Registration is open. If you have thoughts about Sage Summit, share them in the comments. Let me know what you think (good and bad) or if you are considering attending.
Archive for the 'ACT' Category
Sage Summit, the annual end-user conference for products like ACT!, Peachtree and of course MAS 90 and MAS 200 is scheduled for November 9-12 at the Georgia World Congress Center in Atlanta.
I haven’t had an opportunity to attend Sage Summit in the past but my experiences at the latest vendor conferences, Sage Insights, have been outstanding. To sign up for emails about Sage Summit, just fill out this form.
If you have been or are thinking about going, let us know in the comments.

During the month of June, Sage is offering Free Anytime Learning training course with the purchase of ACT! Premium – Corporate Edition – Upgrade (ACT! by Sage Premium 2009 and ACT! by Sage Premium for Web 2009. These are version 11.0 for anyone keeping track of releases. Free shipping is available and payments can be delayed up to six months.
The Anytime Learning Course is a $14.95 value but that isn’t the best offer on the table. The ACT! Quick Study Guide, originally $49.95 is available for $19.95 (even if you have already purchased the upgrade or plan on waiting for v12.0)
If our economy has changed, it only makes sense that some of our marketing processes should change also. I’m not advocating making sweeping revisions, but now is a terrific time to take a different approach or try some new ideas. Here is a short list of cost efficient ideas and tips for a modifying your marketing process right now.
- Analyze your list of leads. It is important to get the the right information to the right people.
- Offer something soft like a white paper, newsletter, free trial, or webcast.
- Create an offer with a high perceived value and a low- cost fulfillment that is unique to your company. Your offer should have specific benefits and a sense of urgency like limited quantities.
- The offer must relate to the main benefit of your service or product.
- Follow the rule of 3 by mentioning your offer three times. It will help the idea stick.
- It is wise to include a guarantee with your offer.
- Keep in mind, the most powerful word in marketing is free.
Now is the time to develop new ideas to promote your products and services. Let us know what changes you have made to your marketing plans by commenting below.
Spreadsheets are great for calculating interest but they are not an effective way to generate reports. Use your software. Today every business management software package has some kind of custom report writer available, yet many businesses are creating their business critical reports using Excel. Learning your system’s custom reporting tool and creating your reports using these tools will provide companies with huge return. Once custom reports are created, and all transactions are completed for that accounting period, then reports are generated at the touch of a button and the report contains actual data. Spreadsheet reports require too much time for data entry, possibility for data entry error and probability of formula corruption. Spreadsheet reports lack timeliness, integrity and the ability to reproduce historical reports.
By Brian Rice
In the latest issue of ACT! eNews, Kristi Smith provides good, tactile instruction for some advice you might have heard from this office before: let the machine do the work. What that means, of course, is there are tools like ACT! which have undergone years of development, not to mention the money we as users have paid and the time we as users have spent implementing and learning. Let’s let the tools do their job. The first step as Kristi phrases it is “to dispel the idea that ACT! is a database program. ACT! is a powerful sales management tool
that happens to run on a computer.”
Question: As a Sales Manager, where do you want your staff to apply their time and resources?
- Preparing reports for review at the next sales meeting
- Developing leads, presenting to opportunities and fulfilling orders
Clearly the answer is b. and because you have a sales management tool, you are prepared to allow your staff to do just that. Kristi provides instruction on how to use dashboards, a group of graphical representations of key indicators so you can see how your business is doing.
Kristi suggests using the dashboard for:
Pipeline coaching: see how your team members move through the sales cycle and where they need help moving opportunities to the next stage
Goal monitoring: see how close individuals or groups are to reaching their targets
Focusing on key opportunities: review the top ten opportunities to see where you can make the biggest impact
Dashboard accountability: your dashboard can be customized to show the indicators you follow; print copies of the dashboard to share with your staff so they can see where your focus is
If you aren’t a Sales Manager, your dashboard will be different, but play around and find the details you are looking for and then tell ACT! you want to see your dashboard any time you log on to the system.
In this same issue of ACT! eNews, Xavier Musy shares more information about custom dashboards.
If you are already using dashboards, let us hear how in the comments section. If you are thinking about how you might use them, let us hear your ideas.
By Brian Rice
I recently reviewed the ACT! Link for use with Quickbooks tour. The first six slides with content referred to
eliminating duplicate entry and centalizing information. Without a doubt, these are both worthwhile goals. However, it is on the final three slides that the good stuff shows up. These slides are each titled: Take Action Using Real-time Data and Be Productive. That sure is a mouthful but it really says something. Let’s not just cut down on duplication because we think we should. Let’s not just integrate our systems because we’ve heard that’s the best thing to do. Let’s get something done; let’s be productive; let’s accomplish something for a reason.
So in which ways does the ACT and Quickbooks integration improve productivity? With Quickbooks Scheduling, users can create activities and schedule reminders to take action on Quickbooks transactions like completing follow up calls for sales or collecting on past due invoices. The sales staff that spends most of their time working in ACT can use Quickbooks item lists and tax tables to create estimates. After those estimates are generated, they can either be modified or if they are approved, they can be converted to invoices.
There you have it: two seemingly honorable goals with several reasons to justify why they ought to be.
The Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce recently published a paper outlining some very sensible strategies businesses can employ in seven different arenas “when the economy sours.” While we might argue that, at this point, if the economy has soured, following the advice provided may either pull your business out of a slump or keep it from falling into a slump in the first place.
Two of the sales strategies mentioned in the document recommend prioritizing both your sales prospects and your existing customers. We can all agree that we should exert our effort where we will realize the biggest return; after all, how many references to the Pareto Principle can you recall from prior sales training?
ACT! by Sage ships with some pretty terrific reports for prioritizing your efforts that might work for you right out of the box. By following the Reports Menu to Edit Template, you can even modify the existing reports to meet your needs or click New Template to start from scratch. By using these tools to analyze where you need to focus your sales and marketing energy, you will also be working within another of the included strategies: optimizing operations.

