I started this series of articles by relating my experience coaching football to selling. It is my goal now each week to focus in on one of the 9 football related tools that can be applied to selling.
Our first, the practice schedule, is one of the most important tools used by football teams. Overall, practice is an essential contributing factor to success on the football field.
It is important to note that, in football:
- Understanding your opponent is critical
- Reviewing practice and game performance is needed
- A team has to have a solid strategy in all aspects of the game
- Great athletes must be able to make game time adjustments and decisions
- And yes, an occasional good bounce can be additive
At the end of the day, however, improving skills, practicing the game plan, and getting feedback from the practice sessions are crucial for success!
4 Minute Practice Makes Perfect Video
But back in the day, before I retired from coaching, we used to have 30 practice sessions before each game. Each session was at least 2 hours. For every hour on the field, there was at least 1 hour in the classroom and at least 1 hour of film study or playbook study. This was all for about 8-10 minutes of actual action on the field.
How much time are you spending practicing to improve your sales management skills? How much time are you spending coaching your people to improve their craft? And don’t tell me:
- We hire / I have experienced people
- We hire adults — we expect them to do what they need to do to get better
- I’ve been at this for 20+ years, I think I know what I’m doing
Tell that to the greatest coaches of any sport in the game and they will tell you how wrong you are to believe that experience, or years in the profession, means that less time is needed in practice.
Tell that to Tom Brady.
Now let’s talk about practice as a sales productivity tool.
Malcom Gladwell’s oft quoted “10,000 hours” of practice to become expert in a skill may in fact be more of a platitude than a fact. What appears to be a fact is that there are contributing factors to practice that are connected to competency and eventual expertise in a skill.
One of those contributing factors is a feedback loop: “A feedback loop [provides]…the necessary information for adaptive measures to achieve the desired levels of teaching and learning objectives.” Brunel University Study
At Anthony Cole Training Group, we have delivered workshops and focus on the concept of an ideal week in all of our training programs. To support the ideal week, we help our clients develop their ideal week. Within that ideal week is time allocated for practice. Regardless of the outcome of the "10,000 hours" debate, there is no debate about implementing practice as a requirement to improve a skill or performance across the board.
What should practice look like?
Your practice should include the following sales practice components: Drill for Skill, Role-Playing and Strategy Development. To accomplish these exercises, you should have pre and post call checklists as well as phone call scorecards and data from your sales huddles. All of these data points act as ‘video’ of how you or your people are actually performing. Using the data and real time information allows you to make your coaching and practice sessions more intentional.
To find out more about the ideal week and other tools we offer, visit our Sales Productivity Tools resource below:
https://blog.anthonycoletraining.com/sales-productivity-tools
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For those of you that like to do the research on the research:
Practice Makes Perfect – Science Daily
Deliberate Practice – Business Insider
How To Learn any Skill With Your Own Weekly Plan – Kayla Mathews MUO Blog Post