| Feb 15, 2019 | | 8 min read

Top 10 Metrics to Track for High-Performing Sales Leaders

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As a sales manager, accountability is key.

It’s ultimately your job to keep your sales team accountable to their personal and organizational goals, but how? I think you’ll agree with me when I say that tracking sales metrics is EXTREMELY time consuming.

Not only that, but sales managers also have to consider which sales KPIs (key performance indicators) to focus on. With a multitude of factors to watch, it can feel like an overwhelming amount of data being thrown your way.

“Which sales metrics should I be tracking?”

It’s a common question.

Have you ever tried to scale performance without tracking how you got there in the first place? The famous SharkTank entrepreneur, Daymond John, gives his insights on sales metrics through this analogy:

...imagine your ship is in battle and you have no command center giving you visibility of whether or not your ship has been hit until 30 days later, nor visibility on whether enemies are behind you or in front of you. What do you think will happen to your ship? You Sink.

That’s why we’ve compiled this concise list of the Top 10 Sales Metrics that will be your secret weapon in developing a high-performing sales team. Narrow your focus to these all-important sales KPI’s, and remove the time-consuming research and guesswork—which means more time to sell.

Top 10 Sales Metrics for Managers to Track

 

1. Opportunity-to-win Ratio

The opportunity-to-win ratio, or win rate, measures the success of your sales team per opportunity over a given time period.

By comparing the number of closed-won opportunities to all closed opportunities in the same time period (both closed-won and closed-lost), you can get a high-level view of your sales team’s overall success.

Sales managers can also use individual win rates to identify weaknesses and strengths among their individual sales reps and take corrective action.

How to calculate Opportunity-to-Win Ratio

Win Rate = the # of closed won opportunities / # of closed opportunities (closed won + closed lost) in the same time period

READ this blog: What’s holding you back from being a successful sales professional?

lead-conversion-1-150x1502. Conversion Rate

The conversion rate, sometimes known as close rate, is going to paint a clear picture of the effectiveness of your funnel.

Lead generation starts at the top of the sales funnel, and works its way down the funnel into the hands of the sales department. This will give both marketing and sales insight to the quality of their leads coming into the funnel through marketing campaigns.

In order to measure your lead-conversion rate, you need to determine what is considered “converted” in your company’s eyes. Typically, a lead is considered converted when they become a paying customer.

Average conversion rates are going to vary from one industry to the next, but it is important to track conversion rates from both Sales Qualified Leads (SQLs) and Marketing Qualified Leads (MQLs).

How to calculate Conversion Rate

Lead Conversion Rate = (Total # of New Customers / Number of Leads) x 100

3. Average Deal Size

Knowing your average deal size will give you a starting point to grow the size of your deals.

How can you double your deal size, without knowing your current average deal size?

Exactly —You can’t.

This tool is going to help you keep track of revenue coming in, and will act as a guideline for how many deals need to be closed in order to reach (or surpass) monthly quotas. It can also help sales managers to identify at-risk opportunities.

Keeping track of this metric month-over-month will also help you to understand how and when your pipeline changes. For example, if average deal size is increasing, you may be attracting leads with a wider set of needs than in previous months.

How to calculate Average Deal Size

Average Deal Size = Revenue $ of deals closed / # of deals closed

days-to-close-150x1504. Average Days to Close

The average number of days to close is based on how long it take sales reps to close a deal from the first point of contact with a prospect.

This metric give insight to how quickly sales reps are able to move prospects through the pipeline and turn them into revenue for your company.

Various types of prospects require various sale cycle lengths. For example, a larger opportunity may take significantly longer to be closed than one with a smaller value.

How to calculate Average Days to Close

Average Days to Close = (Add all days it took to close deals for the month) / # of deals closed


sales-reps-meeting-quotas-150x1505. Percent of Sales Reps meeting Quotas

By monitoring which sales reps are meeting quotas, you are measuring the effort being put toward each of their accounts.

Though technology is on the rise throughout B2B organizations, Forbes alludes to the fact that person-to-person interaction still plays a huge role in building stronger relationships. This article pointed out:

57% of sales reps are not meeting quotas.

Meeting quotas has much to do with the personal efforts of the sales reps theirself, and spending more time on the needs of their clients and making quality connections. By monitoring this metric, sales managers are able to observe who on the team is excelling in sales, and who is not.

Know more on How Agencies Are Making 4,000+% ROI for Clients With White Label PPC

6. Time spent in each stage of the pipeline

Knowing the number of deals in each stage of the pipeline will reveal how your prospects are working their way through your sales pipeline (and where the pipeline is getting clogged).

This metric will give insight into developing different sales techniques to push prospects from one stage to the next.

Get those contracts into their hands!

Make sure that your sales staging is based on what is actually happening, not on how sales reps feel; you can feel really good about a deal, but that doesn’t mean the prospect will close.

By being certain with the position of your prospects, you’ll be able to assess more accurately which stage of the pipeline your prospects are sitting.

Read this blog to know how to be a better salesperson: Eight Ways to Optimize Your Sales Day

monthly-sales-150x150

7. Monthly Sales

Sales seems like an obvious one, but it’s a great way to see if you’re forecasting your sales quotas in a way that is challenging but still achievable for the sales team.

We know that revenue is the ultimate sales goal, especially among a group of competitive sales reps, and it’s also a great indicator when tracking sales performance.

churn-rate-150x1508. Churn Rate

“How good are you at keeping your clients?” is a question you should definitely be asking yourself.

If we could only pick one sales metric to focus on, churn would likely be the one.

Knowing your churn rate means knowing why—and how often—your customers are leaving you. The higher your organization’s churn rate, the more customers in the hands of your competition. Knowing why customers churn is the key to making improvements in your sales tactics and techniques for future success.

How to calculate Churn Rate

Customer Churn Rate = (Customers beginning of month - Customers end of month) / Customers beginning of month

9. Average Lead Response Time

Your lead response time is the average time it takes to reach out to a lead after they’ve been identified as a lead.

Each company will have their own description of what a lead means to them, but typically it refers to a prospect downloading a piece of content or filling out a demo request. According to InsideSales, a study done by Dr. James Oldroyd reveals that:

50% of buyers choose the vendor that responds first.

No doubt about it, you want your contact with someone to be the first vendor they talk to—especially if you have tons of competition.

How to calculate Average Lead Response Time

Average lead response time = Sum of # min/hrs/day to respond for all contacts / # of contacts

effort-150x15010. Effort

This last point isn’t your typical sales metric. Effort isn’t just one number that you track month-to-month, but a representation of all efforts made by your sales team.

Measuring effort can take many forms: number of calls made, presentations booked, emails sent… whatever your organization identifies as contributing to winning a deal.

After all, the little things can have a huge impact, both on successful sales outcomes and future customer relationships.

You made it to the end! Those are our Top 10 Sales KPI’s that you should be tracking in order to lead in sales and performance. Tracking these metrics will:

  1. Help to direct the focus of your sales team
  2. Quickly identify potential problems
  3. Allow you and your sales reps to improve

Although there are endless sales metrics, one of the most valuable factors is attitude. Your attitude expressed throughout all your efforts will ultimately determine the success of your sales team. Utilize these 10 sales metrics in your next sales report to scale productivity and boost performance.

About the Author

Maddi is a former Content Marketing Intern at Vendasta. She spends her days learning the in's and out's of blog writing and and drinking copious amounts of coffee. When she's not blogging you'll find her bullet journaling or planning the details of her next travel destination.

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