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Centralization versus Decentralization in Sales Force Management

In the centralized sales organization almost all activities, including sales force management, are administered from a central headquarters. The central sales office has full responsibility for recruiting, selecting, training, compensating, supervising, motivating, controlling, and evaluating the sales force. In the de-centralized organization, in theory at least, all these activities/ are handled by field sales executives. A decentralized sales organization is one in which there is decentralization -in management of various selling tasks and in performance of certain important personnel management activities. For example, branch or district sales offices may do the recruiting, selecting, motivating, and supervising; the central head-quarters may handle training, compensating, and evaluating; and the branches and the central headquarters may share responsibility, in proportions varying with the marketing situation and management philosophy, for other aspects of sales force management. It is rare, in other words, for sales force management to be either 100 percent centralized or 100 percent decentralized. Management’s appraisal of relative costs and effectiveness results in some aspects being centralized and others decentralized. Centralization in sales force management varies. Smaller companies that have few salespeople and confine their operations to a small geographical area, keeping the unit of sales high, the sales call frequency low, and the caliber of salespersons relatively high, incline toward centralized sales force management. Manufacturing firms relying almost entirely upon specialized wholesale middle-men for marketing of their products need only minimum sales forces and, there-fore, tend toward centralization. Local wholesalers with restricted sales areas also have small sales forces and, by the nature of their operations, are highly centralized. The principal factor deter- mining centralization, then, is a small size of sales force, but other marketing factors, such as those illustrated, also move a company in this direction.

High decentralization in sales force management is found mainly among companies with large sales forces. Likely to have considerable decentralization, for instance, is a manufacturing firm distributing a wide line of consumer products over a vast market area and selling directly to varied retailers-all conditions indicating the need for a large number of salespeople. Wherever marketing conditions require large sales forces; the economies and effectiveness of decentralization are more attractive than are those of centralization.

Other things being equal, there is a strong pull in the direction of sales force decentralization as a company grows. This is true even though decentralization requires at least one more level of sales management, and the maintenance of branch and district offices (or both) causes additions to other fixed operating costs. With growth, the advantages of decentralized sales force management increasingly outweigh the higher costs. Among these advantages are:

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