Archive for the ‘Sales’ Category

2011 Sales Performance Study – Forecasting Excellence

Thursday, May 19th, 2011

CSO Insight’s recent Sales Optimization Report reveals that when rating their “Ability to Accurately Forecast Business,” 46% of salespeople rate Needs Improvement. This is down from 60% five years ago, so there is progress in forecasting accuracy. There were 44% that rated Meets Expectations, and only 7% seen as Exceeds Expectations.

At MXL Partners, we’re big believers in a rolling 30-60-90 Forecasting methodology. Many companies acknowledge that they practice this, however we’ve recently seen yet another example this quarter of a sophisticated multi-billion organization with sketchy forecasting practices.

While all the information is in the CRM and reports are plentiful, there are still 3 issues:

    1. Visual Clarity in Reporting – CRM reports are cluttered and inconsistent, allowing missed cues and trends buried in the data.
    2. Consistent Updating and Accuracy of Information – without deliberate discipline and appropriate attention to detail at the rep and management level, this is a key reason for misleading forecasting.
    3. Adherence to Sales Process – paying only lip service to stages, milestones and stepscauses more pain and delusion than it should.

When a rep creates and manages their own visibility reports of all Pipeline, Best Case and Commit Opportunities, updates this weekly with views over at least a rolling 90-day horizon, and then forces adjustments and actions to this Pipeline/Forecast view per a prescribed milestone process, then they will be prepared to report to management, and themselves, with truth and accuracy.

It’s actually simple and powerfully effective. The problem is not in the CRM but at rep and management level.

‘Roll Your Own’ Selling – Ad Hoc Sales Messaging

Thursday, May 12th, 2011

There’s a growing trend in the sales kingdom. It’s ad-hoc sales messaging. Not necessarily bad if you’ve got a hot and compelling product. Certainly some sales teams can still be successful while they vary in their adherence to the purity of whatever target sales messaging was produced by Marketing. It’s like winning a game with a team of great athletes in spite of a less than coherent game plan.

The problem catches up to you eventually. Wide variations of a team’s sales messaging (direct, phone or email) will leave openings for the competition to exploit if they’re better at this than your team.

There are 3 keys to effective sales messaging:

    1. Audience Specific Targeting
    2. Clarity of Market Trends, Audience Objectives and Challenges
    3. Short and Long Sales Talk Tracks, Questions and Visuals

In the absence of effective control of these, any sales team will “roll their own” – that is, they will create their own versions of scripts and emails and anything that they believe they need to be successful. Sometimes what they create is worthwhile; many times it can be quite ugly. Multiply this across an aggressive and frustrated sales team and you have a recipe for confusion internally and in the marketplace.

The fix takes work and involves (re)alignment or sometime wholesale (re)creation. It’s critically important though to avoid an ad-hoc sales organization.

Do you have an ad-hoc messaging, ‘roll your own’ sales team?

Reps Know Products, But…

Monday, April 18th, 2011

CSO Insight’s recent Sales Optimization Report reveals that salespeople are knowledgeable about their products. However, there are clear weaknesses when it comes to effectively understanding buyers, cross-sell/up-sell, selling value and forecasting accuracy:

Meet or Exceed Expectations- Effectively present Features and Benefits = 67%
- Differentiate from Competition = 69%
- Align Solutions with Customer Needs = 68%
- Generate Accurate Bid/Proposal = 85%

Needs Improvement- Understanding Customer Buy Process = 40%
- Effectively Cross-sell/Up-sell = 47%
- Sell Value/Avoid Discounting = 42%
- Forecasting Accurately = 54%

This data shows that salespeople, for the most part, know their products, but are lacking in areas not typically emphasized in training across sales teams.

More Research or More Sales Calls?

Wednesday, April 6th, 2011

It’s an age old question: Do I spend more time researching companies before I call them or do I make more “cold” phone calls? This topic is too much debated. It’s a qualified no-brainer. You want to make more calls. Let me explain.

If you make 10 calls in a 2-hour period because you’re studying lead prospects’ web sites, social media sites and rooting around your CRM, and I make 30 calls in the same 2-hour period, all things being equal, I’m going to outsell you. Over a period of weeks, months and year, I will cover more ground in the territory, uncover more opportunities and drive more revenue.

Now I didn’t say zero research or no entries in the CRM. It’s about intelligent balance. Here’s the trick – 3 keys that will separate Producers from Meanderers:

1. Know Your Targets - if I know my vertical or target audience, then I can do cursor research, i.e., quick specific info checks on web sites or other sales intelligence resources.
2. Know Your Pitch - if I know what I’m going to say then I have No Fear and will boldly make great quality calls and leave great quality messages all day long.
3. Know Your Metrics - if I know my cadence metrics and results then I will confidently and systematically work the numbers game.
4. Batch Your Updates - if I keep my calling notes separately on a spreadsheet as I make my calls I can update the CRM appropriately at the end of day or night without losing my calling rhythm.

These keys result in Focus, Confidence, Accountability and Speed. You don’t need a manager to guide you; you can manage yourself. I will gladly take a team full of smart focused, confident, productive self-managers any day over a team of over-organized, plodding, CRM perfectionists.

Are you or your team really as productive as can be?

Sales Leadership System

Tuesday, March 15th, 2011

Mention sales systems and one typically thinks of IT, CRM and/or processes. Mention sales leadership and one may think of strong, effective salesmanship and/or heroic management overseeing the sales troops much like a military general. In truth, great sales leadership can be successfully systematized beyond technology and personality.

In more and more organizations, the need for an effective Sales Leadership System is clear if not obvious. It is possible and desirable to have a process-driven sales management structure that runs with machine-like efficiency and as effectively as the most well-designed technology system.

There are 4 key requirements associated with an effective sales leadership system:

  1. Sales Process Redefinition – over-hauled, clarified and aligned with Sales and Marketing, no lip service any more
  2. Sales Strategy Reinforcement – clarified customer targets, audiences, messaging, playbooks and gameplans
  3. Sales Metrics Discipline – consistent visibility and measurement metrics, reliable, streamlined pipeline/forecast management
  4. Sales Review Cadence – acceptable and sustainable pace and form of rep/team reviews, coaching, planning per month or quarter.

Not easy or quick to roll out. These take time, care and experience to institutionalize a best-practice sales leadership system. Tough to do if your driving Sales, Marketing or the whole company. It’s like orchestrating a complex symphony while you’re playing first chair violin. Let’s discuss your 2011 plans.

How’s your sales leadership system?

The Art and Science of Great Salesmanship

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2011

We see a lot of salespeople who are seasoned and experienced in sales and account management. Likewise we see a new generation of reps who, by all appearances, have the competencies to sell and produce numbers.

So what’s the problem?

None, really. Nevertheless it’s still an 80-20 world where the top 20% stand out like beacons in a dark night. While selling competencies are increasing across sales organizations, the differences between the “cream of crop” and the masses are still stark and a mystery to many.

It shouldn’t be. Top producers are still smarter, work harder, more knowledgeable, more systematic, and practice their trade with an artist’s touch and natural style aligned with their true self and personality.

No surprises. No magic. Simply a comfortable balance of salesmanship that we’ve always seen as the intersection of art and science. Some things never change or go out of style.

Management’s Selling Roles

Wednesday, February 16th, 2011

Saw an interesting article recently about the role that CEOs should play relative to sales deals. Essentially, it emphasized that top executives should stay focused on forging company strategy, setting policy and corporate direction. Makes sense. Of course management’s role in the selling effort should vary by title but is influenced by penchant and skills. Let’s review 3 titles: CEO, VP of Sales, and Sales Director/Manager.

1. CEO/President – as cited, senior execs drive strategy, but are certainly to be visiting customers and feeling the marketplace pulse. What they don’t need to do is over-engage in sales cycles and inject themselves too deep into details competently managed by their direct reports and field reps. Knowing deals is one thing, micro-managing from the CEO perch is another. Start-ups excluded.

2. VP of Sales – this level of management often comes in one of two flavors: the Field Marshall who is deep in the trenches with the team, very involved with customers, meetings and closing calls; and the Process King who is more hands-off, process and operations oriented and works through First Line managers. Best leader, but hard to find, is a blend of superstar sales driver-closer and systematic, process-driven sales executive.

3. Sales Director/Manager- depending on the size of the team, you may need a strong sales/process blended manager who can manage team business while driving and coaching field salespeople. At this level, better to error on hands-on approach but moving toward managing the business. Toughest transition for many great sales closers to make, as they just can’t let go of the thrill of the deal.

In any event, it’s all about getting deals done, and this often overrides prudence. With executive leadership’s involvement in sales often a function of deal size, criticality, style and gifts, its wise to ask the question:

Is executive management appropriately involved in sales deals?

Rule #11 – Create a Playbook

Wednesday, January 19th, 2011

So now you’re ready to document your sales process “playbook.” A playbook is just as it sounds—it’s a notated game plan of steps, actions and tools used to facilitate the execution of the sales process. In the previous two rules (Rule 9 and Rule 10) we’ve mapped the selling stages to the buying stages. In Figure 12 (see Appendix A), we’ve now filled out the specific actions and tools that management has deemed necessary for the salesperson to successfully navigate the sales cycle.

Every selling stage can be dissected into a bullet list of action steps, tactics or strategies. Additionally, specific collateral documents, templates and sales tools come into play at various points along the process.

For instance, at Stage 1—Lead Generation, salespeople are tasked with following up leads inbound from marketing campaigns or websites, or initiating targeted contacts on their own. There is typically some live preliminary lead qualification beyond common lead scoring or form fields. A well-managed sales and marketing team will coordinate specifically what a rep should be doing and document those actions. These are grilled into the sales rep at sales meetings or training sessions. A playbook can be developed for different types of field reps (inside teams, outside direct, etc.) as well as for different product lines (upsell items, renewals, new business sales, etc.).

At Stage 2—Discovery/Qualification, there is ample room for error and inconsistency as reps need to further qualify the opportunity and execute a professional discovery or information gathering sales call. By document-ing the specific qualifying and probing questions as well as referencing various helpful sales tools for the rep to utilize, sales management ensures that their team is conducting the right effort at the right time. This continues throughout the rest of the sales cycle.

An enterprise software company’s sales team was comprised of inside reps, outside reps and market development/lead generation reps. There were inconsistencies in the quality of customer meetings as reps
often generated a proposal (Stage 4) after a single conversation (Stage 1) with the customer/prospect. While sales were closing in some cases, some implementation issues cropped up because the reps had failed to fully scope out the tailored application and use case of the software solution. What was missing was a more detailed discovery/qualification conversation or meeting (Stage 2) and then a planned proof-of-concept (POC) or pilot/trial that solidified the success of the solution but also further developed the customer relationship and growing engagement. The reps were guilty of short-circuiting the appropriate sales process, a common problem in many of today’s sales organizations. This problem was alleviated by ingraining through sales training the importance of good sales cycle management and crystallizing the correct actions, tactics and tools.

As noted earlier in the CSO Insights research, approximately two-thirds (63%) of firms fall into the category of Random or Informal when it comes to adhering to a specified sales process methodology.2 One-third (37%) are Formal or Dynamic when it comes to effectively following some documented sales process.

But today’s marketplace landscape requires more than simple documentation and training. “Sales Process 2.0″ is all about the dynamic interactivity of sales stages, steps, actions, collateral beyond the printed page. There are some exciting new technology solutions that have taken the concept of “Playbook” to new and powerful levels through the automation of a documented selling process and the just-in-time serving up of the appropriate tool, script, or action-step to guide the new or experienced salesperson. When these tools get implemented across sales organizations around the world, then sales effectiveness will meet sales efficiency and produce consistent sales excellence.

Do you have a Sales Process Playbook?

2. CSO Insights, Sales Performance Optimization Report, 2009.

The 4 Biggest Things

Monday, January 17th, 2011

There are 4 Big Things that impact selling success. These are not just for 2011; they are timeless. If you get these right as a salesperson or sales manager, then you’re on your way to selling victory. Sounds easy, but lots of room here for error and miscalculation.

Here are the 4 biggest things that impact selling success:

    1. Activity – What You Do
    2. Messaging – What You Say
    3. Audience – Who You Say It To
    4. Visibility – How You Track It

We’re working with Fortune 500 companies and Silicon Valley startups that have sales team inconsistencies around all of these. When it comes to sales activities, that is, how many calls, emails, meetings, proposals, etc. need be done daily, weekly, monthly, some teams have no set pattern of activity metrics. The quality of sales messaging at all points of the sales cycle varies widely as well. It’s a lot more than just a good elevator pitch.

Additionally, correct customer audience/targets in terms of industries, segments and titles can greatly impact the effectiveness of selling efforts regardless of the quality of the selling message. Finally, how salespeople and managers maintain sales visibility in tracking pipeline growth and forecasting accuracy is as critical as anything in driving activities, adjustments, incentives and results.

Sales isn’t easy. It’s simply clear and straightforward what one has to do to be successful.

Are you set up for success in 2011?

Beginnings and Endings

Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

It’s mid-December as we confront the end of another sales quarter and calendar year. We see the finish line through the busy Christmas break and final year-end wrap-up. When all things tell you ease it on in, the sales pro in you knows it’s time to step up and finish strong with a final kick that will propel you in the new year.

But is there anything special one can do at this point? Yes, here are 3 keys to finishing strong:

    1. Set Your Sight on the Prize – Never lose sight of your goal and objectives. You’ve can calculate your final attainment at this point. Keep it clearly etched in front of you.

    2. Sprint to the Finish – No matter the standings, strong finishers give it an extra kick at the end to outrun anyone ahead of them. Ratchet up your step these final sales days and don’t let up the pace until year end.

    3. Never Give Up – Famous words by Winston Churchill, and other winners who didn’t quit. Even in the face of tough circumstances, sales pros don’t cave, they suck it up, make no excuses and find a way to get it done.

And looming just weeks away is a new year. Sales pros work the end game while gearing up for new beginnings. Have a great and strong finish, a Merry Christmas, and a Happy New Year.