null
[go: up one dir, main page]

Campbell and Bailyn's Boston Office: Managing the Reorganization

$8.95
(USD)

Are you an educator?

Register as a Premium Educator at hbsp.harvard.edu, plan a course, and save your students up to 50% with your academic discount.

Product Description

Publication Date: April 11, 2008

Source: HBS Brief Cases

When students have the English-language PDF of this Brief Case in a coursepack, they will also have the option to purchase an audio version.

Ken Winston, the regional sales manager at a securities brokerage firm, has reorganized his generalist salespeople into "Key Account Teams" (KAT), to increase sales of specialized, higher-margin fixed income products. Winston is also implementing a new corporate performance management system. To help improve coordination between sales and marketing, Winston must solicit feedback from marketing staff on how responsive his salespeople are to marketing's directives. The marketing group has information on product costs that allow it to forecast product profitability, and by persuading the sales force to focus on those products the marketers can improve firm-wide margins. The KAT model, implemented six months earlier, has challenged the core internal values of the organization - such as a salesperson's control of his or her customer base and the appropriateness of product specialization. However, the long-term test of the new organizational structure will be its alignment with external changes in the securities industry: how securities are bought and sold and the types of new products flooding the market.

Product #:
Pages: 10

Related Products

Loading shopping cart, please wait...