Scorecard Sales | York, PA — Serving South Central Pennsylvania
There is a number that should stop every B2B sales manager in South Central Pennsylvania cold: the average sales representative spends only 30 percent of their working week actually selling. According to Salesforce’s State of Sales report, the remaining 70 percent is consumed by administrative tasks, internal meetings, reporting, data entry, and the organizational overhead that accumulates around the selling activity rather than contributing to it. For a construction company, insurance agency, or manufacturer paying a salesperson $60,000 to $90,000 per year plus benefits, that means the company is effectively funding seven hours of productive selling time per week — and paying for roughly 23 hours of everything else.
The problem is compounded by the fact that most B2B sales managers do not know how their reps are actually spending those 30 productive selling hours. They know outcomes — proposals submitted, deals closed, revenue booked — but they know them weeks or months after the activity that produced them. By the time a bad quarter reveals a prospecting problem that began in January, half the year is gone. The root cause — not enough discovery calls, not enough new account touches, not enough follow-up on pending proposals — has been running unchecked the entire time, and the manager has been managing results rather than the behaviors that produce them.
Why Managing Outcomes Alone Is a Losing Strategy
The distinction between managing outcomes and managing inputs is one of the most important in B2B sales management, and it is one that a surprising number of managers miss even after years of experience. Outcome metrics — revenue, deals closed, quota attainment — are lagging indicators. They tell you what already happened. They give you no leverage to change what is happening right now, in real time, where the next quarter’s results are being determined by what your salespeople do or do not do today.
Input metrics — calls made, meetings scheduled, proposals submitted, follow-up contacts completed, new accounts approached — are leading indicators. They tell you what is about to happen. A rep whose activity levels are high and consistent is building a pipeline that will produce results in the weeks ahead. A rep whose activity has dropped is building a pipeline problem that will become visible as a revenue problem in the quarter ahead — but by then, the coaching intervention required is far more dramatic and far less certain to succeed than it would have been if the activity drop had been caught and addressed when it first appeared.
Only 22 percent of firms saw an increase in the percentage of salespeople meeting their quotas in 2023, according to the 2023 Sales Performance Scorecard. The pattern is consistent with an industry-wide failure to measure and manage the inputs that determine whether quota attainment is even possible given the pipeline each rep has built. Activity measurement is not the entire solution to sales underperformance, but the absence of it makes almost every other sales improvement effort harder to sustain.
The Scorecard tool from Scorecard Sales is built precisely around this diagnostic principle. It captures sales activity in real time — what each rep is doing, at what volume, and across which stages of the selling process — in a format that gives both salespeople and managers immediate visibility into what is and is not working. The purpose is not surveillance. It is diagnosis. A manager who can see that a rep is making 20 calls per week but converting almost none of them to meetings is facing a completely different problem than a manager whose rep is converting calls to meetings at a healthy rate but failing to convert meetings to proposals. Those two problems require two different coaching interventions — and without the activity data, both look identical: a rep who is not hitting their numbers.
What Real-Time Activity Tracking Changes About Sales Coaching
Sales coaching is only as useful as the specificity of its guidance, and specificity requires data. The most common coaching conversation in B2B sales management goes something like this: the manager asks why the rep is behind on their number, the rep describes a series of deals in various stages of progress and provides reasons why some have stalled, the manager offers encouragement and perhaps a suggestion about a specific stalled deal, and both parties leave the conversation uncertain about what actually needs to change for the number to improve.
That conversation is not coaching. It is deal review. And it addresses the stage of the process that the manager has the least leverage over — the deal is already in the pipeline, already committed to a buyer who is making decisions at their own pace, already operating outside the salesperson’s direct control. The coaching that actually changes outcomes happens at the activity level, before deals enter the pipeline, when the behaviors that will determine next quarter’s results are still in their formative stage.
The Scorecard changes the coaching conversation by making activity visible. When a manager reviews a salesperson’s activity data alongside their outcomes, the coaching question shifts from “why isn’t this deal closing?” to “you’ve been averaging eight prospect calls per week and your conversion to meetings is strong — but your follow-up rate on pending proposals is inconsistent. What’s getting in the way?” That is a specific, behavioral, coachable observation. It addresses something the salesperson can change today, in this week, in a way that will affect next month’s pipeline.
The data also changes how salespeople relate to their own performance. Most salespeople are optimistic by nature — they believe the deals in their pipeline are moving forward even when objective data suggests otherwise. Activity tracking creates a more grounded, accurate self-assessment. When a rep can see that they have not made a new account contact in three weeks, or that their meeting-to-proposal conversion has dropped over the past month, they are confronted with data rather than impressions — and data is harder to rationalize away.
For construction, insurance, and manufacturing sales teams across the South Central Pennsylvania corridor, this grounding effect is particularly valuable because the long sales cycles in these industries create natural opportunities for self-deception. A contractor’s salesperson can spend weeks “working on” a large project opportunity without ever moving the engagement forward, and the absence of activity measurement means that time goes unexamined until the opportunity either closes or quietly disappears. The Scorecard makes that pattern visible before it becomes a pattern.
The Power Process: Converting Activity Into a Structured Selling System
Measuring activity is the diagnostic layer. The Power Process is the operational layer — the mechanism by which salespeople convert productive time into consistently executed sales behavior rather than improvised, inconsistent effort that produces variable results depending on individual personality and intuition.
The Power Process provides an extensive library of sales tactics and approaches for every stage of the B2B selling cycle: prospecting for new accounts, developing existing customer relationships, managing meeting agendas, and maintaining contact with the long-term opportunities that characterize construction, manufacturing, and insurance sales environments. Salespeople can draw from this library to build their own customized process, or they can adopt and adapt processes created by others within the system.
The value of this structured approach is not that it constrains salespeople to a rigid script. It is that it eliminates the blank-page problem that most salespeople face when building new selling habits. The question “how should I approach a new prospect in the construction supply market?” is genuinely difficult to answer from first principles, especially for newer salespeople. The Power Process answers it with proven starting points that the salesperson can refine based on their own experience. This significantly reduces the ramp time for new sales hires and gives experienced salespeople a platform for systematizing the things they already do intuitively — making their own best practices replicable and teachable rather than locked in their heads.
The Power Openers tool extends this structured approach to the prospecting contact itself. Most salespeople dread cold outreach not because they lack confidence but because they lack a clear, compelling approach — they do not know exactly what to say in the first thirty seconds of a phone call or the first paragraph of a prospecting email. Power Openers resolves this by generating customized script templates for in-person introductions, phone calls, and emails based on simple structured questions about the salesperson’s offering, target customer, and value proposition. A construction materials salesperson who has a well-crafted power opener makes more first contacts with more confidence and converts a higher percentage of them to discovery conversations.
As detailed in Why Most B2B Sales Teams Underperform — and How an Integrative Sales Improvement Process Fixes It, the combination of activity measurement, structured process, and diagnostic coaching creates the integrated infrastructure that separates consistently high-performing sales teams from those that depend on individual star performers to carry the team’s number.
The Benchmarks That Show What’s Possible
The Sales Collective’s 2025 U.S. sales training statistics document that for every dollar invested in structured sales training, companies see an average return of $4.53 — a 353 percent ROI that compounds further when coaching reinforcement converts training gains into permanent behavioral change rather than the 70 percent training forgetting rate that occurs without reinforcement. Organizations with established sales coaching strategies achieve 91 percent of their overall quotas, compared to significantly lower attainment at organizations without structured coaching infrastructure.
Those numbers exist at the national level. For the small and mid-size businesses that define South Central Pennsylvania’s commercial landscape — the construction companies, insurance agencies, and manufacturers in York, Lancaster, and the surrounding counties — the opportunity is arguably larger, because the gap between current performance and achievable performance with structured investment tends to be widest in organizations that have never had systematic sales management infrastructure at all.
Scorecard Sales: Your Partner in B2B Sales Improvement
Since 2020, Scorecard Sales has built a strong reputation and proven track record helping sales teams in construction, insurance, and manufacturing throughout South Central Pennsylvania achieve their sales goals.
Our Sales Improvement Tools Include:
- The Integrative Sales Improvement Process — The Scorecard, Power Score Assessment, Value Score Indicator, Power Process, Power Questions, One Page Sales Plan, and Power Openers working together as a complete sales infrastructure
- Coaching and Training Programs — Ongoing sales coaching, skill development, and team-level improvement delivered in person across York, Lancaster, Dauphin, Cumberland, and Adams counties
Ready to Build a Sales System That Actually Works? Contact Scorecard Sales to discuss your team’s specific challenges and start building the infrastructure that makes consistent quota attainment possible.
Works Cited
“Salesforce Report: Sales Teams Using AI 1.3x More Likely to See Revenue Increase.” Salesforce News, Salesforce, July 2024, www.salesforce.com/news/stories/sales-ai-statistics-2024/. Accessed 26 Mar. 2026.
“Sales Training Statistics: USA 2025.” The Sales Collective, thesalescollective.com/sales-training-statistics-usa/. Accessed 26 Mar. 2026.
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- Why Most B2B Sales Teams Underperform — and How an Integrative Sales Improvement Process Fixes It
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