salesforce.com CRM Management Solutions
Each of these salesforce.com
CRM solutions are grounded in best practices collected from hundreds of thousands of sales professionals supported over three decades. You will increase the velocity of your sales cycle, eliminate sales bottle necks and maximize your sales team’s effectiveness in less than 30 days.
Baker Sales Systems will help you:
- Significantly expand
the capacity of your sales, marketing and
business development teams
- Improve the
efficiency of your sales prospecting funnel
- Dramatically decrease
your sales cycles
- Promote selling
clarity, motivation and sales proficiency
- Expand the geographic
reach of your marketing, sales and customer
services organizations
- Dramatically reduce
the time required to roll out sales improvement
initiatives
For 20 years I've been a bit of an idiot when it comes to
buying printers, expecting good performance on a lean budget.
But now I'm smarter. And older. And balder. I've learned the
right things to do when buying technology for my business. Just
watch.
For starters, with my new printers, I'm going to expect to get
what I pay for. For example, why do box seats at a baseball game
cost more than the bleachers? Why does a BMW cost more than a
Honda Civic? It's because good things just cost more. Same goes
with technology. I can't expect a $159 printer to be the
workhorse for my company. Same as why I shouldn't expect a free
online project management app to be my company's primary
business tool. Most technology I know doesn't work very well to
begin with. The rule of thumb in buying technology, like
anything else, is you get what you pay for. Expensive servers
have more memory, hardware space, and processing power.
Expensive databases can handle more data and more people at the
same time. And pricey printers can handle more print jobs and
produce better quality output than their cheaper counterparts.
Not that the more expensive products are more reliable. They're
not. Most software vendors I know consider a product to be
reliable if it works well 95 percent of the time. Thank God
these people are not building airplanes. Cell phones have been
around for 20 years, and I'm still dropping 10 calls a day. Cars
have engine trouble. Network connections inexplicably slow down.
Workstations lock up. I'm a naïve fool if I think my new printer
will work 100 percent all the time, no matter who makes it.
SOME GOOD GUIDANCE
Any good buyer of technology will tell you this: make sure to
have a good support system in place. All technology needs some
kind of human service backing it up. When I bought the last
printer, the guy at Staples offered me an annual service
contract. And, being the idiot that I am, I said no, considering
it just another way "Corporate America" rips off the
hard-working business community. This time, I'll listen a little
more closely. And when I purchase a new application or hardware,
I'll make sure there's support for that, too.
When I buy that new printer, I'm going to have an exit strategy
in mind. That's because all technology has a lifecycle. And the
smart guys I know who buy technology have a good idea how long
their technology will last. A friend of mine replaces the
laptops his sales guys use every two years, whether they need it
or not. That's because he's learned that laptops, particularly
the low cost ones he buys, generally start having problems after
two years on the road. Things deteriorate. I've learned that
smart business owners don't wait for things to break.
Given the activity in my office, I think two years is a good run
for a sub-$500 printer. Other technologies should last longer. A
good Customer Relationship Management or accounting application
should run 5 to 7 years. A server can go 3 to 5 years. A wife
who keeps a clean house and makes good meals should last 30 to
40 years. A husband who thinks this way about his wife would
last about 10 minutes. See? Everything has its lifespan.
I've been perusing the Internet looking at replacement printers,
and I've found out another thing about buying technology: don't
rely too heavily on user reviews. Tech stuff tends to get more
attention on the Web than nontech stuff. There are too many
websites with too many crazy people offering their views. I
can't rely on other people's opinions all the time. Those like
me who post comments online are but a small, statistically
unreliable sample.
WHERE TO GET FEEDBACK
The best place to get reviews of smaller technologies, such as
printers and workstations, are the such popular sites as
Consumer Reports, PC Magazine, PC World and CNet (CBS). And the
best place to get feedback on a business software application or
service? Try the big job sites, such as Monster.com and
CareerBuilder.com. Use the application's name in your keyword
search, and you'll see companies listing jobs for people who
have experience with it. That would lead you to believe the
company is using the product. Call there and ask for someone in
the department likely to be a user. Then ask that stranger how
they like the product or service. People love to give their
opinions—and you're getting the opinions of someone who wasn't
fed to you by the vendor.
Another great place to see how well that potential technology
works? Try the vendor's "forum" or "community." Most tech
companies have them. Usually these forums can be found in the
company's support section on their website. But many can now be
found on Facebook or LinkedIn. Access is generally open to the
public.
Finally, I need to understand the long-term costs of my
purchase. I need to expect that even though a new printer may
cost me only $299, the manufacturer will gouge me another $50 to
$75 per month for inkjet cartridges. Or when I buy a new
software application, the vendor will strong-arm me into
renewing its annual maintenance, so I get "updates" and
"support" and the ability to "purchase more licenses in the
future" if I need. Can you believe this? It's true. A one-off
purchase is rare when buying technology—be ready for a
commitment. Smart technology buyers figure their costs over
multiple years to calculate the equipment investment's true
return. You should do the same—even for a cheap printer.
Source: Gene Marks
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