. pricing
models). Tacit knowledge comes from personal experience and know-how
(i.e. best practices).
A framework for effective knowledge management
within strategic account management includes establishing structure
and internal processes, motivating and influencing cultural behavior
to foster sharing and collaboration and creating user-friendly management
information systems.
Technology plays an enabling role to not only catalog
vast amounts of information but also to intelligently process and
manipulate data into meaningful knowledge for organizational alignment,
account planning, account team communications and customer-facing
systems. Global account management research has shown a positive correlation
between effective knowledge management systems and successful global
account management (increased sales volume / share of wallet).
Not the least to benefit from effective knowledge
management is the customer, whose increased satisfaction results from
the sellers ability to bring new ideas and value to the strategic
account relationship.
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Top | Mature
SAM Programs SAM Programs reaching maturity usually exist within
corporate cultures that not only talk about being customer-focused
but also have put a customer-driven philosophy into practice.
The level of multi-functional coordination and collaboration needed
to establish a fully effective strategic account program requires
corporate-wide support to meet the demands of key customer relationships.
A shared reward system plays a significant role in getting and keeping
this customer focus.
Having established key operational systems and
processes, players in a mature SAM program tend to focus more on strategic
issues and opportunities such as value creation, potential areas of
collaboration, new product development, supply chain management, and
strategic alliances.
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Top | Metrics
Program / Account Metrics define the value or set of values the supplier
brings to the customer, the value the customer provides to the supplier,
and the shared value. Value is represented in both financial and relationship-based
terms and, ideally, is incorporated into the account plan at the beginning
of the partnership.
Examples of value and measurements include: segment
loyalty and growth achievement, expanse of executive relationships
(broad / deep), mutual gain in productivity and efficiency, increased
share of clients total spend, client acknowledges value of partnership,
and improvement in clients business results.
Additionally, the supplier rates its strategic
account program against pre-established critical success factors.
Such factors include senior management commitment (i.e. leadership,
personal involvement), organizational alignment (program objectives
with vision), scope (defined customer benefits), strategic account
manager selection (selection process), account selection / deselection
(selection/removal process), strategic account planning (joint customer
and account team planning), infrastructure (sufficient resources for
program), and, ability to demonstrate value (process to identify and
satisfy customer requirements).
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Top | National
/ Regional Account Programs A national or regional account program possesses
a number of key processes to successfully implement corporate strategy
for strategic accounts. These include: securing senior management
support, creating the appropriate internal systems to coordinate activity
nationally / regionally, building the appropriate product / service
delivery model, account planning, program / account metrics, training
and educating the right people, using compensation to drive the right
behavior to achieve account objectives and optimizing technology and
IT systems for national / regional account communications and knowledge
management.
National account programs establish centralized
decision-making and operate within a uniform culture. Regional account
programs may cross national boundaries but tend to develop semi-autonomous
operations defined around geographical locations such as Europe, North
America, the Pacific Rim, etc. Within these programs, decision-making
is more decentralized, organizational processes are more complex and
the culture more diverse.
By contrast, global account programs coordinate
worldwide process and operations utilizing both centralized and decentralized
decision-making to implement a corporate global strategy at regional
and local levels worldwide. Organizational complexity is high and
cultural sensibilities are a critical success factor for global account
relationships.
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Top | New
Strategic Account Manager Toolbox A strategic account manager is the company representative
who is responsible for planning, developing and managing a total program
of seller-buyer relationships with high-level officials in customer
firms. Typically, the SAM has the authority to address client concerns
throughout the organization to ensure that the contract obligations
are fulfilled and the relationship is preserved.
Some of the fundamental characteristics and behaviors
of a SAM include: aligns customer / supplier strategic objectives,
listens beyond product needs, understands the financial impact of
decisions, consultative problem solving, orchestrates organizational
resources, establishes a vision of a committed customer / supplier
relationship and engages in self-appraisal and continuous learning.
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Top | Organizational
Structure Many factors impact decision-making concerning
the organization or reorganization of corporate structure for strategic
account management. Characteristics of both the sellers and
the buyers firms influence organizational structure and each
corporate structure must be uniquely designed to fit individual company
needs.
In some corporations, organizational structure
for strategic accounts is integrated into an existing centralized
structure. Where existing corporate structure is decentralized, however,
a strategic accounts organization can be created as an umbrella
while the underlying structure is left in place. Functionally effective
SAM programs have been documented using each of these approaches.
Seller characteristics that are relevant to organizational
structure include the nature and complexity of the companys
products, markets and industry and the existence of cross-selling
synergies between product lines that determine whether bundled
solutions can be viably offered. In addition, the companys scope
of operation whether national, regional, multinational or global
significantly dictates structural needs of the organization.
Influencing characteristics of the strategic customers
include their degree of centralized buying behavior, their interest
in and / or potential need for the sellers bundled solutions,
their geographic scope and size of operations and the structure of
the client interface at multiple locations.
Organizational structure for a global accounts
program versus a national or regional program typically involves a
higher degree of structural complexity, flexibility and a combination
of both centralized and decentralized authority.
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Top | Partnering
Process / Strategic Alliances The foundation of partnering is trust, and the
trust is built upon performance as well as more subjective perceptions
of honesty, openness and confidentiality. In strategic accounts, performance
correlates with achievement of customer account metrics and the realization
of shared value over a sustained period of time. The more subjective
aspects of trust are derived through successful sharing of both risk
and reward.
Characteristics of a partnership include a shared
vision, the integration of processes, intimate knowledge and understanding
of the demands of the entire supply chain, strong infrastructure and
information systems, a high degree of cooperation, joint innovation,
senior management commitment to represent the Program at the highest
levels, and the ability to demonstrate productivity and value to the
executive team and to the customer.
The partnering of two or more suppliers in formalized
relationships is also a form of partnering and is generally referred
to as a strategic alliance. This type of advanced relationship is
built on account-specific, market and / or organizational synergies
that combine to create new value and opportunities with mutual strategic
accounts.
Some of the most common barriers to partnering
include the customers fear of over-dependence, fear of commitment,
surprises, short-term thinking, nonalignment of internal reward systems,
inflexible contracts, insensitivity of company cultures, stifling
of innovation and loose lips.
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Top | Program
VP / Director Toolbox The program VP / director of strategic accounts
is instrumental in architecting the infrastructure of the strategic
accounts program and establishing the responsibilities and performance
criteria of the strategic account managers. Moreover, the program
VP / director has overall accountability for SAM program results,
answering to top-level executives whose commitment of corporate funding
and resources is critical to the long-term viability of a strategic
accounts effort.
Attributes and activities associated with the position
of a program VP / director of strategic accounts include: demonstrates
personal selling effectiveness (internally and externally), selects
high potential strategic account managers, diagnoses performance,
coaches strategically, influences organizational strategy, orchestrates
alignment of organizational resources, leverages technology and provides
strategic vision. In practice, a program VP occasionally has been
known to function as a strategic account manager with assigned accounts.
Empowering the strategic account manager
may be one of the most important functions served by the program VP
/ director. The SAM assumes full responsibility for the key customer
relationship and requires a corresponding level of authority to fulfill
those obligations and to leverage corporate resources. Consequently,
the program VP / director must actively support, as well as take direction
from, the SAM concerning the management of a strategic account.
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Top | SAM
101: The Basics for Starting a SAM Program Oftentimes, a SAM program begins with a pilot
account to minimize investment and risk. New strategic processes are
created and gradually institutionalized for rollout across other strategic
accounts.
Companies documenting the process of launching
a SAM program have identified the following key areas of foundational
focus: knowledge management, selecting key customers, account planning,
organizing for comprehensive customer coverage and support, technology
infrastructure, compensation and rewards, customer satisfaction, program
metrics and executive sponsorship.
From an organizational perspective, a companys
sales-oriented culture must change to a customer-driven one under
the umbrella of executive sponsorship. Moreover, buy-in across divisions
and across functional layers of the corporate structure builds the
broad-based collaboration essential to deployment of corporate-wide
resources for strategic accounts.
Turfism is a common and formidable
obstacle to effective organizational alignment, as is the entrenched
silo mentality within individual business units. Consequently,
a shared reward system is a difficult but critical component of a
SAM program.
Additionally, the roles of the strategic account
manager and program VP / director are foundationally important to
the reorganization of the sales force and require explicit definition.
Most specifically, the duties and responsibilities of the SAM demand
skills and competencies uniquely tailored to manage and grow strategic
customer relationships. Differentiated education and training of SAMs
are integral to successful programs.
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Top | SAM
Program Case Studies While the concepts and fundamental processes for
strategic account management may be common across varying industries
and types of businesses, each companys program is uniquely designed
to fit their own culture and business as well as match attributes
of their customers organization. This is a good reason to look
at a number of different case studies and note the variations in small
companies, large multinationals, service companies, industrial manufacturing
companies, companies selling commodities, new programs, mature programs,
high tech industries, European-based companies, and so on.
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Top | Small
Company Programs (<$500M) The level of investment to develop and implement
a SAM program is significant. Small companies must first make the
Business Case for Strategic account management and assess their Organizational
Structure for the potential and suitability for a strategic accounts
program. Also, a phased approach to create a strategic account management
process, focusing on only one or two accounts, is often recommended
as a way minimizing risk and building incremental account successes.
A major challenge for smaller companies is making
the transition from regional to national and national to global. Key
customers look to their closest suppliers to match and anticipate
their growth, to expand not only their operations but also the scope
of the relationship and the total value provided.
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Top | Skills
& Competencies The skill set of a strategic account manager is
distinct from that of a traditional salesperson and combines the following:
communication skills, team leadership skills, business and financial
acumen, relationship management skills, strategic vision and planning
skills, problem-solving skills, cultural understanding (Global account
manager), internal selling skills, customer selling skills, industry
/ market / product / service knowledge about the company and industry
/ market / product / service about the customer.
The more complex skills associated with a global
account manager reside in the ability to function as an entrepreneur,
maneuvering within political and cultural relationships and creating
new value for the partnership.
Performance factors of the program VP / director
of strategic accounts revolve around the functions of: providing strategic
vision, orchestrating organizational resources, influencing organizational
strategy, coaching strategically, diagnosing SAM performance, selecting
high-potential SAMs, empowering SAMs, leveraging technology, demonstrating
personal selling effectiveness with customers and demonstrating personal
selling effectiveness internally.
The competencies of an executive sponsor correspond
with their role to secure and maintain top management support for
the Strategic accounts Program, empower the strategic account manager
and solidify strategic relationships with customer counterparts.
Account teams are typically multi-functional and
contribute their individual areas of expertise. Team members must
be able to establish customer relationships where none may have existed
before; jointly, they must be able to brainstorm, collaborate and
work creatively to find customer value in product, process and service
areas.
Also see New
Strategic Account Manager Toolbox, Global
Account Manager Toolbox, Program
VP / Director Toolbox, Executive
Sponsorship, and Team
Issues.
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Top | Supply
Chain Management / Procurement A supply chain links suppliers to their suppliers
and to their customers customers; an end-to-end supply chain
networks the raw material supplier through to the end consumer.
A supply chain is managed through the flow of materials,
information and finances. The materials flow transfers product from
a supplier to a customer, in coordination with any service needs.
The information flow facilitates ordering and delivery communications.
The financial flow consists of all payment and credit-related data,
arrangements and agreements. Permeating and informing all three flows
are the various relationships that exist between the members in a
supply chain.
The strategic account manager has opportunities
to find customer value through the supply chain. Where value equals
cash, the SAM and the account team can look to each of the three areas
of materials, information and finances to find more and creative ways
to save money, increase efficiency or solve specific customer problems.
From the purchasing side, top procurement officers are increasing
pressure on their tier-one suppliers to manage tier-two suppliers.
Technology enablers (customer relationship management
systems) and Web-based solutions play a significant role in improvements
to supply chain management. The convergence of business strategies
and information technology are now driving the future of supply chain
dominance and e-procurement strategy. Experts say that business of
the future will be electronically conducted across a total network
of focused collaboration. And, in the vast majority of industries
and business sectors, the opportunity still exists to forge the first
value supply chain.
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Top | Team
Issues A high performing team has the ability to transform
the way business is conducted with a strategic account, by leveraging
the full resources and expertise of the company and collectively brainstorming
new ideas and customer solutions. Collaborative account planning with
the customer is a key activity of a cross-functional Team, creating
new levels of relationships within the account and also surfacing
new areas of opportunity and growth.
While account teams are generally integrated into
the overall operation of a Strategic accounts Program, potential conflict
can occur when the strongest customer teams threaten to dominate other
account teams and monopolize corporate priorities, resources and funding.
In these instances, a team operates more as a separate company and
works counterproductively against the rest of the company.
The functioning of a global account team presents
more complex issues in the areas of cross-cultural competencies, logistics
and coordination. | Home
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Top | Technology:
CRM, SFA, Communication Tools Far from streamlining just operational tasks, technology
serves higher strategic purposes that enable key account managers
and account teams to deliver value to the customer across a broad
range of organizational and management functions. The term used to
describe this comprehensive account coverage is customer relationship
management, of which SFA or sales force automation is a part.
Technology plays a significant role in institutionalizing
strategic account management processes and building joint process
and one-to-one relations with the customer. In global account management,
CRM facilitates connectivity across global customer teams coordinating
worldwide communication and remote business operations.
Key SAM areas for CRM application include: The fundamental challenge of CRM is in selecting
the right systems and applications. Fortunately, applications specifically
designed for strategic account management process are emerging.
Strategic account leaders need to know how, when and where CRM will
help their organization. Implementing new systems can cost as much
as U.S. $15,000 - $35,000 per user over a three-year project time
frame. Regrettably, many organizations have realized after the fact
that the end-users of the systems, who were not involved in the
selection process up-front, should have been. Also, experts recommend
strategic account managers focus on their own skill needs and the
sales / account management process, as well as feedback from the
customer when evaluating new technologies.
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Top | Training
& Professional Development The type and size of the SAM program in which
these individuals function - whether national, regional, multinational
or global impacts the combination and level of abilities,
knowledge, skills and behaviors required for these positions. Differentiated
training is most specifically needed for global account managers
who must possess a more complex array of political and collaborative
skills to accomplish strategic objectives.
Training also graduates to various levels according
to level of experience. New strategic account managers are taught
the core competencies of strategic account management, while more
advanced SAMs train in higher levels of skills such as negotiation,
value creation and innovation.
Research shows a positive correlation between
separate training for strategic account managers and fully functional
and effective strategic accounts programs. Less effective programs
more often provide SAMs the same training as other salespeople.
Yet, training is often perceived as an expendable expense. However,
benchmarking data on best practices in strategic account management
indicate that training of the SAM and account teams is a critical
success factor due to the job-specific skills and behavior needed
to grow these vital customer relationships.
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Top | Value
Creation / Innovation The process of creating value requires intimate
knowledge of the customers needs and challenges, alignment
around a model for problem-solving, multi-functional collaboration,
process and systems for managing supply chain issues, and the ability
to translate value into positive financial results.
In a true partnership, the goal of mutual value
is implied and must be achievable on both sides of the relationship.
Whether a value proposition is for a single offering or representing
the institutional value of a strategic partnership, the embedded
benefits must demonstrate positive financial results to the customer
and to the supplier.
Value to a customer translates to increased revenues,
reduced costs or improved business processes. Value to a supplier
may mean incremental success toward long-term financial goals, enhanced
profitability, new opportunities or advancement of the relationship
to a higher level.
Innovation begins with the strategic account
manager whose intimate knowledge of the customer and team leadership
skills facilitate both internal and customer collaboration to surface
breakthrough ideas. Multifunctional teams play a significant role
in the development of innovative thought and process. However, innovation
also requires a corporate culture in which creativity and collaborative
networking can flourish.
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