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8 Training Tips for Effective Banking Sales Training

Posted by Jeni Wehrmeyer on Fri, Jun 23, 2023

There is no greater benefit than hearing from a client how they are implementing a sales development program in their bank and their culture. We recently had the benefit of 45 minutes of input from one of our valued banking clients and learned how they are building their team of successful, relationship building bankers.

Certainly, we are helping this leader with our Sales Managed Environment and Effective Selling System sales tactics, but the program is also flourishing due to their strong leadership.

Here are some of their key areas of focus.

  • Sales development is for everyone, even the senior bankers. It might be important to treat them differently, provide options and flexibility but greatness is achieved by always learning so top performers must actively participate in sales training.
  • Why be good, when you can be great? That is an underlying and consistent theme that drives the development efforts and generates engagement of the bankers. Who does not want to be part of a great team?
  • Sales training must be bank-wide, all lines of business are in for a successful bank sales team. The same language must be spoken and an easy-to-follow sales process must be used consistently for bankers to leverage opportunities and bring in partners.
  • Sales development is a capital investment and should be positioned and reported as such. This bank reports quarterly on the number and dollars of deals in the pipeline vs year prior as well as improved “pull through rate” which is number of sales compared to deals entering the pipeline.
  • Use Big Math for coaching. The data does not lie and it takes the personal out of the conversation. Of course, banks must collect the right data in order to do that including outreaches, appointments, opportunities, presentations, approvals and deals closed. This data will tell a seasoned coach in which areas their bankers need to improve.
  • Leverage small group training even though it may be more time intensive or costly, it is worth it. Small group training allows bankers to be more comfortable in front of others in role play. This leader said they practice until the banker no longer feels like “throwing up on their shoes.” That is what gets them to greatness as well as having senior leadership actively present.
  • Clear out the BS in the pipeline with regular 30 and 60 day reviews and personal coaching. Do not let the pipeline carry dead weight. This will help the pipeline be more predictive of future success as well as flush out the potential need for more prospecting activity on the part of the banker.
  • One way to make the pipeline more real is to require Opportunity Memos on those deals that are in middle to end stages of the pipeline. This memo clarifies the prospect qualifies on the many scorecard attributes identified by the bank.

These days, banking is in the news and the positive side of that is many bank clients are reaching out to their banks to ask questions, explore options, get better rates and feel more secure. This may take banking out of its commodity state of years past and allow for bankers to differentiate and engage their clients and prospects in a new way.

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Topics: Sales Training, banking sales training, sales training tips

The Best Advice Sales Managers Can Give to Help Increase Sales

Posted by Tony Cole on Fri, May 19, 2023

In this blog article, we discuss the best advice sales managers can give their salespeople, and that is to "keep moving."  If you want to increase sales within your organization, you must keep moving throughout the ups and downs, the missed opportunities, the clients who "ghost" you, and more.

No one ever said that consultative selling or sales coaching would be easy, but you must motivate your team to keep moving and to see the bigger picture.

I met Al several years ago at my health club while we were playing early morning tennis with a group of 6 others. At the age of 57, I was the youngest in the group.  I played regularly with this group for about a year and as I honed my tennis skills, I would come home and brag to Linda about how my partner and I crushed the other team that morning. 

One morning, I think she had heard enough and wanted to know more about the competition I was playing. After all, I had only been playing tennis for just over a year. She and I would hit balls on a local tennis court so she knew my game really wasn’t that good. It was either I kept drawing great partners or the competition was suspect.

In the spirit of full transparency, I will go through some of the competitors I crushed. 

  • Frank – 72 years old, arthritis in a hip and bad feet from early childhood development issues
  • Bill – 70 - recovering from his 2nd by-pass surgery
  • Ron – 68 retiree with a bad back, hip replacement and vision issues
  • Chuck – 71 – braces on both knees
  • Jim – The best of the lot, 69 but in good shape
  • Jim – Former military, 72, recovering from hip and back surgery
  • Al – At the time Al was 89 and a retired man of medicine

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The jig was up and my story had been exposed.  I was competing against the walking wounded you might see in a 4th of July Parade playing a flute, carrying a flag, and playing a drum.  In reality, they were quite good tennis players who tolerated my lack of skill with great humor.  They often took advantage of me as a result of my lack of talent and experience as well.

I ran into Al just last week and that is when I learned the best advice any manager could give a sales team.  Both Al and I had just finished working out. I was walking through the locker room as he was getting ready to leave. I don’t see Al as often as I used to, so when I do, I always take some time to chat with him and ask him about his life.

Tony – Al, how are you doing my friend?

Al – I’m doing alright, can’t complain, you know just getting in a workout and heading home.  Doing pretty good though.

Tony – You look great Al.

Al – Well I just keep moving.  I figure if I keep moving, I’ll be alright.  I can still walk 3 miles with no problem.  I work out on the elliptical.  But I’m losing my memory.  I’m sorry, I don’t remember your name.

Tony – It’s Tony.

Al – I just can’t remember things like I used to and you know what that means…. ( silence of acknowledgement).  By the time I get upstairs, I won’t remember your name.

Tony – That’s okay Al.  Are you still driving?

Al – Sure!

Tony – Al, how’s your wife? 

Al - She’s fine, just fine.  She’s the young one.

Tony – You are my hero, my inspiration to just keep moving.  Thanks. Can I give you a hug.

Al – Sure

Tony – Thanks Al,  Great to see you,  you take care of yourself and I’ll see you again soon.

Al – Okay.

Al is 97 and his wife is 95.  They survived the Holocaust and continue to thrive today. They thrive today because they are both committed to this one piece of great advice that all sales managers must provide to their sales team - Just Keep Moving.

When salespeople or sales teams fail, it is a result of one or both of two things:  Effort and/or Execution. 

As I’ve been teaching and coaching in our Sales Managed Environment program for years now...

Effort Requires No Skill

To Al’s point, more than half the battle of surviving and thriving is this; Just Keep Moving.  Keep calling prospects, keep meeting with them, keep inquiring about the business those prospectsrun, keep asking powerful and insightful questions, keep finding out if there is anything you can do to help someone achieve their objectives, and more.

But everything starts with effort. And effort starts with the will to just keep moving.

Thanks Al for the lesson!

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Topics: sales conversations, sales effectiveness training, banking sales training, professional sales training, consultative sales coaching, corporate sales training, sales force performance management, social selling, online sales training, politics, hire better people, insurance sales training, brand video, train the trainer, driving sales growth 2020, 5 keys to sales coaching, handles rejection, online sales management training, sales training workshops, sales training seminars, sales team evaluation, keys to selling success, keys to selling

March Madness and the Search for Pipeline Predictability

Posted by Tony Cole on Fri, Mar 31, 2023

Today's topic: March Madness, the ongoing search for bracket and sales pipeline predictability. The March Madness tournament can be somewhat predictable, but upsets are expected. In the world of sales forecasting, you have the same problem! 

Transcript:

Hello, everyone. Tony Cole here. Thanks for letting me into your day once again. My topic: March Madness, The ongoing search for bracket and sales pipeline predictability. Good luck with that, right?

The NCAA tournament for men's and women's basketball is somewhat predictable, but upsets are expected. Just take a moment to consider this year men's and women's brackets. 13 seat Furman beats number 4 Virginia. 15 Beats Arizona, number four and seven, Missouri. Not to be outdone, number 16 Fairleigh Dickinson from New Jersey beats number one Purdue. And there were others on the women's side, number eleven, Mississippi State beats number six, Creighton, number, I think was eight, ole Miss beats number one, Stanford. And on the bottom 66, Florida Gulf Coast beats number five Washington State.

The predictive data would have suggested that you would not have picked those or bet on those teams to win. Over the two days of 32 games in each tournament, you would have predicted 16 teams would eventually win. That would be 100% certain. That is a valid prediction. Predicting the exact 16 teams would be more of a challenge and less credible because of upsets. And this year's upsets proved that premise. In the world of sales forecasting, you got kind of the same problem.

Predicting future revenue and based on sales is critical. As an example, many companies the first quarter of the year is normally a good predictor of how sales will play out for the balance of the year. Two other predictors to consider that you ought to have, should have, so on and so forth, are pipeline and sales activity. You ought to have those two pieces of data. I hate to assume, but assuming you track your pipeline, if you do, you should look at two other sub data points.

Number one, pipeline validity. In other words, if a 90 day pipeline predicted $100,000 in sales. Did $100,000 in sales actually show up? How valid was the number? And then there's pipeline credibility. Did the predicted opportunities actually close? So company A, B and C were predicted to close and be part of that 100,000. Did A, B and C actually close? Or did you get A, B, and R? Right? Did the predicted opportunities close or were there some upsets that you weren't predicting? Now the upsets on the plus side are good. Upsets, on the downside, not so good.

Tracking these two data points helps you as a manager minimize the opportunity for salespeople to flood the pipeline just so it appears that they have enough activity to hit their goal. And it also weeds out some of those kind of hold things back the sandbaggers until those things actually close. Sales activity is a leading indicator, so let's talk about that. It should be based on a success formula So that each salesperson team knows two very important things. Those two things are effort needed in their prospecting and outreach activity, and two, their effectiveness. How effective are they from one step to the next step in the sales process? You see, when salespeople fail to hit their goal, fail to hit objectives, it can only be because one or two contributing factors the effort wasn't there or the execution wasn't there to help your people close more business, more. Quickly at better margins.

You must provide them this kind of business intelligence so that they can accurately predict and you can accurately predict their likelihood of success. I know this sounds like micromanaging, but I'm a fan of Jim Collins, who states, there's no such thing as micromanaging. You're either managing or you're not managing. As a sales manager, we tell our clients and our sales development expert program our sales.

As we tell sales managers who participate as we tell sales managers who participate in our Sales Managed Environment certification program, their job is to lead, manage and coach. If you don't manage activity, then coaching to improve skills and change behavior is nearly impossible and effective at best. There's your message for today. Enjoy the rest of your day and the tournaments. As always, thank you.

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Topics: Sales Management Training, Leadership Skills, banking sales training

Selling Value Without Selling, Part 3: THE SOLUTION!

Posted by Tony Cole on Fri, Mar 24, 2023

In part 1, I gave you a sample of how the ‘selling value’ discussions sounds.  Here it is again.

Prospect: Why should I do business with you or your bank / company?

Sample traditional response:  Because we bring a value added approach to our relationships. We do more than just get you great rates on loans and deposits. We approach your business from a ‘trusted advisor’ approach. We work hard to understand what your overall objectives are and then search to find solution to help you achieve those objectives. Our staff focuses specifically on the agriculture segment. We have a combined 135 years of experience. Our bank has the biggest market share in this area and our branches are conveniently located throughout your footprint, we have extended hours of operation and our on-line banking deliverable is second to none. If you are looking to work with a bank that can do those things, has that kind of focus, then I’d like to show you, and tell you more about how we can help you and your business grow and prosper.

Here is a sample of how someone might respond if they are ‘positioning’ value.

Prospect: Tony, why should I do business with you and your company?

Tony:  I know this may sound strange but maybe you shouldn’t. We really haven’t gotten too deep into your business. I don’t even know your business objectives or priorities. I don’t know the challenges you face that might be unique to you and your business. It would be arrogant of me to assume we should do business. But, maybe the best way for us to figure out any potential business relationship is engage in a conversation that I have with many business owners the first time we meet. Okay?

Key Take away: Prospects are used to salespeople telling them why they – the prospect – should buy from them.  When a sales person says, ‘maybe you shouldn’t’, the prospect is hearing something that they NEVER hear from a salesperson thus accomplishing the goal of: Don’t look, act or sound like a sales person. It’s one thing to have a marketing piece that touts your organization’s uniqueness, differentiators from the competition, it’s another to have people on your team that truly are unique in their approach.

Prospect continues: Sure, where should we start?

Tony: It may not be the case with you, but with many ag business owners / operators have come to me with questions / problems with the following:

(keep in mind that you MUST understand your target market so well that you can verbalize EXACTLY the problems / concerns prospective clients deal with seasonally or year round. Then you must use that deep domain knowledge as part of the conversation with new prospects)

1. Maintaining or Growing the margin between receivables and accounts payable.

2. Making sure that their financials are strong so that when required they can get access to cash on a costs favorable and timely basis

3. Have solutions that help them grow or maintain a sustainable or scalable business.

When you take those moments at the end of the day, week or month and think about your business which of these three, margins, strong financials, sustainable / scalable business is top of mind or close to it?

Key take away: When a salesperson is attempting to position value they do so via the questions they ask. They do so by telling stories – working with my other clients.  They demonstrate their expertise not by telling the prospect they are experts in cash flow analysis, business transition strategies or providing favorable terms and conditions for specific equipment leasing or land purchase.  No, they demonstrate the expertise by asking questions.

Prospect continues:  At this point you can assume a prospect will react one of two ways:

1.     They will pick one of the three items or,

2.     They will share with you another one that happens to be top of mind.

A strong qualifier/ value seller will weave into the conversation questions, comments, stories analogies and metaphors that tie into the problem the prospect identified. It is critical that you become awesome at story telling because story telling leads to right brain – emotional – thinking. And that is the side of the brain that makes decisions. The framework for the discussion would follow a planned script rather than a canned script.  It might look something like this.

Prospect saysMy biggest concern is making sure my business is sustainable and scalable. If I don’t do that, 1 or 2 things will happen. We’ll either go out of business or get bought by someone bigger and I’ll be working for someone else.

Tony:

  • Tell me more about that.
  • How long have you thought about that, or how long has this been going on?
  • Is that a problem?  Why?
  • What have you done to try to fix it in the past?
  • I know you have a banker, what have they done, what have other advisors attempted to do to address this.
  • Let me ask you a question:  When they suggested a solution that would do A, B and C.  What happened?  (You are counting on an answer that sounds something like):

Prospect:  No one has brought something like that to my attention.

Tony:  I wonder why?

Key take away: When you ask, “I wonder why”, the prospect will be wondering the same thing. This, is what Randy Schwantz calls creating a wedge.

This dialog would last probably 20 to 30 minutes of the prospect sharing experiences that have or have not happened because of the current relationship.  This would eventually lead an elite salesperson asking this question:

Tony: Suppose there was a solution, suppose we could do for you what I’ve done for others in this situation? What would happen next?

Key take aways:

  • STOP selling VALUE.
  • START gaining clarity on what your target market VALUES.
  • Learn how to start the conversation so that your prospect talks instead of you.
  • Have a framework for your dialog that starts with a question, provides accurate possible answers, and then allows for a framework beginning with, so that it starts with “tell me more about that”, and ends with “suppose there was a solution”.

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Selling Value Without Selling: Part 2

Posted by Tony Cole on Fri, Mar 17, 2023

What your salespeople must ‘have’ to be successful at uncovering value.

From a sales strategy and process perspective, positioning value not only requires a great VALUE PROPOSITION but also supporting Will to Sell, Sales DNA, and Sales Competencies.

Using data from just one of our dozens of community bank clients, this is what we found out about top 25% of the team vs the bottom 25% of the team.     

First and foremost, longevity may have some impact, but consider that the average years of service for the top 10 was 25.22 years the bottom 10% still had significant years of service of an average of 18.44 years.  Do you really expect someone with 18 years experience to be outperformed by an average of 4 to 1?

The top 10% outperform, are better at, and are more likely to execute than the bottom 10% in the following areas.

  • 69% more committed to succeed in selling – willing to do everything possible to succeed assuming legal, ethical and moral standards
  • 41% more comfortable discussing money issues
  • 46% better at qualifying prospects
  • 50% better at asking questions
  • 100% better at getting introductions to new prospects.
  • 75% better at getting a real budget
  • 44% better at positioning the companies value proposition
  • 80% better at protecting margins (selling value)

In addition to these findings, our own personal experience in talking to, role playing, and during pre- and post-call debriefing sessions during 1 on 1 coaching sessions, we find the following to also be true:

Top sales people understand the value of telling stories, using analogies and proof of concept examples.

  • They pre-call plan and prepare
  • They post-call debrief to make sure they covered all the steps in their sales approach
  • They ask the right questions, the right way at the right time AND if they find that they missed a question they do NOT hesitate to re-engage with the prospect to get closure on open items.

Year in and year out, continue to scratch their head trying to figure out why:

  • Sales growth is such a struggle
  • The sales team pushes back when ‘new goals’ are established
  • How to protect margins and pricing strategies
  • How to flatten the performance bell curve so the success of hitting the sales goal doesn’t continue to fall on the backs of the few 

Some of the answers to those questions can be answered by understanding the make up of your sales team. Additionally, companies that we work with have bought into the idea that spending money on sales training without investing in a solid approach to a ‘Sales Managed Environment’ is a waste of money, time and resources.

The sales leadership and sales management team must be capable of positioning, teaching, and coaching sales people the concept of selling value instead of just telling them to sell value.  The recruiting effort and the development effort of the company must address items that you see in the chart below.

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Let me close part II of this three part series with this:

There hasn’t been a single company that we’ve worked with for 30 years that has a strategy to be the low cost provider, beat the competitors price to win deals, and compete with a commodity mindset or go-to market strategy. No one’s strategy is:

  • We are the most expensive solution you can find
  • Our people aren’t very good at what they do
  • Our service model is terrible.
  • We hope you buy from us

No, not a single client or prospect we’ve talked to approaches the market with those bullet points. EVERYONE is talking about

  • We value our customers
  • We are competitively priced
  • Our people go out of their way to make sure you are 100% satisfied
  • Our people are well trained and ready to serve
  • Our product offerings are top shelf, best in class and guaranteed

So if everyone in your market is pitching the same pitch how do you differentiate yourself.  Be ready for part III. But be really ready because it WILL require a changing in thinking and doing which will require a change in coaching, training, behaviors and skills.

Free STAT finder to help me understand if my people, my team has what it takes to execute our outbound sales strategy

Can’t wait for part III? Need to talk to someone now? Call or text me (513) 226-3913

 

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Topics: Sales Management Training, Leadership Skills, banking sales training


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    About our Blog

    Anthony Cole Training Group has been working with financial firms for close to 30 years helping them become more effective in their markets and closing their sales opportunity gap.  ACTG has mastered the art of using science-based data and finely honed coaching strategies to help build effective sales teams.  Don’t miss our weekly sales management blog insights from our team of expert contributors.

     

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