Categories
digital selling training Sales Enablement sales training Social Selling Social Selling Training

How To Choose The Right Sales Training Program

Now that most sales motions are happening digitally, it’s never been more important to invest in your team’s digital selling skills.

The easiest way to achieve this is by investing in a digital sales training program that will standardize and formalize the way your revenue team’s prospecting, account growth, and account retention efforts.

Your efforts to modernize the sales process should be supported by the entire organization, from the top-down. Everyone needs to be on board, from your revenue leaders down to your frontline sales reps. The sales training program you choose should also be integrated within your existing oversight and coaching framework.

This way, everyone in your sales team can properly receive the sales coaching and guidance that they would need to succeed.

Your organization’s leadership committee also needs to be involved. As this might be new information to them, they might not see the need for digital sales training. By involving them in the process, they can better understand why a digital sales transformation is necessary. 

But how can sales leaders choose the right sales training program for their organization?

What makes a good digital sales training program

There are dozens of sales training programs available for all types and sizes of businesses, focusing on different aspects of the sales process. With so many options available, choosing the right one for your team can be daunting.

Here are four criteria that you should consider when deciding on a digital sales training program for your organization.

A good digital sales training program…

1. Should Sufficiently Address Skills Gaps
To create a tangible impact in your organization, start by identifying the most prevalent sales skills and performance gaps that your revenue team is facing. This is how you can find opportunities to upskill the members of your revenue team. Here are some of the most common issues that should be addressed immediately:

  • Lack of communication skills: Communication is a two-way street. While most sellers are great at talking, not all sellers can listen well. The best salespeople actively listen to their prospects, asking intelligent questions and using both verbal and nonverbal means to get their customers to warm up to them. Low performers usually spend at least 70% of their calls and meetings speaking.
  • Lack of preparation for sales conversations: You’d be surprised at the number of sales representatives who go into sales calls and meetings without a back-up plan or even a specific objective. There are even sellers who take on calls without knowing anything about the prospect or how your product would specifically benefit the customer.
  • Lack of a prescriptive sales process: Your whole revenue team needs to be consistent when it comes to your sales process. You can’t have a seller skipping certain steps or adding unnecessary ones—that’s how they can miss important tasks like following up with leads or sending email sequences. Even the smallest inconsistency or inefficiency could affect your whole bottom line. 
  • Lack of social selling knowledge: While the term social selling is well-known, not all sellers are aware of the techniques and best practices it involves. They might know that LinkedIn can be used for networking and prospecting, but they don’t necessarily know how to do so. And if your organization doesn’t have a prescriptive process for social selling, it’s pretty much like the blind leading the blind. Which leads us to the next point…

2. Should Teach Social Selling Skills
In this age of digital networking, social selling is no longer optional, but a must-have. It’s an incredibly important skill set that drives actual pipeline and sales. And with pipeline creation being one of the most crucial aspects of the sales process, your team needs to utilize all tools and resources at their disposal.

3. Should Be Incorporated Into Your Existing Sales Process
Training wouldn’t produce results if it’s not aligned to your company’s goals, values, and strategy. That’s why the concepts that will be taught in your chosen sales training should be integrated into your existing sales process to make it more efficient and effective. A good digital sales training program should optimize your sellers’ style, adjusting specific actions for better results instead of dictating a non-negotiable list of things to do per situation.

4. Should Be Reinforced for Optimum Learning
Reinforcement of skills is also important, as long-term growth is rarely produced by one-time training. Learnings need to be applied, and tested, a feedback loop should be established, and sales managers should be able to provide coaching and mentorship.

Wrapping It Up

When it comes to your sales team’s performance, there’s always room for improvement. A good sales training program is necessary for developing your sellers’ skills, tapping into their expertise and talent to increase sales and profits, drive growth, and cultivate a high-performing work environment. 

While there’s no harm in investing in marketing, recruitment, or tools, companies shouldn’t forget about their current sales force—your most important asset and revenue-driver. By enabling your sellers’ transformation into high-performing salespeople, you’ll be better equipped to blast ahead of your competition.

Categories
Blog Sales Sales and Marketing sales cycles Sales Enablement sales for life Sales Leadership Sales Play sales strategy salespeople Social Selling Tools

Long Sales Cycles Require “Learning Paths” to Align the Buying Committee

Does your sales team have 6-18 months sales cycles? Is the buying committee involves 5-10 people on every customer transaction? Does it feel like your sales team needs to draw from everything they’ve learnt in The Challenger Sale, Customer Centric Selling, and Value Selling… insert sales methodology here?

Categories
Blog Sales Enablement

How To Make 2018 The Year of Sales Enablement

 

Categories
Blog Digital Selling Enterprise Sales Sales Enablement Sales Leadership

Global, Digital Buyer & Seller – don’t let geolocation or language be your excuse

Whether you like it or not, you can’t stop your buyer from learning.  They will learn using their peer networks, and/or they will conduct online research.  While they won’t buy a complex solution online like it’s Amazon Prime (the eternal excuse people use to not practice Social Selling is “my buyer doesn’t BUY on LinkedIn”), a PORTION of their buying journey will leverage digital insights, referrals and triggers.

As an excuse, you can argue with me that your buyer is not a digitally-savvy buyer today.  Perhaps it’s their industry like coal mining, or their geolocation like Mongolia… I get it.  BUT, you CAN’T argue with me that they’re becoming MORE digitally savvy.  Come on, whether it’s pressure from the next generation (Gen Z), or cultural changes with a mobile-first economy, digital is only intensifying.

The Definitive Guide to Social Selling for Leaders

Categories
Blog Digital Selling Enterprise Sales Sales Enablement Sales Leadership

5-minute Sales Leadership Round-up with Jen Holtvluwer @ Cherwell Software

After 6 years, +300 customer engagements, and meeting countless sales and marketing leaders in my travels, I’ve seen the GREAT, the bad, and the ugly when it comes to sales and marketing initiatives and leadership.  Leaders have been asking me for tactical soundbites from the strong leaders I’ve met that are inspiring, change agents, and all-around great people to work with.

Based on that popular requests, I welcome you to follow my new series of blogs and video interviews dedicated for senior sales and marketing executives.  This is the first of the series.

The Definitive Guide to Social Selling for Leaders

Categories
Blog Digital Selling Enterprise Sales Sales Enablement Sales Leadership

Where Do You Fit On The Digital Maturity Curve?

Digial Maturity Curve

You can argue with me by saying “my customer is not on social media platforms, and isn’t terribly digital in consuming content”.  The reality is some sales leaders believe that the digital evolution will never effect their business.  You CAN also argue with me that social selling or digital selling is not a proactive thing in your industry, or your country, right now…

The Definitive Guide to Social Selling for Leaders

Categories
Blog Sales Enablement

How to Win Clients and Influence Prospects with Sales Enablement

With sales representatives’ success rates taking a downward turn over the last five years, many sales professionals have wondered what the solution is. When social selling and digital selling paradigms have done so much to propel sales growth, the question becomes more concerning. Why are sales representatives’ quota attainment levels falling?

{{cta(‘9b0c5556-6b51-48a8-9b22-fccc97007076’)}}

Categories
Blog Sales Enablement Social Selling Training

Proving the Business Value of Sales Enablement with Metrics

prove-business-value-saas

While sales enablement is a relatively new concept in the history of sales, it’s quickly become a critical component to many SaaS and enterprise businesses. Sales enablement does just that – it enables sales teams to be more efficient, more productive, and thus more profitable.

Categories
Blog Sales Enablement Sales Management sales training

Dynamic Training Is Turbocharging Sales in 2018

dynamic-training-sales

What do personalization tech, social networks and content portals all have in common? User-directed action. All three represent the large-scale culture shift away from undifferentiated, mass-market broadcasting and toward greater individual control over the speed, form and scope of content they interact with on a daily basis.

Categories
Blog Content Marketing Sales Enablement Social Selling

Effective Sales Enablement Requires Tighter Alignment Around Value Messaging

enablement-alignment-messaging

Sales reps ask for more content, yet the content already created by product teams, marketing and sales enablement groups seems to sit there taking up server space and offering zero action. Some research indicates that up to 65 percent of the content created for sales teams is going to waste. Why?