39 min listen
#017 Five Reasons your KAM Programme is Failing
FromKAMCast - Key Account Management Strategies for Business Leaders
#017 Five Reasons your KAM Programme is Failing
FromKAMCast - Key Account Management Strategies for Business Leaders
ratings:
Length:
18 minutes
Released:
May 13, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
IN THIS EPISODE:Key account management is a beautifully simple business basic…one that isn’t that easy! If it was, we’d all be doing it brilliantly wouldn’t we?
Like most working practices in business, there are a handful of common, or typical reasons why a KAM culture struggles to get off the ground in an organisation. In this episode, I seek to shine a glaring light on the assassins of good KAM practice.
The intent for this episode is this: we’re big believers in shining a light on vulnerabilities in a business – it serves as a wonderful opportunity to mitigate risks, develop and create new ways of working and foster better ways of thinking.
In this episode, David shares the experiences we’ve had in working with clients. Some of these clients have called for our support as a result of experiencing the loss of a customer and realising their vulnerabilities way too late.
Others have started their respective KAM-Paigns to implement a KAM Culture and the momentum has dwindled and progress halted, caused by one or several of the reasons shared in this episode.
HIGHLIGHTS FROM THIS EPISODE:We’d urge you to bookmark this episode and make sure that you listen to it properly – dig really deep and reflect. It could be the spur you need to make a long-term systemic change which could in turn could bring meaningful (and profitable) transformative change.
Here are the highlights that David walks you through on the 5 reasons your KAM programme is more than likely failing:
#1 Your Key Account criteria lacks focus & clarityDo you and your team know who your key accounts are and why they are qualified as “key”? Yep, a simple one right? But so many businesses miss this.
I find that this lack of clarity often comes from a place of assumption. Assumption that the key accounts are simply the largest ones. The accounts that make up the lion’s share of revenue or profit.
For me, the true definition of a key account is whatever is, or whatever will be, important to your business.
It’s so important to reach a focus and clarity of the defining characteristics of a key account in your business. Without that, a KAM programme runs the risk of becoming something we talk about rather than do.
(Listen to the episode to get the 5 reflective questions you need to ask yourself).
#2 The customer’s voice isn’t being heard
When was the last time you proactively sought feedback from your key contacts at your most important customers?
And did that feedback make its way back to the business, into your team discussions and shape the way you engage with that customer going forward?
We spend a lot of time making decisions that impact the customer and creating products and services that deliver an end value for the customer… and yet, all too often, we do this whilst sat around a boardroom table, without a customer in sight.
In the world of KAM, the customer’s perception becomes your reality…
#3 Your KAM strategy is shot down by friendly fire
We believe that key account management is a team sport. It’s not a job for lone heroes who go where nobody has gone before, in pursuit of commercial glory.
Key account management is, in many ways, part of everyone’s job within the company. Looking at it simply, maybe there are only two groups of people within an organisation?
There is a group of people who are (a) servicing the customer and there is another who are (b) providing an internal service to the group of people servicing the customer.
So, if we run with the notion that the quality of the service you deliver the customer is directly influenced by the quality of service you deliver each other, we see just how important teamwork is…
(Listen to the episode to hear more if this “speaks” to you!)
#4 Your Key Account Managers don’t have time
The trouble with time management is that it is not possible! Nobody ‘manages’ time, it’s a myth. Time moves by at the same pace for everyone - no...
Like most working practices in business, there are a handful of common, or typical reasons why a KAM culture struggles to get off the ground in an organisation. In this episode, I seek to shine a glaring light on the assassins of good KAM practice.
The intent for this episode is this: we’re big believers in shining a light on vulnerabilities in a business – it serves as a wonderful opportunity to mitigate risks, develop and create new ways of working and foster better ways of thinking.
In this episode, David shares the experiences we’ve had in working with clients. Some of these clients have called for our support as a result of experiencing the loss of a customer and realising their vulnerabilities way too late.
Others have started their respective KAM-Paigns to implement a KAM Culture and the momentum has dwindled and progress halted, caused by one or several of the reasons shared in this episode.
HIGHLIGHTS FROM THIS EPISODE:We’d urge you to bookmark this episode and make sure that you listen to it properly – dig really deep and reflect. It could be the spur you need to make a long-term systemic change which could in turn could bring meaningful (and profitable) transformative change.
Here are the highlights that David walks you through on the 5 reasons your KAM programme is more than likely failing:
#1 Your Key Account criteria lacks focus & clarityDo you and your team know who your key accounts are and why they are qualified as “key”? Yep, a simple one right? But so many businesses miss this.
I find that this lack of clarity often comes from a place of assumption. Assumption that the key accounts are simply the largest ones. The accounts that make up the lion’s share of revenue or profit.
For me, the true definition of a key account is whatever is, or whatever will be, important to your business.
It’s so important to reach a focus and clarity of the defining characteristics of a key account in your business. Without that, a KAM programme runs the risk of becoming something we talk about rather than do.
(Listen to the episode to get the 5 reflective questions you need to ask yourself).
#2 The customer’s voice isn’t being heard
When was the last time you proactively sought feedback from your key contacts at your most important customers?
And did that feedback make its way back to the business, into your team discussions and shape the way you engage with that customer going forward?
We spend a lot of time making decisions that impact the customer and creating products and services that deliver an end value for the customer… and yet, all too often, we do this whilst sat around a boardroom table, without a customer in sight.
In the world of KAM, the customer’s perception becomes your reality…
#3 Your KAM strategy is shot down by friendly fire
We believe that key account management is a team sport. It’s not a job for lone heroes who go where nobody has gone before, in pursuit of commercial glory.
Key account management is, in many ways, part of everyone’s job within the company. Looking at it simply, maybe there are only two groups of people within an organisation?
There is a group of people who are (a) servicing the customer and there is another who are (b) providing an internal service to the group of people servicing the customer.
So, if we run with the notion that the quality of the service you deliver the customer is directly influenced by the quality of service you deliver each other, we see just how important teamwork is…
(Listen to the episode to hear more if this “speaks” to you!)
#4 Your Key Account Managers don’t have time
The trouble with time management is that it is not possible! Nobody ‘manages’ time, it’s a myth. Time moves by at the same pace for everyone - no...
Released:
May 13, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (28)
#002 Creating Personal Relationships in an Impersonal Environment by KAMCast - Key Account Management Strategies for Business Leaders