Modern-Day Sales and Marketing Blog

3 Rules for Running a Sales Contest

By Chris Peterson| Sep 16, 2016 8:50:00 AM | 0 Comments

salescontest.jpg

Over a decade ago, my boss asked me to really drive production before the end of the quarter because we were lacking in other regions.  I rode in the field every day the final six weeks with my team and we brought in about 30% of our quarterly quota from future orders.  We ended up almost 200% of our goal for the quarter and saved the Q2 reporting that year.  There was no contest, no rewards – just a request from my boss.

Guess what? We had a contest the next quarter and the director of the winning region won a Rolex.  Really?  I just pulled all my Q3 business into Q2 to bail out the other regions and now one of them is going to get a Rolex… my Rolex.  Needless to say, I haven’t liked sales contests since then, but they can work if you follow these three rules of thumb.

  1. Contests have to be unpredictable.  If your sales team knows that every year during the holidays you’re going to have some type of contest, you’re probably going to have a slow October.  Don’t reward the sandbaggers and keep everyone on their toes.  When a contest pops up out of the blue, it’ll be more exciting.
  1. Make an emotional impact.  Giving away a dinner for two to the highest grossing sales person is not a contest – its gratuity and a wasted $150.  A contest needs to make an emotional impact on everyone involved, and need to be challenging but possible.
  1. Don’t have just one winner.  If you have a contest that positions the sales people to compete against each other, you’re going to lose many of them after a few weeks if someone jumps out to an early lead.  The best contests rewards the winner, but also rewards everyone that breaks a certain milestone.  For example, the sales person who sells the most hosted access control this quarter wins a three day trip for two.  Everyone else that sells 150% of their quarterly quota of hosted access control wins a $500 gift card to Best Buy. 

Predictable, poorly planned sales contests do not work.  However, holding a surprising and fun contest every now and then is a fantastic way to keep things fresh and get a nice bump is sales – just make sure you’re not hurting your top performers!

What are your thoughts on sales contests? Leave a comment below...

Topics: Sales Training

Learn More

Subscribe to Our Blog

Thanks for Visiting Today
New Call-to-action

Recent Posts