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Friday, April 25, 2008
The Key to Retaining Sales Talent
Your salespeople are one of your most valuable investments. You recruit them, train them and trust them with your valued customers. You depend on them to keep your business growing.
So what happens if they leave? Even worse, what if they're lured away by one of your competitors, along with your accounts? That would be a real blow to your business. That's why it's smart to bind them to you financially.
There are several ways to do this. One solution is the non-compete contract, which we discussed inlast month's column. The problem with non-competes is that they're essentially negative in nature. They're also penalty-driven, and no one likes the prospect of punishment.
Golden handcuffs offer a more positive alternative. Instead of a financial penalty, they represent a potential financial reward. If salespeople leave the company prematurely, they lose their chance to reap the reward.
The best golden handcuffs are custom-fitted. In other words, you need to find--and hit--your salesperson's personal hot button for the handcuffs to really hold.
The solution can be simple or complex. A simple plan, for example, would be to lease a car for your salesperson. The trick is, you place the lease in his or her name. You make the monthly payment, but he or she has the legal obligation. If the employee leaves the company, your payments cease. At that point, the monthly payment--or the disposal of the vehicle--becomes his or her problem and responsibility.
What if cars aren't your salesperson's thing? You can do the same thing with tuition reimbursement.
Or how about something more complex and long-term, like a deferred compensation or salary continuation plan? You have many choices, from a straightforward deferred compensation/disability agreement to some form of retirement trust.
Remember, you don't necessarily have to fund the program with current dollars. You do have to be ready to meet your financial obligation, however, assuming your salesperson fulfills his or her part of the agreement. No matter how you structure it, if the salesperson leaves before the agreed time, he or she forfeits all or part of the plan benefits.
Another idea: What some employees really want is equity in the company (which has the additional bonus of motivating performance). In that case, reward them with market equity stock or allow them to buy it, perhaps at a discounted rate.
If you don't welcome the thought of a minority shareholder, you can even create a phantom stock program. In this case, the employee is not an actual owner. However, he or she does receive a payout if a dividend is declared, when they retire, or if the company is sold.
Of course, whatever plan you craft, you'll want to work it out with your attorney and accountant. But otherwise, when it comes to creating golden handcuffs, the possibilities are limited only by your imagination--and by whatever strikes gold with your salesperson.
Ray Silverstein is the "Sales"
columnist at Entrepreneur.com and president and founder ofPRO: President's
Resource Organization, a network of advisory boards for small-business owners.
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It's time to let you in on a dirty little secret: You may not own the stock you own. That's right, if you invest with a brokerage firm, the shares you bought are almost certainly not held in your name. Technically, they're held in the name of the Wall Street firm you do business with, hence the term "street name."
No, you haven't been robbed. Ultimately, the decision to hold shares on the books under a different name doesn't affect the economic ramifications for you. You¿re listed as the "beneficial owner," even though the firm is the official owner of the shares. But, you are giving up some rights, and investors concerned about good corporate governance might want to get that stock back in their own names.
Here's the problem: If your stock is technically owned by, say, Merrill Lynch, then Merrill Lynch gets to do things with it that might work against your wishes. Take short selling. Investors who want to sell shares short need to first borrow those shares. The lenders are often the big Wall Street firms that are handing out Street-name shares. So, if you feel that a company you own is a victim of aggressive short selling, chances are your own shares are being used to fuel the shorting.
Also, your brokerage firm can cast ballots on some corporate matters affecting a company without getting your input. Technically, this can only happen in votes considered ¿routine¿ by securities regulators. But, there's a big catch: some big events, like board elections, are considered "routine" under law.
The good news is that you can easily fix the Street name problem: Just request that your brokerage firm makes you the listed owner of the shares. If they refuse, find a new firm.






