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Key Account Management

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Parag Utekar
9
Parag Utekar
Student (MBA), India

Key Account Management

Key accounts of an organization typically require a large, long-term commitment and the involvement of several specialized people due to their buying power and complexity. Delivery systems, terms and conditions involved in the purchase, product applications, and the vendor's products might be changed or developed from scratch for such major accounts. The selling cycle (also: sales cycle) often involves a period of months, or even years, and many expensive sales calls before (hopefully) a contract is signed and revenues are generated. Such effort means a considerable amount of opportunity cost for the vendor in the form of time and attention which can not be not allocated elsewhere.

That's why not every current customer or a potential prospect can be treated as a "Key Account" and the selection of such accounts is a crucial decision for any selling company. Thus having clear account selection criteria is necessary to deploy efficient (key) account management tactics. Depending on the seller's marketing strategy and the competitive situation involved, several factors are relevant in key account selection:
  • SIZE OF THE ACCOUNT: Total order volume.
  • ORDER SIZE: This is probably the most common criterion used by the organizations in judging which customers are categorized as key accounts. In many businesses, large orders are usually less expensive to fulfill than smaller orders due to the economies of scale and the learning-curve effects inherent in many production processes and delivery systems. The extent of vendor sales efforts in these situations requires large orders to amortize the selling expenses and justify the efforts involved. Nonetheless, the order size may not be the only criterion for judging the key account. For example, a high-service, a premium-priced producer, might find buyers that generate the largest orders are often the most price sensitive. The companies might not be willing to pay for the vendor's support offerings because their purchase order makes it easier to establish an in-house service and the support capabilities for the product.
  • PRODUCT MIX: The potential involved in selling across the vendor's product line is often understood to be a key consideration in the key account selection process. It is especially important when the selling company's cost-of-goods-sold is almost equal across its product line. Still, customer price sensitivity varies across some products and not others. This situation especially pertains to many service businesses wherein multiple products share a similar delivery system, but the customers' benefits and price elasticity vary from one service to another. New computer technology created factories that can produce multiple different product designs at the same at lower costs as an equal-size stream of different product designs in the traditional factory geared to unit-cost economies of scale. Thus, in such situations, "system sales" across the vendor's product line can be more profitable than a single large order for any single product.
  • CUSTOMER MAINTENANCE COSTS: Often, it becomes important to project the cumulative cash flow of the relationship history. Account profitability patterns often vary over time and one needs to considers the long term costs and benefits of a large customer. During the development and selling period, the customer's cash flows are often negative, and the demands are typically encouraged by the vendor. When the product gets delivered, and the reorder begins, the cumulative cash flows become positive for the vendor. The expenses required to maintain these orders, "after the sale is over," differ significantly from one account to another, making the customer maintenance cost an important criterion.
Another important issue is that a key account can represent a continuous stream of orders for the supplier. In turn, this stream of orders tends to affect the supplier's business through multiple interrelationships which must be balanced in account-selection decisions: the size of the account; the order size; product mix; the net price and the margins available to the supplier; and the service, support, and other customer-maintenance which tend to affect the cumulative cash flows. In reality, there might be no actual balance of these factors. These large and powerful buyers tend to occupy a strategic position in the marketing plans of the firm and its competitors in the relevant product category. Hence, having a very good Key Account Selection process is crucial.

⇒ Do you have an additional tip or model for managing key accounts?

Sources: Cesdes, F.V. (1989). Managing Major Accounts, Harvard Business School, 9-590-046.

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Rating

  Ohstrom
-3
Ohstrom
Management Consultant, United States
 

Key Account Management

The article has a lot of truths, but the concept of KAM has largely been supplanted by Account Based Marketing, ABM, leveraging marketing technology.

  Schwarz
3
Schwarz
Strategy Consultant, Germany
 

Customer Centricity in Key Account Management

@Per Ohstrom: It is not a clear either/or. Marketing automation has its qualities if you aim to reach a broad target, probably in the orientation phase and comparing offers or informing themselves more generally. However keeping an eye on your target client, follow their business, challenges and try to understand where their next problem may occur, can be an asset. And especially if you have the offer to assist in solving it. That in my understanding is the key element in key account management or strategic client development.

  Melchiorre Calabrese
2
Melchiorre Calabrese
Business Consultant, Italy
 

Key Account Management is not Just Selling

It should be clear that "Selling more" is just a small aspect of the key account management.
In order to have a really high performance, the key account manager has to perform a wide range of analysis activities:
- He needs to understand the structure of its key customers and consequently he must adapt its product portfolio or technical characteristics of the offered products
- He has to understand how the actions regarding the politics of selling and product design change could affers the final financial results of the company for which he is working.
- Finally, he needs to understand the development methods of its customers in order to accordingly design the development of the design and price of the offered products.

  Madan Gopal Agarwal
0
Madan Gopal Agarwal
Business Consultant, India
 

Key Accounts Must Get Value

To start with, today, every B2B account is to be considered an important account if one needs to grow continuously, period after period. The account needs to continuously 'feel' that it is getting som...

  Jayaram
-3
Jayaram
Business Consultant, India
 

No Key Account Management

I don't agree for KAM. A customer is a customer, irrespective of how much he buys. All customers must be treated the same. However, the supplier can have a special pricing and services contract with ...

  Parag Utekar
2
Parag Utekar
Student (MBA), India
 

Key Account Management is Useful

At times, a maximum portion of the revenues are generated from a select few customers, this is where KAM can be used. But having said that, each and every customer is important for the organisation....

  Buddhika Kumarasinghe
1
Buddhika Kumarasinghe
Manager, Sri Lanka
 

Is Key Account Management Profitable?

When using KAM, existing products/services should be changed by adding or reducing features, and implementing brand new products/services based on the customer requirements and this is what commonly h...

  Parag Utekar
1
Parag Utekar
Student (MBA), India
 

New Digital Key-Accounts Strategies

There must have been occasions at which company leaders must have looked at their best clients and wondered, "It would be terrible if we lost them." Such "Key Account" customers disproportionately aff...

  Aniket Deolikar
3
Aniket Deolikar
Consultant, India
 

KAM is Based on the 80-20 Principle

@Jayaram: If in your business 80% of the customers are accountable for 20% of all sales, while the remaining 80% are responsible only for 20% of the sales, then it is your responsibility as a manage...

  OSCAR PETER OJIGO
0
OSCAR PETER OJIGO
Student (University), South Sudan
 

How to Implement Strategic Account Management?

Strategic account management is a process at the organizational level that goes beyond sales to encompass building strategic, mutually beneficial relationships between the company and its key customer...

  Jaap de Jonge
1
Jaap de Jonge
Editor, Netherlands
 

Triple Fit Canvas

I just found a new, very good key key account management instrument by INSEAD Prof. Christoph Senn. Inspired by the Blue Ocean Strategy Canvas (Kim and Mauborgne) and the Business Model Canvas (Osterw...

 

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Special Interest Group


More on Sales Management
Summary Discussion Topics
topic Sales versus Marketing
topic How to Motivate the Sales Force?
topic B2B Sales of New Products
topic Sales versus Business Development
topic Hunting versus Farming Sales Strategies
topic The Sales Tightrope: Common Errors in Selling
topic Sales Strategies | Selling Strategies
topic 7 Steps of the Selling Process
👀Key Account Management
topic 5Cs of Sales Management
topic Involvement of Executives in B2B Sales
🔥 Artificial Intelligence in B2B Sales
topic Sales Methods, Models and Theories
topic Virtual Selling Process Due to Internet and Covid
topic Selling is Transforming a LEAD Into a DEAL
topic Integrating Sales and Marketing
topic Approaches for Sales Pipeline Management / Sales Funnel Management
topic How to Align Sales Strategies with Corporate Revenue Targets?
topic Metrics for Tracking Sales Performance
topic Understanding the Buying Process in Major Accounts
Special Interest Group
Knowledge Center

Sales Management



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