Territory Management Plans

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Summary

Territory management plans are strategic guides that help sales teams organize, prioritize, and execute their work within specific geographic or account segments to maximize revenue and coverage. These plans go beyond simply dividing up areas—they use data and thoughtful analysis to make sure each rep has the right mix of opportunity, workload, and direction.

  • Segment accounts smartly: Group customers by their potential and frequency, tailoring your approach to maximize impact rather than treating every account the same.
  • Use data for direction: Regularly review sales numbers, visit consistency, and market feedback to adjust your plan and stay focused on high-value opportunities.
  • Prioritize structure over randomness: Build a consistent routine for calls, visits, and reviews so your efforts drive measurable growth, not just activity.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Matt Green

    Co-Founder & Chief Revenue Officer at Sales Assembly | Helping B2B tech companies improve sales and post-sales performance | Decent Husband, Better Father

    62,044 followers

    "Let's just divide accounts evenly among reps." Famous last words from every sales leader who's never done territory math. Six months later: Rep A closes $800K, Rep B closes $200K. Same quota. Same comp plan. Different territories. Folks - territory planning isn't about fairness. It's about math. Here's the formula to always keep in mind: Territory Value = (Account Potential x Win Probability x Coverage Capacity) - Competitive Density. So, how do you apply the formula? Let's bust out our TI-82s and break this down... Step 1: Calculate the true account potential. Don't use company size alone. Use buying indicators: - Recent funding rounds (+50% potential). - Executive hiring sprees (+30% potential). - Tech modernization projects (+40% potential). Example: 500-employee company = $50K base potential + $10M Series B = $75K total. Step 2: Determine the win probability by account type. - Green field (no solution): 25-30% win rate, 4-6 month cycle. - Competitive displacement: 15-20% win rate, 6-9 month cycle. - Expansion accounts: 60-75% win rate, 2-4 month cycle. Step 3: Eval the coverage capacity reality. Each rep can effectively work: - 25-30 ENT accounts (15-20 hours/month each). - 50-75 MM accounts (8-12 hours/month each). - 100-150 SMB accounts (3-5 hours/month each). Step 4: Inspect geographic efficiency. - Dense metro: 8-10 meetings/week (1.0x capacity). - Regional spread: 4-6 meetings/week (0.75x capacity). - National territory: 3-4 meetings/week (0.6x capacity). Step 5: Measure the competitive density tax. - Low competition: +20-30% win rates. - Saturated markets: -25-35% win rates. Here's an example of how to score territories: 1. Territory A: 40 enterprise accounts x $90K potential x 25% win rate x 0.8 geography x 0.9 competition = $648K. 2. Territory B: 60 mid-market accounts x $35K potential x 35% win rate x 1.0 geography x 1.1 competition = $809K. As you'll see, territory B wins despite LOWER account values. Once you've run the math, don't treat all accounts equally. Allocate effort thusly: - Tier 1 (20% accounts, 60% revenue): Weekly touches, exec relationships. - Tier 2 (30% accounts, 30% revenue): Bi-weekly touches, manager relationships. - Tier 3 (50% accounts, 10% revenue): Monthly touches, inside sales. At the end of the day, good territory planning is applied mathematics, not office politics. Equal doesn't mean fair when account potential varies 10x. Run the math. Weight the factors. Track the results. Because the rep with the better territory will always outperform the rep with more accounts. Remember that math doesn't lie, but territory assignments definitely do. :)

  • View profile for Matthew Volm

    CEO and Founder @ Eventful - the platform for every human moment in B2B GTM. Meetings, webinars, podcasts, in-person events, and conferences. We handle the ops. We handle the AI stuff. You handle the people.

    35,658 followers

    🚨 Territory management isn’t just drawing lines on a map and calling it a day. It’s one of the most strategic - and painful - levers in RevOps. Done well, it drives: ✅ Predictable pipeline coverage ✅ Fair rep workloads ✅ Healthy market penetration Done poorly? You’re left with: ❌ Overlooked high-value accounts ❌ Sellers stepping on each other’s toes ❌ Burnout and churn caused by inequity At RevOps Co-op we just published a 4-part deep dive into territory management (based on some expert insights from our friend Kevin Davis at BoogieBoard) covering the messy realities most GTM teams face and the tactics RevOps leaders can use to get it right. Here’s the breakdown 👇 1️⃣ Tactics to Improve Territory Design Most territory plans rely on “last year’s map + a few tweaks.” But that approach ignores how fast markets, ICP definitions, and buying behaviors change. Instead you need to consider: ↳ How to layer firmographics, technographics, and intent data to design balanced books of business ↳ Why whitespace analysis is critical to capture untapped market opportunity ↳ Ways to align territories with your GTM strategy (not just your org chart) 2️⃣ Complex Account Hierarchies Enterprise and global accounts rarely fit neatly into a single box. Multiple subsidiaries, cross-region ownership, and overlapping product lines can create a nightmare for coverage models, which means you need to consider: ↳ How to standardize rules of ownership across parent/child entities ↳ The risks of ignoring hierarchy complexity (double-coverage and channel conflict) ↳ Models for splitting global vs. regional coverage without confusing the customer 3️⃣ AI & Automation in Territory Design Can AI really design better territories than humans? Increasingly, yes. But only if you feed it the right inputs, like: ↳ Where AI shines: analyzing massive datasets, spotting hidden potential, and testing “what-if” scenarios ↳ Where human judgment is still required: defining strategic goals and weighting qualitative factors ↳ How automation reduces spreadsheet wars by continuously updating assignments as data changes 4️⃣ Territory Equity & Change Management Even the most mathematically perfect model will fail if reps feel it isn’t fair, so don't forget about the human side of territory design: ↳ Defining equity (hint: it’s about opportunity quality, not just quantity of accounts) ↳ Playbooks for rolling out new territories without sparking revolt ↳ Metrics to monitor after launch to make sure inequities don’t creep back in 💡 The big takeaway: Territory management is a living system. It’s not a one-and-done exercise - it requires ongoing data, process rigor, and thoughtful change management to keep it effective. 👉 Dive into the full series on our website => www(.)revopscoop(.)com #revops #salesops #revenueoperations

  • View profile for Murali Paleti

    FMCG Sales Manager @ Claret

    34,478 followers

    Arjun’s Story: Mastering Territory Planning “If you fail to plan your territory, your competition will plan it for you.” In his third year as a Territory Sales In-Charge, Arjun hit a wall. His beat was chaotic. Retailers complained about inconsistent visits. Sales fluctuated. And his ASM kept asking, “What’s your game plan, Arjun?” That’s when Arjun realized: It wasn’t about working harder — it was about working smarter. Here’s what Arjun learned about Territory Planning – and how it transformed his FMCG sales performance: 1. What is Territory Planning and Why Does It Matter? Arjun discovered that territory planning is more than mapping a route — it’s about strategic segmentation based on: Retailer potential Geography Local market behavior Why it worked for him: Clear priorities Better beat coverage Consistent relationships = consistent orders 2. How Did Arjun Segment His Territory? He grouped his market like this: A+ Retailers: High-value, high-frequency visits B Retailers: Mid-tier, focus on schemes and upselling C Retailers: Occasional visits with trial offers Pro Tip: Customize approach → Don’t treat every store the same. 3. Route Optimization: Game Changer 🚗 Earlier, Arjun wasted hours zigzagging across his beat. Now? He used Google Maps + his CRM to: Cluster visits Reduce travel time Spend more time selling, less time moving Result: He covered 20% more stores in the same time. 4. Retailer Strategy: One Size Doesn’t Fit All Key Accounts – Relationship + Availability = Loyalty Mid-Tier Stores – Schemes and displays = Volume Low-Tier Stores – Low-hanging fruit for growth Arjun tailored his pitch, not just his product. Competitive Intelligence = Street Smarts During store visits, Arjun started noting: Competitor schemes Pricing changes Retailer feedback He used these insights to tweak his offers. Result? – Beat the competition without undercutting prices. 6. Power of Tech in Territory Management From planning to reporting, Arjun used: CRM Apps: Track sales & visit frequency Beat Planning Tools: Optimize routes Live Dashboards: Adjust on the go Lesson: Tech gave him data. Data gave him direction. Common Mistakes Arjun Avoided ❌ Random visits ❌ Favoring only large retailers ❌ Ignoring data ❌ Skipping follow-ups ✔️ He built a system that balanced effort and impact. 8. Measuring Success of Territory Planning Arjun tracked: Sales growth per cluster Retailer satisfaction Visit consistency New retailer additions Each month, he reviewed — and improved. Arjun’s Takeaway: “Territory planning isn't just logistics. It's strategy. And strategy wins markets.”

  • View profile for Wesleyne Whittaker

    Sales Strategist for CEOs | Helping Technically Strong Sales Teams Turn Product Knowledge Into Consistent Revenue | Author of The Sales Reset | Creator of BELIEF Selling™

    15,242 followers

    Why is no one talking about the real issue in field sales? Most sales reps are executing but zero ownership. And it’s costing companies millions in lost opportunities. I worked with a VP of Sales in the industrial sector who had strong boots on the ground. But here’s what we uncovered: His field reps were running routes, checking boxes, and reporting back… But they weren’t thinking like owners of their territory. No pipeline strategy. No prospecting game plan. No real understanding of their numbers beyond what was handed to them. So, we built something different: A Territory CEO Framework. Reps began each quarter with a territory business plan. They segmented their accounts by potential, not just geography. They started tracking leading indicators, not just lagging results. Weekly 1:1s shifted from check-ins to strategic reviews. What happened next? → One rep identified a stalled account worth $500K and flipped it. → Another reduced their travel by 30%, and doubled their face-to-face selling time. → Team-wide forecast accuracy went from 62% to 89%. The magic wasn’t in more effort. It was in more autonomy and ownership. Because when your field reps start thinking like Territory CEOs, they stop waiting for direction, and start driving outcomes.

  • View profile for Rajiv Chaubey

    Senior Pharma Sales Leader | 24+ Years Driving Growth, Teams & Market Expansion | Zonal Business Manager | Critical Care | Commercial Excellence | Leadership Mentor | Open for National Leadership Roles

    25,180 followers

    𝗛𝗼𝘄 𝗼𝗻𝗲 𝘁𝗲𝗿𝗿𝗶𝘁𝗼𝗿𝘆 𝗺𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗱 𝗳𝗿𝗼𝗺 𝟳𝟮% 𝘁𝗼 𝟭𝟬𝟰% 𝗶𝗻 𝗷𝘂𝘀𝘁 𝟰𝟱 𝗱𝗮𝘆𝘀. 𝗡𝗼 𝗻𝗲𝘄 𝗽𝗿𝗼𝗱𝘂𝗰𝘁. 𝗡𝗼 𝗲𝘅𝘁𝗿𝗮 𝘀𝗰𝗵𝗲𝗺𝗲. 𝗡𝗼 𝗮𝗱𝗱𝗶𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻𝗮𝗹 𝗺𝗮𝗻𝗽𝗼𝘄𝗲𝗿. 𝗝𝘂𝘀𝘁 𝗱𝗶𝘀𝗰𝗶𝗽𝗹𝗶𝗻𝗲𝗱 𝗲𝘅𝗲𝗰𝘂𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻. When I reviewed the territory, the issue wasn’t demand. It was direction. Here’s what we changed: 𝗗𝗮𝗶𝗹𝘆 𝗖𝗮𝗹𝗹 𝗔𝘃𝗲𝗿𝗮𝗴𝗲: From 8 calls → 12 quality calls per day (More importantly, structured call planning — not random visits) 𝗥𝗲𝘁𝗮𝗶𝗹 𝗖𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗿𝗮𝗴𝗲: From 45 outlets → 70 active outlets Dead stock identified. Secondary movement tracked weekly.  𝗗𝗼𝗰𝘁𝗼𝗿 𝗙𝗼𝗹𝗹𝗼𝘄-𝘂𝗽 𝗙𝗿𝗲𝗾𝘂𝗲𝗻𝗰𝘆: From 1 visit/month → 2 focused visits Consistency built recall. Recall built prescriptions. 🎯 𝗕𝗿𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗙𝗼𝗰𝘂𝘀: Instead of pushing 9 SKUs, we narrowed it down to 3 power brands. Energy stopped getting diluted. What happened next? 📈 Territory jumped from 72% achievement to 104% 📊 +18% growth 💰 ₹8 lakh value addition in 45 days No motivational speeches. No pressure tactics. Just measurement. Monitoring. Mid-course correction. Most territories don’t fail because of competition. They fail because of scattered focus and weak review rhythm. When structure improves, numbers follow. Growth is engineered. Not hoped. #PharmaSales #SalesLeadership #ExecutionMatters #CommercialStrategy #PharmaGrowth #FieldExcellence

  • View profile for Leore Spira

    Director of Revenue Operations & GTM Strategy | B2B SaaS | Forecasting, Salesforce, AI-enabled RevOps | Top REVOPS100 Leader

    13,231 followers

    #revopsconfessions Territory management is not a #sales spreadsheet. It's revenue architecture. At every company, and every quarter, I see the same pattern: Split accounts, balance headcount, adjust a few regions, and announce "new territories". And then… pipeline imbalance, political friction, and forecast noise. Territory management is not about geography. It's about revenue design. If #RevOps isn't defining the structure, you're just reallocating chaos. How? Start with strategy, not with reps. Before assigning a single account: ⭐︎ What is the ICP segmentation logic? ⭐︎ What motion are we optimizing for (Enterprise ABX? Velocity? Partner-led?) ⭐︎ What ARR capacity should each territory carry? ⭐︎ What win rate and cycle assumptions are we building around? Territories should reflect revenue potential, buying complexity, and motion, not fairness optics. Otherwise ➤ One rep is overloaded with complex enterprise cycles; another cruises on inbound velocity; #forecast becomes fiction. Territory design = capacity planning + revenue math. Process before assignment. From a RevOps perspective, you need: ⭐︎ Clear ownership rules ⭐︎ Parent–child logic defined ⭐︎ Reassignment triggers documented ⭐︎ SLA for lead acceptance ⭐︎ Quarterly review cadence If this is not embedded in #CRM logic and automation, it will turn political very fast. No governance = noise. Noise = missed revenue. Don't bring AI into a broken system AI will not fix bad segmentation. Before adding "smart routing" tools, make sure: ⭐︎ TAM is mapped ⭐︎ Tiering is defined ⭐︎ Coverage ratios are calculated ⭐︎ Capacity model exists ⭐︎ Weighted pipeline targets per territory are clear AI on top of poor architecture just accelerates misalignment. Garbage structure + AI = faster garbage. Where AI does change the game. Once the foundation is clean, #AI becomes a multiplier: ⭐︎ Predictive account prioritization ⭐︎ Engagement-based routing ⭐︎ Workload imbalance detection ⭐︎ Signal-driven reassignment ⭐︎ Territory simulation ("what if we split Tier 1 differently?") ⭐︎ Forecast correlation by territory quality Now we're talking scale. My trick, a combination of ChatGPT, Claude, and BonData agents, does the tricks. Lastly, internal management at scale. If you want this to work long-term: ⭐︎ Single source of truth (#CRM only; choose HubSpot or Salesforce) ⭐︎ Automated assignment workflows ⭐︎ Slack alerts for ownership conflicts ⭐︎ Version control for territory changes ⭐︎ Impact analysis before reshuffles Territories should not change because someone "feels" it's uneven. They change because the #data proves it. When Sales designs territories alone, the outcome optimizes comfort. When RevOps designs territories with AI leverage, the outcome optimizes scale. Territory management is structural revenue engineering. Design first. Automate second. Scale intelligently. What's the biggest territory mistake you've seen in the last 12 months?

  • View profile for Joseph Jagdhane

    Business Development Manager/ Sales Management/ Team Management/ Distribution Management/ Category Management/ Sales growth

    3,735 followers

    A 30-60-90 Day Plan for an Area Sales Manager (ASM) is about moving from "student" to "leader" to "optimizer." Your goal is to prove you can manage the complexity of a territory without disrupting what is already working. Days 1–30: The Deep Dive (Learning) Focus: Absorption, relationship building, and baseline data. Internal Networking: Meet with your direct reports 1-on-1. Understand their personal motivators, their biggest frustrations, and their "win" style. Shadowing: Spend "days in the field" with each sales rep. Don't coach yet—just observe how they interact with customers. Data Audit: Review the last 12 months of territory performance. Identify the "Top 20%" clients and the "Bottom 20%" performers. Product Mastery: Ensure you have a technical grasp of the product and the current marketing collateral. Deliverable: A "State of the Union" report for your manager, highlighting initial observations and immediate low-hanging fruit. Days 31–60: The Execution (Leading) Focus: Implementing small wins and establishing a rhythm. Establish KPIs: Set clear, non-negotiable weekly activities for the team (e.g., number of new prospect meetings, CRM update frequency). Gap Analysis: Identify "White Spaces" on the map—geographic areas or industries where your brand is underrepresented. Coaching Cycles: Start active coaching. Use the "Joint Call" format where you provide feedback immediately after a client meeting. Stakeholder Alignment: Meet with the Marketing team to ensure the leads they are generating match the needs of your specific area. Deliverable: A territory map showing targeted growth zones and a coaching schedule for each team member. Days 61–90: The Optimization (Scaling) Focus: Strategic growth and long-term sustainability. Process Refinement: Identify one major bottleneck in the sales process (e.g., slow contract approvals or poor lead routing) and fix it. Forecast Accuracy: Demonstrate that you can predict the area's month-end revenue within a 5-10% margin of error. Strategic Accounts: Lead the pursuit of one "Whale" account (a major client that could shift the territory's needle). Performance Management: Address the "Bottom 20%" identified in Phase 1. Either they are showing improvement through coaching, or a formal performance plan is initiated. Deliverable: A full Strategic Territory Plan for the next fiscal year. The ASM Success Checklist | Phase | Focus Word | Primary Metric | |---|---|---| | 30 Days | Listen | Relationship Strength | | 60 Days | Act | Activity Volume (KPIs) | | 90 Days | Own | Revenue Growth/ROI |

  • View profile for Jeff Denney

    Co-Founder - Recruiter - Sales Coach - Communication Coach - New Business Development

    10,210 followers

    When I ask a sales candidate "How they sell, or how will they attack their new sales role".... Here's what I am looking for: Consultative Selling Approach to Running a Sales Territory 1. Territory Planning & Segmentation: *Identify key geographic zones within your territory. *Segment accounts: current customers, high-potential prospects, dormant/lost accounts. *Prioritize time and travel based on revenue potential and account needs. 2. Research & Preparation *Research each account’s business, industry trends, leadership, and competitive positioning. *Stay informed on local market dynamics, regulations, and buyer behaviors. 3. Customer Discovery & Needs Assessment *Conduct discovery meetings focused on understanding customer goals, challenges, and pain points. *Ask thoughtful, open-ended questions to uncover underlying needs. 4. Solution Alignment *Position products/services as tailored solutions to the customer's unique situation. *Emphasize ROI, workflow improvements, or competitive advantages. 5. Relationship Building *Establish strong rapport with all stakeholders (decision-makers, influencers, end users). *Build trust through consistency, transparency, and value-added interactions. 6. Education & Support *Offer training, workshops, or demonstrations to educate and empower customers. *Serve as a consultant and problem-solver, not just a salesperson. 7. Close Strategically *Align closing efforts with the customer’s timeline and buying process. *Overcome objections with data, empathy, and confidence. *Secure the business by reinforcing long-term value and support. 8. Post-Sale Follow-up *Ensure smooth implementation and onboarding. *Provide proactive support and regular check-ins to ensure satisfaction and identify upsell opportunities. 9. Measure & Adjust *Track key metrics: sales growth, customer retention, deal cycle length. *Refine territory approach based on performance data and feedback. #SalesStrategy #TerritoryManagement #DiscoverySelling

  • View profile for Deepankar Chugh

    Region Sales & Market Development Leader | Endobariatrics & Endoscopy | Driving Therapy Adoption Across North & East India

    5,930 followers

    What Most Business Development folks get Wrong About Territory Development? And I’ve been guilty of some of these myself! Let me say this upfront — territory development is not about visiting more accounts. It’s about understanding the behaviour of your territory. The biggest mistake BD folks make? They confuse movement with progress. Here are the 5 things I’ve learned the hard way: ✔️ They assume every account has the same potential. It doesn’t. Your territory is divided into two types of accounts — Focus Accounts and Non-Focus Accounts. Not “big” and “small.” Not “tier A” and “tier B.” But those that will grow with you and those that never will, no matter how many visits you make.. Your job in BD isn’t to do more. Your job is to filter better. ✔️ They sell without mapping the real decision chain. In medtech, the “decision maker” is rarely one person. There’s a clinical influencer, a financial gatekeeper an operations blocker, and a silent resistor. If you don’t map the chain, you’ll keep pushing the door that isn’t even locked. ✔️ They chase new accounts but ignore existing territory behaviour Territory expansion is awesome. Territory retention is profitable. If your existing high-potential accounts aren’t growing YOY, your new wins don’t matter. Growth = expansion + retention + depth — not just adding pins on a map. ✔️ They plan geography… not behaviour. BD plans usually look like: ✅️ “10 accounts this week” ✅️ “5 demos” ✅️ “2 visits per day” But real territory development sounds like: 🎯 “This account has high willingness but low capability — I need to educate.” 🎯 “This one has capability but no urgency — I need to create value perception.” 🎯 “This one has politics — I need to win influencers first.” The map is secondary. The psychology is primary ✔️ They don’t create territory rituals. Every strong BD person I’ve met has rituals: ✨️ A weekly account health check ✨️ A monthly territory reprioritisation ✨️ A 90-day pipeline reality check ✨️ A competitor watchlist ✨️ A pre-call plan and a post-call learning note Average BD reps “react.” Top BD reps “design.” My takeaway after years in sales + medtech BD: Territory development is less about coverage… And more about understanding who moves, why they move, and what stops them from moving. Once you crack that, your territory becomes predictable — and predictable territories are profitable. In your territory, what’s one behaviour you’ve seen that instantly tells you an account is a Focus Account or a Non-Focus Account? Would love to hear real examples in the comments. #medtech #sales #pharma #management #businessdevelopment

  • View profile for Joseph Licata

    Top Medical Sales Coach & Recruiter / Helping Thousands Break Into Medical Sales Through RepPath Academy / Building the Next Generation of High-Performing Reps

    47,128 followers

    Most medical sales candidates think networking means sending connection requests and asking, “Can you refer me?” That’s not networking. That’s hoping. If you want to land a medical sales role, you need to network with strategy and purpose. Here’s how to do it the right way 👇 1️⃣ Start with a specific opening not a company. Don’t just say, “I want to work at XYZ MedTech.” Apply to a specific role in a specific division in a specific district. Hiring managers hire for territories not for the company at large. 2️⃣ Reach out to reps in the SAME division and SAME district. This is critical. If the opening is in the Cardiology division in the Dallas district, connect with: • Current reps in that Dallas cardiology team • Former reps who worked that territory • Adjacent territory partners These are the people who know: • The hiring manager’s style • What actually drives success in that district • The real challenges in the territory 3️⃣ Ask better questions. Stop asking, “How do I get hired?” Start asking: • What are the top 3 drivers your manager cares about? • What makes someone fail in this territory? • What are the biggest growth opportunities right now? • Which hospitals or IDNs are key accounts? • Who are the dominant competitors? • What objections do doctors typically have? • What does a top performer do differently? This is how you gather intelligence. 4️⃣ Identify the hiring manager’s key drivers. Every manager has pressure points: • Market share growth • New product launch adoption • Contract pull-through • Competitive conversion • Expanding into non-users • Strengthening relationships with specific hospital systems Your job is to figure out what keeps them up at night. 5️⃣ Build a mini business plan before you ever interview. This is where 95% of candidates fail. From the information you gather, create a simple but actionable territory plan: Include: • Key hospitals and health systems using your product • Major physician targets • Competitors and their positioning • Current challenges in the territory • Immediate quick wins (first 90 days) • Long-term growth opportunities • Relationship-building strategy • How you would create value beyond “dropping off samples” Now you’re no longer “a candidate.” You’re a future territory manager presenting a growth strategy. 6️⃣ Then — and only then — approach the hiring manager. When you reach out, your message changes from: “Hi, I applied and would love to connect.” To: “I’ve been studying the territory and speaking with members of your team. I’ve put together a 90-day execution outline based on the competitive landscape and key accounts in the district. I’d value 15 minutes to pressure-test my thinking.” That’s different. That’s memorable. That’s hireable. To schedule an introductory call to learn more about the RepPath Academy, please book an appointment via my LinkedIn page.

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