Post 30 June

Managing Inside Sales from the Outside: Setting Expectations That Drive Revenue

In steel and building materials sales, the relationship between inside and outside sales can make—or break—your revenue targets. When it’s strong, leads flow smoothly, follow-ups are seamless, and customer experience is consistent. When it’s fractured, deals slip, communication lags, and margins suffer.

For regional and territory sales managers who operate out in the field, managing the inside sales team often feels like steering a ship from shore. But make no mistake: how you lead your inside team—through communication, expectations, and collaboration—has a direct impact on your results.

Inside Sales: The Engine Behind the Curtain

Inside sales reps are more than order takers. They’re your frontline for:

Rapid quote turnaround

CRM accuracy

Customer service responsiveness

Order and shipment coordination

When aligned with your goals, they amplify your reach. When misaligned, they become a bottleneck. Your job as a field leader is to create clarity, consistency, and accountability across both roles.

Start With Shared Goals

It’s easy to assume inside sales knows what matters most. But assumptions lead to frustration. Start by aligning on shared success metrics:

Quote-to-close ratio

On-time response rate

Accuracy of job specs entered in the system

Customer satisfaction or renewal rate

When both inside and outside teams understand how their actions impact these metrics, collaboration improves. Inside sales starts to see themselves as more than a support desk—they become a strategic partner in revenue generation.

Set Clear Expectations—and Reinforce Them

Your inside team isn’t on the jobsite with you. They don’t hear customer complaints in real time. So if you want them to prioritize speed, detail, or flexibility, you have to make those expectations explicit.

Create a working agreement that spells out:

Response time targets for quotes and inquiries

Communication protocols for customer updates

Escalation paths for urgent or complex issues

CRM requirements (what gets logged, by whom, and when)

Then revisit this agreement regularly. Not as a punishment tool—but as a way to reinforce standards, share wins, and make course corrections.

Equip Them to Win

If your inside reps don’t have access to the tools, training, or context they need, performance will suffer.

Make sure they:

Understand key product differentiators and pricing logic

Have access to updated spec sheets, material availability, and lead times

Know who to contact for technical, delivery, or compliance questions

You’d never send a field rep into a pitch without support—treat your inside team the same way. The more equipped they are, the faster they can respond and the more confident they’ll be representing your brand.

Communicate Like You’re On the Same Team (Because You Are)

Your communication style sets the tone. If you only reach out when something’s wrong—or if your messages sound more like orders than updates—you’ll build a compliance culture, not a collaborative one.

Instead:

Share context behind customer asks or changes

Give heads-up on big deals in the pipeline

Celebrate when your inside team saves a deal, spots an issue, or turns a quote around fast

Recognition goes a long way. A two-line email or call saying “Nice work on that last-minute order” can shift someone’s entire mindset for the day.

Use the CRM to Create Visibility, Not Red Tape

Field reps often see CRM systems as a chore. But for inside sales, that system is their window into your world.

Make it a habit to:

Log customer notes after visits

Update stages and statuses promptly

Flag special requirements or urgency with clarity

This isn’t about admin—it’s about empowering your team to respond intelligently without chasing you down for details.

Coach to Win, Not Just Fix

If you want your inside sales team to level up, don’t just correct mistakes—coach toward excellence.

Use weekly check-ins to:

Review top opportunities together

Debrief quote outcomes and customer feedback

Spot where additional training or clarity is needed

When reps feel invested in, they invest more in the outcome. And when they know their input is valued, they become more proactive and engaged.

Final Thought: Two Roles, One Goal

The distance between inside and outside sales is only as wide as your leadership allows. By setting expectations clearly, reinforcing them consistently, and leading with transparency and respect, you turn two separate roles into one powerful, coordinated team.

Sales success in this industry isn’t just about what happens in the field. It’s about how well your support engine runs behind the scenes. Manage that engine well, and you’ll go further—and faster—than you thought possible.