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Conference 7.286::digital

Title:The Digital way of working
Moderator:QUARK::LIONELON
Created:Fri Feb 14 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:5321
Total number of notes:139771

373.0. "A Sale for Digital" by DELNI::HAMMOND (Drew Hammond, NaC Pubs) Wed Aug 26 1987 14:28

    Does anyone know whether DEC employees get any compensation if they
    
    refer a potential customer that eventually results in a sale?
    
    Any ideas on policy?
    
    
    Thanks.
    
    
      - Drew
    
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373.1VCQUAL::THOMPSONNoter at largeWed Aug 26 1987 14:337
    No they don't. Not directly anyway. There was a program that gave
    employees some bennies if they had a PC reference that resulted
    in a sale but that has long ago faded away. Personally, I don't
    think employees should need any extra incentive to help DEC sell
    computers. But then I'm a wild-eyed DEC fanatic. :-)
    
    			Alfred
373.2I don't like your chances on this one...NEWPRT::BARTHKarl - the Pigasus riderWed Aug 26 1987 15:5216
RE: .0

I think the general idea is: you benefit indirectly from any sale you
help with. (The well-known "salary continuation plan." :^)) 

If you made this as a formal suggestion, you'd probably get told to buy
stock. Anyway, I suppose if the sale is significant enough you'd at
least get a sales manager to buy you lunch. Will that do?

BTW, I subscribe to the .1 theory also.

Yours in fanaticism,

K.


373.3QUARK::LIONELWe all live in a yellow subroutineThu Aug 27 1987 04:4712
    Ah yes, what I like to call the "Get Personal, Screw a Friend"
    campaign.  I sold two Rainbows through it, got a gas grill for
    my efforts.  My uncle still has his Rainbow, but like most
    Rainbow owners is very upset at being abandoned by Digital -
    hard to get hardware, harder to get software.  That program was
    so complicated I'm amazed they sold as many as they did.
    
    I feel no need for explicit rewards for helping with a sale -
    my management hears about the big ones and that's enough (my
    job is engineering, not sales, but I do help a lot with
    pre-sales presentations).
    				Steve
373.4DEC not a commision companyAUNTB::SOEHLOn to Mt. PilotThu Aug 27 1987 13:1615
    It might be helpful to remember, if you were aware of the fact,
    that salespeople aren't commisioned.  Ie, they don't get a direct
    compensation for each individual sale.  Therefore, for those of
    us who aren't salespeople, there is no justification for compensation
    on an individual sale.  Besides, NOT being a salesperson is
    compensation enough for me.  8+)
    
    Steve, maybe you could gut the grill and use if for parts for your
    uncles Rainbow? 8+;
    
    Patrick
    
    
    
    
373.5MAMTS6::BACKERMANEnd-of-the-Rainbow_SeekerThu Aug 27 1987 13:209
    re -1
    
    "Besides, NOT being a salesperson is compensation enough for me."
    
    		hear, hear!!  :^)
    		Billie
    
    PS Hi, Pat.. longggg time no see!
    
373.6but they now areVAXRT::WILLIAMSThu Aug 27 1987 13:377
    Ah but I thought the sales force was now "sort-of commissioned",
    in that there were direct monetary consequences of making quotas
    and or sales.
    
    This happened a few months ago I think...
    
    /s/ Jim Williams
373.7i think so...THRUST::THISSELLGeorge ThissellThu Aug 27 1987 16:575
    I think that the top 20% of the sales peoples were given
    "direct monetary consequences". A first for DEC...
    
    George
    
373.8Pragmatic approachSDSVAX::SWEENEYTue Sep 08 1987 13:0118
    re: .7
    
    There is a bonus plan for sales reps based upon their performance
    relative to budget.  Last year was the first year of its operation.
    
    re: employee referrals
    
    This is a touchy subject.  If the sales organization doesn't respond
    in a timely manner (ie phone call from sales rep within 48 hours),
    then your referral/Digital's prospect will get pissed at you and/or
    Digital.  Too often I've seen these fall through cracks, to use
    a favorite sales management cliche.
    
    The best way for a unknown-to-Digital customer purchasing less than $1
    million per year to grab Digital's attention is to send a letter to the
    local sales office detailing what their business problem is, and what
    sort of system they want (single user, multi-user, etc), and that they
    are deciding immediately.