Ending Departmental Turf Wars
This article was written by Chris Penttila of Entrepreneur.com. Chris is a freelance journalist in the Chapel Hill, N. C., area.
Business is good for Michael Cooch, founder of four-year-old Everon Technology Services, a Boston IT firm that serves SMBs. The company's clientele encompasses industries from schools to government lobbying firms to retail shops, and sales are projected to surpass $5 million this year. "We've grown over 100% per year since we started the company," says Cooch, 33. "There's a good market for our services out there."
The competition, however, can get fierce among Everon's 35 service delivery employees, its three sales employees and its one-employee marketing department. The marketing department researches and generates leads and gives them to the sales team, but the service team has veto power over all sales deals and can advise the sales department on how to sell a prospect. The result can be tension -- and sometimes rivalry. "There's a strong back-and-forth between the sales team and the service team," Cooch says. "It's a very competitive group."
Can They Get Along?
Keeping both sides working together is the tricky part. Departmental competition is the ugly underbelly of companies large and small, resulting in product delays, increased costs and dwindling market share as departments vie for domination behind the scenes. Today, the online side of a company can feel it's competing against the offline side. Sales and customer service can go mano a mano, and skirmishes between marketing and R&D are legendary. ...Recent Comments
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