T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
144.1 | SBS ==> ARGH! | LURE::CERLING | God doesn't believe in atheists | Thu Jul 30 1992 09:54 | 30 |
| Ahhh! SBS. The most dreaded TLA to any hard-working, dedicated sales
support person. There have been weeks of time wasted discussing this
subject. (I have spent many, many hours trying to improve how the
system is used here, pretty much to no avail) Before we go down a
rat-hole, let me say that I believe the intent of SBS is valid and
needed; what is lacking is a decent implementation, and they are
working on that.
Sales, in order to know the cost of sales, has to know how sales
support is spending its time. How much on administrative details (you
know, SBS), learning, time spent working on proposals and/or demos, and
so on. This makes sense to me. However, the only system they had that
could even come close to being used for capturing this system was a
system designed for PSS. It did not work well for Sales Support.
After a year of *great* frustration on the part of the support people,
they worked to improve at least the data entry portion. They are still
evaluating a totally new system for tracking this information. I have
no idea when it might materialize.
Again, I believe that it makes sense to track time to be able to assign
it to various categories. (Maybe not to the level of detail that SBS
currently can track it.) But I also agree that it should not be such a
drain on the people responsible for filling it out. It should be able
to handle special cases like yours, Jim, but also be flexible enough
for those of us that support a couple dozen accounts (sometimes all in
one week). Hopefully, what they have learned from the great deal of
flak they received during this past year will help them design a more
useful, friendly system.
tgc
|
144.2 | Tangential nit ... | SWAM2::MCCARTHY_LA | Lie to exit pollers | Thu Jul 30 1992 12:55 | 8 |
| re: 1
>[...] However, the only system they had that could even come close to
>being used for capturing this system was a system designed for PSS. It
>did not work well for Sales Support [....]
Just so noone gets the wrong impression, It has not been my experience
that it ever worked well for PSS either.
|
144.3 | It can be useful | SUBWAY::DILLARD | | Fri Jul 31 1992 23:28 | 20 |
| .0 I think asks two different questions:
Is there a value in reporting time at some level of detail?
Is there a value in detailed reporting in SBS
In my group we have used SBS to track time for identified prospects
that we think may turn into SI/Large project opportunities. This
allows us to determine our costs so that we can recover same (with a
profit) in pricing the final project.
Detailed time reporting has also been very useful this year in
educating sales on how much work can be generated from seemingly
'simple' requests and how much of a team effort sales support really
is.
I don't care much for SBS but that is all we have now.
Peter Dillard
|
144.4 | Business Need for Activity Information | CARTUN::SAATHOFF | | Mon Aug 03 1992 19:07 | 32 |
| Jim,
If you want to give feedback to someone who cares, I'm a pretty good
choice. I'm Planning and Operations manager for U.S. Sale Support and
my group has responsibility for defining the business requirements for
most U.S. Sales Support sponsored IS systems, which includes SBS.
As a field user of SBS for over six years I'm well aware of the problems
with its implementation and am now actively working with field
representatives and our IM&T organization to address these.
We're working from the same premise that several previous "noters" have
expressed which is that there are sound business reasons for tracking
where we spend our time and what we spend it doing. Labor represents the
greatest single expense to Digital for sales support. Weekly tracking of
it may not contribute to immediately lowering expenses or increasing
revenues, but it does allow us to better understand our cost of sales and
"productivity". With this understanding, we can then make better
decisions about resource allocations whic will then contribute to lower
expenses and increased revenues.
SBS is recognized as a dated and inefficient tool for collecting this
information. We are in the midst of designing a new activity collecting
system for introduction later this fiscal year which is planned to
correct these deficiencies. Our goal is to make it so simple and quick
for you to document what you did and who you did it for, that these
discussions will no longer be necessary. Making it available as a
PC-based tool for those who choose to use PCs will be an important part
of the solution.
Hope this helps to let you see the light at the end of the tunnel ...
|
144.5 | Current Usage of Activity Data & SBS Hints | CARTUN::SAATHOFF | | Mon Aug 03 1992 19:09 | 59 |
| Jim,
Just a few more comments about the activity information you enter into
SBS...
1. Today it is used for:
Reporting Sales Support expenses to Account P&Ls based on how direct
time is charged to accounts.
Providing billing information for chargeable activities.
Transferring fiscal expenses between Services and Sales when Services
does sales support work (windfall) and when Sales Support does
delivery work (reverse windfall) as required for external financial
reporting. (Cost of services vs Cost of product sales)
Local management reporting for account planning, project tracking,
productivity tracking, overtime tracking, and input to performance
reviews.
Trend reporting of a variety of Sales Support work/activity
indicators as part of the Sales Support Executive Support System
aimed at our senior managers. This PC-based, graphics oriented
system is now being enhanced so that it can also be used by local
managers to provide additional usable information from your activity
entries.
2. Recent, interim improvements to SBS
If you haven't used the new Sales Support interface to SBS, called
ATS, try it. It should be a choice on your SBS menu. It allows you
to use a spread-sheet-like approach to entering your time, although
you still must use a VT-compatible device. You can copy pass entries
and easily update the critical fields which change most often, e.g.
the number of hours.
Consider using ATS instead of the default record which you mentioned
in your note.
Being dedicated to a single account, you are in a minority within
Sales Support, (however, I noticed your ELF profile indicates you
support both XEROX and JAMES RIVER). If you rely on a single default
record entry per month to SBS, you will be overcharging the account
you support. In FY92 this occurred since the non-direct charges of
others in your cost center were allocated to the account you charged
with your single entry. In FY93 we've moved to charging for only the
direct, customer-specific time. However, it is uplifted by a factor
of 50% to account for the average amount of vacation, sick, training,
and other non-specific account activities.
Using ATS you can easily copy previous entries for both direct and
indirect time and update them as needed to reflect what you actually
did. It's also possible to enter a month's activity at a time, so if
what you do really doesn't change that much, you could use the entry
system only once each month.
Regards ...7
|
144.6 | | JMPSRV::MICKOL | We won with Xerox in '92 | Tue Aug 04 1992 18:52 | 6 |
| Re: .4 & .5: Thank you, I'm feeling better about where you are heading with
this issue and why we need to capture this data.
regards,
Jim
|
144.7 | How is Sales' time tracked? | ANGLIN::SCOTTG | Greg Scott, Minneapolis SWS | Wed Aug 05 1992 00:39 | 14 |
| Why do we track Sales Support time but not Sales time?
I understand all the stated reasons for understanding our cost of sales
and all that. But my time as a sales support person is only part of that
labor cost.
Somebody told me that Sales must also account for 40 hours per week. I
asked a few sales reps about this, it was news to them. Maybe their
data entry is automated? Maybe we make assumptions they will spend all
their time on accounts to which they are assigned?
I don't want to start WWIII here, just curious.
- Greg Scott
|
144.8 | User friendly, eh? We'll see.... | DENVER::DAVISGB | Gil Davis in Albuquerque | Fri Aug 07 1992 18:48 | 4 |
| If a new SBS data entry system is developed, I strongly suggest testing
it with a few live one's in a few different sites before broad
deployment.
|
144.9 | Sales Time is tracked in ETS | SUBWAY::DILLARD | | Fri Aug 14 1992 00:20 | 9 |
| re .7
Sales time is tracked but in a different system (Effort Tracking
System).
I have seen cases where the secretaries and even finance enters time
for the reps. This may be why the reps don't know about it.
Peter
|
144.10 | | LURE::CERLING | God doesn't believe in atheists | Fri Aug 14 1992 09:48 | 4 |
| That's got to be a real accurate way of capturing information. `the
reps don't know about it'. And I thought the numbers in SBS were bad!
tgc
|
144.11 | | SWAM2::MCCARTHY_LA | Take me to my leader | Fri Aug 14 1992 13:15 | 3 |
| re: .10
Right. I'd guess the two methods have comparable "accuracy."
|