If you are not in the acquisition business, then you must develop your talent. One of the keys to doing that is to understand how to drive sales improvement.
You must determine what is really happening with your salespeople when they fail to acquire a new piece of business.
First, to address the importance of coaching in sales, sales coaching is an essential part of a successful sales team for many reasons.
Good sales coaching helps their reps improve their performance through feedback and repetition which means reps can work on improving specific areas of expertise that need more attention than others.
Also, good sales managers can pinpoint any progress or issues with process improvement projects in order to better coach their sales teams' needs.
A good sales coach is able to build long-lasting relationships with their direct reports.
They demonstrate empathy, which in turn creates a more personal connection and sets the tone for success, and puts their rep's success and wellbeing above all else.
This in return, creates a deeper connection with your sales team and promotes a winning team culture that everyone can feel like they can succeed.
And with that mentality, more sales and better performance are likely to follow.
The key to coaching successful sales teams is focusing on the how not just telling someone what they're doing wrong.
When a good sales coach goes beyond pointing out little mistakes and instead gives them tools for long-term success by highlighting their strengths as well as areas where improvement could be made, this will provide a more productive environment in which everyone can work together towards achieving sales goals.
Here are the 5 steps you must take to help you determine if your people have skill issues or an excuse-making issue:
Companies are constantly trying to figure out how to drive organic growth by:
If you are not in the acquisition business, then you must develop your talent. One of the keys to doing that is to understand how to drive sales improvement. You must determine what is really happening with your salespeople when they fail to acquire a new piece of business. (See LinkedIn Article: What You Don't Know Can Kill Sales Growth)
Are your people just making excuses for failure or do they have deficits in the required sales competencies or will to sell?
To be successful in determining the real issues with your salespeople, you must have a system.
I read a blog the other day by Dave Kurlan. We’ve had a strong business partnership with Dave and his company OMG (Objective Management Group) for most of our 24 years in business. With OMG, we have the ability to determine the answer to the question – is it excuses or is it a talent issue?
Dave’s post - 12 Reasons They Didn’t Like You Enough To Buy From You – helps address some of the issues associated with “not getting the business”. It primarily focuses on the area of matching styles.
This got me thinking about the issue of “style” as it relates to talent, which relates to sales competencies and excuse-making. The challenge for the sales manager is determining if the reason a salesperson did not get the sale was really a talent issue, or if they are just making excuses for failing to execute the skills or sales process of the organization.
To determine the root cause of the results, a sales manager must work more closely with the relationship managers and implement a process that Bill Eckstom calls “intentional coaching”. This process of working closing with your RMs is addressed in our Sales Management Certification Program in the Coaching for Success Module
Implementing a process of gaining insight, providing feedback, demonstrating, role-playing and establishing action items will go a long way in helping your team discern the difference between making excuses for failure and the need for skill development.