Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Create Effective Programs for Sales Incentives

Research shows that the way the brain processes information is responsible for non-cash rewards having a greater impact on people than cash awards. Offers of non-cash rewards are visualized or imaged by the right hemisphere of the brain. Such images or mental pictures trigger emotional responses which can be quite powerful.

Conversely, offers of strictly monetary rewards are processed by the left hemisphere, which lacks the ability to create images. When a monetary offer is received, the brain's left hemisphere assesses the information and determines whether the offer is sufficient, relative to the time or effort required to earn it. The emotional response is what drives behavior, not rational thought. With cash, its reduced to one issue - simply how much.

Tips on How to Create Effective Programs for Sales Incentives
Sales Incentives Have Two Faces - And they're called cash and non-cash incentives. It's important that you offer both. Like it or not, people are generally easier to motivate if you're offering both money and recognition in exchange of showing better job performance.

Motivation Comes from Within - Before creating any sales incentive program, you must also understand that no matter how hard you work on setting goals and determining prizes for employees, there won't be any changes made if the employees themselves aren't ready, willing, and able to change. Thus, be ready to be confronted once in a while with a few bad apples here and there. And when you do, don't blame yourself: it's those people - and not your program - that's at fault.

Separate Sales Incentives for Short-Term and Long-Term Goals - You must prepare separate and appropriate sales incentives for your short-term and long-term goals. Cash and similar monetary incentives work better for short-term goals because they work like confectionaries by providing employees with a temporary boost of physical and mental energy. Stimulants for intrinsic motivation, on the other hand, will definitely work better for long-term goals because it gives your employees a reason to continue working the way you want them to.

3 S's for Sales Incentives - When creating sales incentive programs, always make sure that it adheres to the 3 S's rule: short, sweet, and simple. Anything complicated can discourage your sales workforce from bothering to change. And if you offer something sour instead of sweet, who'd want to work for it?

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