Many companies monitor their pipeline opportunities with the use of a CRM in order to have information about the opportunities being created by the sales team. Companies want to know:
- The stage of the opportunities in the sales process
- Next steps to move the opportunities through the pipeline
- Likelihood of winning the business based
- Future sales revenue of all the opportunities in the pipeline
There are typically three challenges associated with the use of CRMs and pipeline management:
-
Validity – The true accuracy (validity) of the predictive nature of the CRM depends on ensuring that a milestone-centric sales process has been mapped and integrated into the CRM being used.
-
Credibility – Even if the right sales process is mapped and documented, there is still the element of GIGO—Garbage In, Garbage Out. If the sales team is entering opportunities into the pipeline just to appease management, without ensuring that the opportunities meet the criteria for each step in the sales process, companies will still face predictive problems with their pipeline. Furthermore, sales team engagement with using the CRM can often be a struggle.
-
Lack of helpful business intelligence – Entering data and obtaining raw numbers is one thing, but building the CRM for reporting that informs sales leaders on how salespeople are performing against their Sales Success Formula is another. Without comparative data, managers are merely monitoring activity without identifying whether there are problems in the process.
What a company should seek for sales process improvements are sales stage critical numbers and ratios, enabling sales managers to clearly and more accurately identify choke points in the sales process for each individual. Additionally, the data can and should inform managers and the organization if training and coaching are required to improve the sales team's effectiveness and results.
To make substantial sales process improvements, every company must invest in sales enablement tools, systems, and technology. However, data alone will not drive improvement. Solving these issues requires the following five steps:
-
Build a milestone-centric sales process that is part of the CRM and adhered to by the organization.
-
Create Sales Success Formulas for each salesperson based on their historical performance and agreed-upon sales goals. These formulas identify all the steps of the stage-based sales process and the sales team’s success in converting from one step to the next.
-
Monitor and update sales effort and execution data so that coaches can "catch issues early" for lead preservation and sales process improvements.
-
Use the data to develop intentional coaching strategies that help salespeople address specific challenges in either effort or execution.
-
Utilize metrics to measure success individually and collectively:
- Percentage of salespeople hitting effort targets (outreach)
- Percentage of salespeople improving conversion ratios at each step of the sales process
- Average sale increases
- Shifting the 80/20 rule to a 70/30 or 60/40 distribution
- Improved validity and credibility of pipeline predictions
- CRM adoption rates approaching or reaching 100%
Further validation: 87% of elite salespeople (the top 7%) follow a consistent and effective sales process, compared to only 20% of weak salespeople. To implement sales process improvements, start with these five steps.