There are five substantial areas of return on investment for businesses — especially IT providers and MSPs —  that implement Quote and Proposal Automation (QPA).

  1. Quote/Proposal Creation Productivity
  2. Quote to Order Productivity
  3. Quality
  4. Competitive Advantage
  5. Knowledge Transfer

In ROI terms, each can be very substantial, and determining which area has the most potential will vary from company to company. But more often than not, the ROI area with the highest potential may surprise you — Knowledge Transfer, most easily translated as “the ability to get a new salesperson up to speed and quoting for new business.”

Here’s a mini-drama played out time and again among small IT/MSP businesses: The business has a few productive sales people, most often the entrepreneur who started the business, and perhaps another veteran that handles a specialty area like government sales. They’ve each developed their own system of getting quotes out the door, often involving a combination of Word, Excel or Ye Olde Quoting Tool they purchased or developed themselves back in Aught-’02.

The entrepreneur wants to get out of sales, but can’t. Every once in a while, he gets fed up and hires a young fireball to expand the sales department, and the intrepid stripling gets off to a great start, has a big handful of prospects ready to sign in no time … but he needs to do a quote or proposal for them, and the party’s over.  The current systems are so arcane that the only way he can learn how to use them is to have some tribal knowledge passed down, either by the impatient, overloaded entrepreneur information-hoarder, or Mr. Grizzled Government Sales Specialist, who has absolutely no incentive or motivation to teach the new rep anything.

After a few months, the new kid wanders off to more successful hunting grounds.

This vignette happens constantly, and is the reason that the knowledge transfer possible through a standardized approach to QPA is possibly the highest ROI area for this business – because it can unblock growth and let the genie out of the bottle. If a business’ growth is stymied, and has been for years, how do you measure the ROI on a strategic move that allows them to get to the next level?

The ROI on Knowledge Transfer is facilitated by a QPA solution like Quosal by:

  • Standardized processes for creating and maintaining quotes and proposals.
  • Eliminating the manual steps and tools that lead to common errors and omissions.
  • Creating easy processes that allow the company’s experts to review and approve quotes and proposals.
  • Providing a way for standardized quote content to be centrally created and managed, rather than “inherited” from other quotes and proposals.

When these factors are in place, that new sales representative has a great chance to be successful without the roadblocks, “tribal challenges” and old, chaotic processes.

Quote and Proposal Automation generates tremendous ROI – and Knowledge Transfer can be the “sleeper” ROI, and the highest of them all.


 

There is an evangelical bent to the philosophy that drove the creation of our sales quote and proposal platform, Quosal. We get on the stump frequently with our customers about the critical importance of the quote and proposal process.

One of the problems we strive to help our customers solve is that of the entrepreneurial sales bottleneck — the business owner that is also the salesperson (often the ONLY salesperson). Hand in hand with this phenomenon is the arcane, “Gordian knot” of a byzantine quote or proposal creation system that, like the entrepreneur himself, stops the growth of the business cold.

Now, I must step into the confessional and admit that in the 20 months or so since our product launch, the only person that has ever sold Quosal is your humble author. But wait! It’s not because I’m just another entrepreneur bottlenecking the growth of my business…!

Actually, there are 3 reasons that this is the case.

  1. Our software, Quosal, creates such an extraordinary level of productivity, that I’ve been able to drive an incredible amount of business myself.
  2. By plan and by strategy, I have controlled the quality of our installed base by very carefully controlling the presentation, representation and fit of our application for our customers — and the fit of our customers for our application. This has been extremely effective.
  3. I am an entrepreneur bottlenecking my own business. By plan perhaps, but even those of us who beat the best practice drums must move out to 30,000 feet sometimes.

One other reason I have not listed: We’ve carefully built up the infrastructure into which we can plug in salespeople to be successful selling our platform to businesses that will in turn be successful. This topic is at the top of my mind because, per our business plan, we’re now hiring a sales team to carry the banner forward.

Mr. Entrepreneur, if you’re bottlenecking the growth of your company in your sales effort or in other areas of your business, move on out to 30,000 feet. You’re smart enough to see the problem, and that’s the first step in finding a solution.

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