The good news is that (it appears) sales effectiveness is getting more attention than it has in quite some time. The bad news is that it’s being assessed in an ineffective manner, leading to increased investments (and increased costs), but very little to no long-term improvement in the results the sales organization is achieving.
Far too often a marketing or sales approach problem is misdiagnosed as a skills or people problem. Over the last 10 years, I've seen this from a number of perspectives (it’s what prompted me to write The 7 Steps to Effortless Growth eBook). I regularly get inquiries about sales training and/or coaching sales reps.
My first question is, “What makes you feel that you need training or coaching?” And the answer is always some variation of, “We need our salespeople to be more effective so we can make more sales.”
Upon further investigation I’m able to conclude and share that while, yes, in fact the training process needs to be enhanced, they don’t have a training problem. All training would do is improve the things they’re doing, when their problem is that they’re doing the wrong things.
Imagine that you’re playing baseball and you’re up to bat. How likely would success be if I put a black curtain halfway or two-thirds of the way from the pitcher and you, the hitter? It would be virtually impossible, and no amount of training, coach or practice would provide much help.
That’s akin to the problem your sales efforts face today. Your customer has fundamentally changed how they learn, engage, discuss, review and purchase. This does not diminish the importance of salespeople in the process, nor (to counter the argument of many marketers) does this mean that buyers won’t talk to salespeople early in the process. It simply means the way your business goes to market must change to align with today’s world.
Your revenue generation system is only going to be as good (and consistent) as its weakest area. Sure, for short bursts of time you can overcome a weakness in one area, but it eats away on your growth structure and can actually make you weaker.
There are three areas to focus on for lead generation:
Seventy percent of qualified leads never end up buying from a company. An ineffective (or lack of) lead management process is the primary cause. Reeling in a lead is a lot like reeling in a fish. If you move to capture too quickly, you’ll often lose the “big catch.”
Here are the three areas to focus on for lead management.
B2B sales is a tough business today. What’s exciting is that these barriers actually represent a huge opportunity for those organizations that invest in and build their go-to-market structures. It’s no longer enough to simply be able to show up at a prospect’s door, tell a good story and through the sure will and determination of a sales rep or team, close the business.
So take a moment and give your sales structure a close look. Ask yourself if that structure is making it easier for you and your sales team to grow the business or not. If the answer’s not an absolute “YES!” (backed with data), then take the time and make it one. Your bottom line will be glad you did.