THE INFORMATION
AGE.
Networkers are hopping on the information highway.
The revolution in computers during the last decade has profoundly
changed the abilities of networkers to run their businesses. Prior
to the 1980s, almost every major network marketing company sold
its products only to a limited number of direct distributors. The
direct distributors in turn sold to their downline and were responsible
for managing their downline, paying commissions, etc. But changes
in computer technology have made it possible today for network marketing
companies to generate and manage massive amounts of data about sales
organizations. Thus, almost every network marketing company that
has emerged since the 1980s sells directly to all distributors and
provides all distributors with detailed management reports about
their business.
A PEOPLE BUSINESS\A NUMBERS
BUSINESS.
Keep in mind that 90 percent of network marketers
do this as a part-time business. Thus, it is not unusual for leading
network marketing companies to have tens of thousands, if not hundreds
of thousands, of part-time distributors in their sales organizations.
People come and go into the business as they get new jobs, get pay
raises, get married, move or change other life situations. In fact,
according to Dan Jensen, President of Jenkon Data, of Vancouver,
Washington, the largest provider of computer data processing systems
to the network marketing industry, the average network marketing
company loses 50-90 percent of its new recruits in the first year.
Wouldn't it be great if distributors had at their
disposal the ability to analyze activity in their downline sales
organization to assist in keeping their sales organization as active
and productive as possible? That's where advances in computers come
in. Today's leading edge companies provide their distributors with
detailed sales activity information about their downline organizations.
On the one hand, this is a numbers business because of the huge
number of distributors that any one person may have in his or her
downline. On the other hand, it is a people business, and sales
and recruitment in network marketing only occur through relationships.
So what's the bottom line for a networker in taking advantage of
availability of computer generated information? They should view
the information as a management tool. Numbers by themselves mean
nothing, it's what you do with them.
WHAT'S AVAILABLE TO YOU?
So, in this new computer age, what's available
to you as a distributor? First, a few definitions may be in order:
Active Distributor--A distributor
whose monthly sales activity qualifies them for bonuses or override
commissions.
Downline--All distributors sponsored
directly by a distributor, as well as distributors sponsored below
by other distributors.
Leg--An organizational line
of sequentially sponsored distributors starting from one initial
sponsoring distributor.
Every month, companies mail to their active distributors
computer management reports about their downline sales organizations.
These are typically referred to as downline reports or genealogy
reports. Often times, auxiliary reports and other information are
available upon request. In the typical downline report about your
sales organization, the following information is included covering
both yourself and individuals who are in your downline sales organization:
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Rank or position reached in the organization,
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Levels below you or break-away position in
the organization,
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Monthly personal volume,
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Monthly group volume,
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Date of entry in program,
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Meeting activity requirements this month or
last month,
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Recruiting or new sponsoring.
Basically, a downline report is a lengthy computer
printout showing important activity and indicators in your downline
sales organization.
THE NUMBERS ARE A MANAGEMENT
TOOL.
Reading the numbers is not unlike the fortune teller
who reads the tea leaves. Your interpretation tells you something
about your past and your future. Your downline reports turn you
into a CEO of your own sales organization and you can use these
reports as a management tool to:
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promote your own recruiting and sales,
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to promote the sales and recruiting of your
downline,
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to contact, supervise, manage and assist your
downline,
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to look for strengths and weaknesses in sales
and recruiting activity, and
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spot trends.
Says Dan Jensen, whose company Jenkon has serviced
hundreds of network marketing companies that provide downline reports
to millions of their distributors, you should have some broad goals
in working with downline numbers:
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Promote retail sales outside the network. He
notes that an organization where product sales are only for
distributor consumption is less likely to experience major growth.
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Recruiting - use the numbers to increase sponsoring
and retention of experienced distributors.
-
Consistency - Jensen advises to look for hot
and cold spots and for problems one month to the next in both
individual distributors, as well as downline legs.
-
Achievement levels - in most network marketing
programs, distributors who are successful are advancing to higher
ranks or status based on larger group personal sales volumes.
Use the numbers to see if these promotions are occurring and,
if not, why not.
-
Activity - which individuals and which legs
are continuing to be active month after month.
TRACKING SUCCESS INDICATORS.
Yes, there are certain vital statistics that you
should absolutely track. Computer expert Jensen refers to these
key statistics as success indicators. He advises that you track
them, chart them, graph them from month to month and they will provide
a road map for action.
Here are a dozen or so key success indicators Jensen
suggests that networkers track month to month:
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The number of distributors in your organization
last month,
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The number of distributors in your organization
this month (although raw numbers are helpful, the actual key
indicators will be how many are active and how much is their
sales volume),
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The percentage of organization growth from
last month,
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The number of new recruits (this number is
absolutely critical to success),
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The number of legs (a) with, (b) without new
recruits. This indicator identifies where in your organization
things are working, who needs help or training,
-
The downline people who (a) are (b) are not
sponsoring. Consistently active sponsors are good trainers and
should be leaned on, and those who are inactive sponsors should
be pushed to meetings and trainings, buddy system arrangements,
teaming, telephone trees or promotional contests.
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The percent of downline who is sponsoring.
Keep an eye on the percentage that is being maintained or falling
off. Hopefully, it will stay consistent. A drop from 50 percent
to 20 percent, for instance, is bad.
-
The total number of distributors who (a) are
(b) are not active month to month. This indicator may be the
"whole enchilada." This is your barometer, says Jensen.
If it goes up, good weather, down means stormy weather.
Three tips for working with this indicator (1) focus major support
for your actives, (2) before the fire gets cold, focus support
to those showing first signs of inactivity, (3) once firmly
inactive, don't waste your time.
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The percentage of distributors remaining active.
If from month to month, this percentage is going down, then
the signal to you is "get to work."
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Active recruits. A new recruit who merely signs
an application, but doesn't order, does you no good. You should
strike while the iron is hot, otherwise it is a lost opportunity.
You will never have the attention of a new recruit more than
when he or she has just signed on. You should also be tracking
which sponsors are bringing in distributors that are merely
"application filers," and bring this to the attention
of those sponsors in your downline.
-
The percentage of active new recruits to total
actives. Is all your new business coming from new recruits?
If so, then you are losing your experienced distributors. Generally,
the numbers should be low and drop month to month, which indicates
that your experienced people are performing.
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The number of actives last month, but not this
month and vice-versa. In other words, what is the attrition,
which leg is it in, and who needs attention and training?
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The new active recruits ratio to new inactives.
This is a key number. If you gain one and lose one, you are
staying in place and your ratio is 1.0. If you gain two recruits
and lose three to inactivity, it is a big warning and your ratio
is .66. Obviously, if you gain three and lose two and your ratio
is 1.5, you are headed in the right direction. Anything greater
than 1.0 is the right direction.
CHARTING THE NUMBERS.
Do you want to see the big picture? Do you want
to see the trends? Do you want to see your game plan unfold before
your very eyes? Then chart the success indicators month to month.
Either do it by hand in a graph connecting the dots, use a bar graph,
or use a spreadsheet program on the computer. As you look at the
numbers over the course of twelve months, the trends will become
apparent, and says Jensen, you may wish to also note important chronological
events month to month that may be influencing the success indicators:
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changes in product,
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changes in company marketing materials,
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conferences, trainings, meetings,
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seasons,
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special events.
CALL TO ACTION.
Think of all the work that goes into getting a
new recruit. In an industry where attrition of distributors is so
high, if you can keep a distributor active, it is just as good as
finding a new recruit. Ben Franklin's adage "a penny saved
is a penny earned" has merit in this situation.
The computer revolution puts the networkers on
the information highway. Use the information, track success indicators
and use those success indicators as your call to action. Success
in this business does not have to be an accident. Hard work can
pay off. Your call to action is in the numbers.
Thank you Mr. Computer. |