Tag: Channel Sales Incentives

April Showers Bring May Flowers – and Lessons for Growing Your Sales Incentive Program

April Showers Bring May Flowers and and Lessons for Growing Your Sales Incentive ProgramI have a conflicted relationship with the season of spring. On the one hand, spring awakens allergic reactions in me that lead to itchy eyes, a runny nose and all those other temporary maladies that make me feel less than great. On the other hand, I absolutely love to watch things grow – from a seemingly dead state to lush greenery and colorful flowers.

Our yard contains a number of potted plants, including a variety of peppers, tomatoes and jasmine. I find myself drawn to these pots several times a day just to see how much new growth has sprouted since I last checked. And I really look forward to returning home after my monthly trips to see how dramatically growth has progressed.

I think that there is a lesson about human nature to be learned from this – we like to watch things grow. And while that might seem like an obvious statement, I think that it has implications for the design and communication of channel sales incentive and customer incentive programs.

We hear from many clients that they are hesitant to invest in customer incentive programs that “award customers for sales that we’re already getting.” Yet they also recognize that their existing customers are extremely valuable and that retaining and growing them are paramount to financial success. So, what do we recommend to reconcile this dilemma?

Consider one of our more popular sales incentive program designs, in which our client awards its customer with redeemable currency only after that customer achieves some baseline level of activity (e.g., last year’s purchase volume). While this design can be financially attractive to the client, it can also pose a risk. And that risk is that the customer can lose interest while he or she is working toward the prescribed threshold.

This is where the lesson about growth comes in. Through regular progress reports (via email) and stylized graphics (e.g., gas gauges, thermometers, etc.) on the program web site, we can help the client communicate with their customers on how they are progressing (or growing) toward the threshold that will enable them to earn incentive currency. We’ve found that these techniques leverage the program’s participant’s natural interest in growth – and keep them engaged.

And once the customers have passed their thresholds, both they and the client are in a position to enjoy the benefits of growing together.  Want to talk about growing a healthy, lush sales incentive program?  Contact us here to find out more.

Incentive Programs-One Piece of the Performance Puzzle

Many of QIC’s channel sales and customer incentive programs are business-to-business (B2B) rather than business-to-consumer (B2C). Both types provide insight, however and recently I was intrigued by two B2C items that came to my attention: Loyalty Programs Don’t Drive Loyalty; Customer Experience Does – by David Jacques, Customer input The Loyal Treatment, Maximizing Customer Value… Read more »

St Patrick’s Day and Sales Incentive Programs

Happy Saint Patrick’s Day!  As it turns out, you don’t need the Blarney Stone to make your sales incentive program successful – just a solid design and consistent, meaningful communications. According to legend, kissing the Blarney Stone imparts incredible persuasive skill – but because most of us are a great distance from the Blarney Castle… Read more »

Effective Communications Improve Engagement

Effective communications are instrumental to the success of any business, organization or enterprise.  As Rob Miklas colorfully illustrates in this post – A Smoother Flight with Effective Program Communications – without effective communications your recognition or incentive program will most likely never reach its full potential. Like regular announcements from the flight deck, pertinent program… Read more »

Recognition and Incentive Solutions – Partner not Pioneer

A recent Atlanta Journal-Constitution blog entry by John Saddington entitled Look to Partner, Not Pioneer addresses a culture of innovation over partnership and how that may not always be the best solution to one’s business goals.  If you are considering a recognition or incentive program for your organization, partnering with a recognition and incentive solutions… Read more »

Take Out Pizza and Online Points Programs – How Convenient!

I’ve discovered some interesting parallels between QIC’s online points programs – on the IncenTrac® platform — and take-out pizza.  First, I have a confession to make — I don’t cook (gasp!), and it’s not that I don’t know how or that I don’t enjoy cooking — I just don’t do it. It is time consuming… Read more »