John is the CEO of a small dog house manufacturing company in the Midwest. His sales team is small but mighty, consisting of four sales reps who regularly visit pet stores and attend dog shows to scout out potential prospects. Last year, they increased their sales by about 10% year over year, totalling $1.5 million in total sales. John was thrilled, but he knew the company could do better.
During a Q4 meeting with Mary, the CFO of the company, John proposes an ambitious sales target for the coming year: a 20% increase in total sales. Mary hesitates, knowing from recent reports that sales have plateaued and one of the reps is struggling to hit quota. She also knows from her own research that demand for the company’s dog houses hasn’t increased significantly over the last year. Given these factors, she suggests that John pull back on the 20% target.
Together, they review rep performance and overall sales numbers from the last two years. Two years prior, sales only increased 8% year over year, but the company was working with three reps instead of four. Last year, the fourth rep was hired, allowing the company to increase sales growth to 10%. That number could have been higher, but the new rep spent a quarter onboarding so wasn’t focussed on closing deals.
Since the market has remained relatively steady and the three core reps have performed consistently, John and Mary use their performance as a good benchmark. Individually, they increased their sales 10-12% on average every year. Mary recommends 12% as a good goal for the coming year, but John wants a stretch goal, so they agree to 13%.
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