Perreault−McCarthy: Basic
Marketing: A
Global−Managerial
Approach, 14/e
- Personal Selling Text © The McGraw−Hill
Companies, 2002
422 Chapter 15
The Importance and Role of Personal Selling
Salespeople are
communicators who
build relationships
Personal selling
requires strategy
decisions
Promotion is communicating with potential customers. As the Cisco case sug-
gests, personal selling is often the best way to do it. Almost every company can
benefit from personal selling. While face-to-face with prospects, salespeople can get
more attention than an advertisement or a display. They can adjust what they say
or do to take into consideration culture and other behavioral influences on the cus-
tomer. They can ask questions to find out about a customer’s specific interests. They
can figure out ways to solve customer problems. If, and when, the prospect is ready
to buy, the salesperson is there to ask for the order. And afterward, the salesperson
is there to be certain that the customer is satisfied and that the relationship between
the customer and firm continues to be mutually beneficial.
Marketing managers must decide how much, and what kind of, personal selling
effort each marketing mix needs. Specifically, as part of their strategy planning, they
must decide (1) how many salespeople they need, (2) what kind of salespeople they
need, (3) what kind of sales technology support they need, (4) what kind of sales
presentation to use, (5) how to select and train salespeople, and (6) how to super-
vise and motivate them. The sales manager provides input into these strategy
decisions. Once made, it’s the sales manager’s job to implement the personal sell-
ing part of a marketing strategy.
In this chapter, we’ll discuss the importance and nature of personal selling so
you’ll understand the strategy decisions sales and marketing managers face. These
strategy decisions are shown in Exhibit 15-1.
We’ll also discuss a number of frameworks and how-to approaches that guide these
strategy decisions. Because these approaches apply equally to domestic and international
markets, we won’t emphasize that distinction in this chapter. This does not mean, how-
ever, that personal selling techniques don’t vary from one country to another. To the
contrary, in dealing with anycustomer, the salesperson must be very sensitive to cul-
tural influences and other factors that might affect communication. For example, a
Japanese customer and an Arab customer might respond differently to subtle aspects of
Product Place Promotion Price
Personal
selling
Mass
selling
Sales
promotion
Selection
and training
procedure
Compensation
and motivation
approach
Personal
selling
techniques
Target market
Number and
kind of
salespersons
needed
Sales
technology
support
Exhibit 15-1 Strategy Planning for Personal Selling