Close X

Leave a comment


Name:
Email:
Comment:
  I have read and understand the terms and conditions
 

Please click the post button only once - your comment will not be published immediately
This website is currently in BETA

Business Focus >>

The new manufacturers The new manufacturers

A great British renaissance has been taking place. From Aberdeen to the West Country, the zing is back in manufacturing. It’s about time this spectacular story was told.

  • hot
  • hot 100
  • 50 to watch in mobile
  • Entrepreneurs Summit

Manage your sales and marketing online

by David Longworth - Thursday, 6th September 2007 -

Manage your sales and marketing online

It’s tough to track sales made in people’s back gardens. For CreateSpace MD Peter Foggin, Salesforce.com had the answer.

We’ve been in business for three years, creating timber buildings for garden offices, guest accommodation, and children’s playrooms.

In many people’s eyes we just produce posh sheds. But when Mrs Smith from Rotherham calls in and we can access her complete customer history, she’s blown away.

It all started when I built a garden office myself, quit my job and set up the firm in 2003. To begin with, I hand-wrote all the customer information in books.

Then I moved to ACT, a sales management software package. But I hadn’t expected that we’d grow as fast as we did.

So we knew we either had to go down the traditional IT route – bring in an IT expert, deal with loads of hardware and file servers, manage data and so on – or find something else.

The difficulty was that the building contractors, electricians and sales guys were all physically disparate, some of them hundreds of miles away.

Of our 23 staff, only two are office-based. It was one of our customers who suggested we sign up to Salesforce.com’s customer management service for 28 days for free.

It’s an online service for managing sales and marketing activities, like email campaigns, lead tracking and sales forecasting.

Salesforce hosts the software themselves, so we can access it from anywhere over the Internet for a monthly fee. I was a bit worried about data security, but then I saw that huge organisations were using Salesforce.

So I was pretty sure it would be alright.

I’m not an IT expert – I just followed the instructions, and tipped the complete database out of ACT and into Salesforce. I sent a marketing email to 400 or 500 prospects, and within 20 minutes the first response came in.

It works the other way too – before Salesforce, it took us days from receiving an email to actually talking to the customer. Now it’s three or four minutes.

You can customise Salesforce to fit your company, but for the more complicated changes, you’ll want to go to a third-party expert.

We’ve got a superb reporting dashboard, built by a consultancy called Sofia Works. It shows the sales pipeline, and we can do forecasting and opportunity analysis.

If we’ve got £500,000 of sales in the next two months listed as over 80 per cent likely, we know that in six weeks’ time we’ll need a production workforce to handle that, and we start making enquiries.

There’s a six-to-eight-week delay there, so it’s a fine balancing act.

The dashboard also lets me see how much business is stuck and where. If we’ve got £1m of business at the quotation stage, I do a quick call round to get it cleared.

The Salesforce service costs £50 per month per subscriber – we’ve got 15 subscribers, so that’s £9,000 per year. By contrast, it would cost £30-40,000 to do this in-house – and the moment you’ve bought it, it’s depreciating. The dashboard, together with some ongoing consultancy work, cost us £20,000.

In the future, an agent will be able to use a PDA on the customer’s premises and select from over 100 different options for our buildings, based on size, electrics and so forth.

We’ll be able to automatically create a quotation before the guy’s even left the customer’s driveway.

This system will let us expand easily.

We’re going to recruit another 24 franchisees and agents over the next twelve
months and we can say to them: “Don’t worry about accounting, cash collection,
orders, quotations – just deal with the leads and selling.” And we won’t have many worries either.

BUSINESS NEWS >>

New blood shakes up family business

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - July 04, 2008 12:39pm GMT

When Tim Perutz joined the family business, Nimlok was in poor shape. Within two years he’d taken the firm into profit, and cracked 55 countries worldwide.

"Fuel duty will cripple us"

By Kate Pritchard - July 04, 2008 12:28pm GMT

This week, hauliers descended upon the capital, sounding their horns in protest of the rate of fuel duty and waving banners reading “Truck off”. “If this situation continues, it will cripple us, if not ruin us,” says transport entrepreneur Bill Hockin.

Grass Roots entrepreneur receives an MBE for social responsibility

By Kate Pritchard - July 03, 2008 5:24pm GMT

David Evans set up Herfordshire-based performance improvement firm Grass Roots in the eighties. Today, he turns over a whopping £247m, employs over 1,000 people and has just become one of only three people in the country to receive an MBE for services to CSR.

Foresight invests in Silvigen

By Real Deals & Real Business - July 03, 2008 3:45pm GMT

Silvigen, a supplier of biomass fuels for use in the power industry, will use £1.75m from Foresight to finance the development of a processing plant in Goole, North Humberside.

Countdown to Human Capital Awards

By Catherine Woods - July 03, 2008 3:38pm GMT

At last year’s CBI/Real Business Human Capital Awards, prison administrator Vicky O’Dea was crowned the ‘people’s champion’.


BUSINESS COMMENT >>

Lee McQueen pulls a sickie

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - July 02, 2008 2:55pm GMT

First day on the job and Apprentice winner McQueen has been struck down by a flu-like virus.

Look out Boris! Sir Alan for Mayor?!

By Ally Papasodaro - June 27, 2008 4:10pm GMT

Sir Alan Sugar has been mooted as a possible labour candidate for Mayor of London, and the grizzly entrepreneur is up for the challenge.

The world's first Tibetan consumer brand?

By Matthew Rock - June 26, 2008 4:41pm GMT

Bizarre.

Elnaugh Vs. Paphitis. The Dragons are at war

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - June 26, 2008 2:45pm GMT

When Theo Paphitis suggested all women’s brains “turn to mush” when they get pregnant, fellow Dragon Rachel Elnaugh, entrepreneur and mother-of-five, breathed fire and brimstone.

I’m so excited. And I just can’t hide it.

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - June 25, 2008 11:09am GMT

Anyone else gearing up to go wild over the new domain name changes? No? Just think of the wit, variety and confusion it will bring to the world wide web.


Click here to sign up for the Real Business newsletter
Real Business Front Cover