Scheduling sales force training: Theory and evidence |
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Authors: | Anand Krishnamoorthy Sanjog Misra Ashutosh Prasad |
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Affiliation: | aBA2-308S, Department of Marketing, College of Business Admistration, University of Central Florida, 4000 Central Florida Blvd., Orlando, FL 32816-1400, USA;bSimon Graduate School of Business Administration, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY 14627, USA;cSchool of Management, The University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, TX 75083-0688, USA |
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Abstract: | To have a productive sales force, firms must provide their salespeople with sales training. But from a profit-maximizing perspective, there are also reasons to limit training: training is expensive, it has diminishing returns, and trained salespeople need to be compensated at a higher level since their value in the outside labor market has increased. Due to these reasons, the following inter-related questions are not straightforward to answer: (1) How much training should be provided and how should training be scheduled over time? (2) How should compensation vary with training? (3) Should salespeople be asked to pay for some or all of their training? An analytical model is developed and analyzed using optimal control theory to provide answers to these questions. Thereafter, an empirical investigation is undertaken that broadly corroborates the analytical findings. |
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Keywords: | Sales force Training Compensation Optimal control |
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