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Jan 09 2011

Success Factors For A Sales Training Initiative By Dave Kurlan

Published by Jonathan Farrington at 12:39 pm under General

The JF Guest Author Post

If your company is about to begin a sales development initiative, do you know the factors that will determine its eventual success or failure? There are many and ultimately, like most systems and processes, they are only as good as the weakest link.

Sales Force Evaluation – if you don’t begin with this comprehensive look at the people, systems, processes and strategies of your sales organization, it would be like building a home without first knowing the size and location of the land, its proximities to utilities, designing the home, having a blueprint, knowing the local zoning laws, and having a budget! Think about the nightmare you would be in store for…You have questions, questions, questions and the sales force evaluation provides answers, answers, answers.

Sales Infrastructure – you must have a formal, structured, optimized sales process in place PRIOR to training your salespeople. Strategies, tactics and competencies are only as good as the process being followed. You must also have a staged, criteria based sales pipeline with metrics, customized for each salesperson, so that everyone knows exactly how many opportunities, and of what potential size, must be in each stage at any given point in time. From the pipeline requirements, metrics that drive results must be developed for each salesperson.

Sales Recruiting – assuming that not all of your salespeople are A’s and B’s, you must replace the C’s that can’t be saved, and possibly the B’s who can’t become A’s so that you have the right people in the right roles before training begins.

Sales Management  – must be developed, trained and coached so they can coach their salespeople to the training that will be provided and hold them accountable to both the application of that training and coaching, as well as the metrics that were developed.

Sales Training – assuming that the four points above have effectively been executed, now you can begin training your salespeople. Still more factors must be considered….

Methodology – it must be easy to remember, intuitive and easy to apply. It must also deal with both Customer 2.0 and Sales 2.0 issues.

Course Curriculum – this is much less important than any of the other factors yet executives often want to make this the key factor. It’s not.

The Company – of course you want the company to be reputable and have an excellent track record, and they must have the resources to handle the size of your organization.

The Trainer – he or she must be able to perform the following additional factors:
1. Help people to leave their comfort zones
2. Provide assignments and hold people accountable
3. Communicate with the sales management team about progress
4. Get your people engaged
5. Get your people excited
6. Get your people committed to change
7. Make a case for the process
8. Clearly explain the strategies and tactics in the process
9. Make it enjoyable and entertaining
10. Feed by spoon rather than fire hose
11. Role Play
12. Challenge people

Out of all of the factors above, if I had to pick the single one that makes or breaks the effectiveness of the trainer, it would come down to their ability to role-play as a means of demonstrating how a sales conversation should take place. The role-play must be repeatable, real-world, question-based and relevant. No tricks, hokey techiques that only work in seminars, or one-liners that can’t be used with a real prospect. It must sound completely conversational and the trainer must be able to go back and break-down, question for question, what took place in the role-play.

While ALL of the factors in today’s article are crucial for a successful sales training/sales development initiative, if you get them all right and the trainer can’t effectively role-play the salesperson’s part of any scenario, with any salesperson, at any time, in any phase of the sales process, with any type of prospect, you have dramatically increased the chances that you wasted money on sales training.

Dave Kurlan is a top-rated speaker, the best-selling author of Baseline Selling, and a leading expert on Sales Force Development. He is the founder and CEO of Objective Management Group, Inc., the leading developer of sales assessment tools. He is also the CEO of Kurlan & Associates, Inc., a leading sales force development firm. Web: http://www.objectivemanagement.com/ More

5 responses so far

5 Responses to “Success Factors For A Sales Training Initiative By Dave Kurlan”

  1. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by JobShoots and others. JobShoots said: Success Factors For A Sales Training Initiative By Dave Kurlan http://bit.ly/fyLpYr #news #sales [...]

  2. Al Turrision 09 Jan 2011 at 2:54 pm

    David, you are dead on. When people are not feeling well they will go to a doctor to find out what is wrong. They will submit to questions from the nurse, doctor and go through many tests to determine what is wrong so they can have the correct procedure and get to a better level of health.

    No person in their right mind would submit to a doctor who wanted to do surgery without having the patient go through a series of tests to identify what was really wrong and determine what needed to be done to insure a cure.

    Some business owners with sales forces that are not hitting quotas, not prospecting consistently, submitting quotes without qualifying business opportunities properly, will want to skip the evaluation process are go into surgery.

    These are the business owners who will tell you they tried this and that and it didn’t work. They fail to see it didn’t work because the cure they purchased was not appropriate to the situation.

    If business owners approached growing and developing their companies within a medical context and following your recommendations they would have better results when looking for solutions to their businesses and sales problems.

  3. Leanne Hoagland-Smithon 09 Jan 2011 at 9:12 pm

    Your article points to the need to align sales training to the overall organization. The 5 star model by Jay Galbraith is one such tool to help in that alignment. No longer is sales training a one time event, but is an integrated process to move the organization to that next level.

  4. The Touriston 15 Jan 2011 at 10:18 am

    Enjoyed reading/following your page.Please keep it coming. Cheers!
    watch the tourist online

  5. Chamaleonon 08 Sep 2011 at 5:07 pm

    Nice page!
    Chamaleon recruitment agency in London.

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