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Top Five Ways of Becoming a Better Sales Coach
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| Guest post by: Colleen Stanley |
Article Overview: Sales Managers execute several roles and wear many hats: manager, trainer and coach. These multiple roles can create challenges for some sales managers. Where should they invest their time? Should it be in attending internal meetings? Analyzing reports? Training and coaching the sales team? If you are serious about hitting and exceeding your revenue goals for 2012, invest your time in training and coaching your sales team. (It makes analyzing reports a whole lot more fun when the numbers are in the black.)
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Top Five Ways of Becoming a Better Sales Coach
Sales Managers execute several roles and wear many hats: manager,
trainer and coach. These multiple roles can create challenges for some
sales managers. Where should they invest their time? Should it be in
attending internal meetings? Analyzing reports? Training and coaching
the sales team? If you are serious about hitting and exceeding your
revenue goals for 2012, invest your time in training and coaching your
sales team. (It makes analyzing reports a whole lot more fun when the
numbers are in the black.)
Sales managers may have attended
sales training courses on their journey to mastering the art and science
of sales. How many sales managers have attended training and coaching
courses to learn how to transfer the skills that made them a top
producer? In the words of Jack Welch, former CEO of GE, "Before you
are a leader, success is all about growing yourself. When you become a
leader, success is all about growing others.
We have found the
best sales managers make the leap from producer to teacher. If you
can't teach and grow others, you are doomed to be the major rainmaker
versus a sales leader.
Here are five tips to help you grow your sales team.
#1: Know when to train and know when to coach.
Training is telling and imparting knowledge. Coaching is asking
questions to make sure that the knowledge landed in the salesperson's
gray matter. When a sales manager identifies a performance issue, they
usually go into training mode, telling and teaching the salesperson a
sales technique or concept one more time. The problem may not be about
selling skills. In working with sales teams for over a decade, we have
found that salespeople know what to do, however, don't execute selling
skills because they don't believe it works or it make them
uncomfortable.
It's time to take off the training hat and put on
the coaching hat. Ask questions that help change the salesperson's
paradigms and beliefs. Presumptive questions are a great coaching tool
for shifting perspective.
For example, "When you asked the
prospect how much the problem was costing, what did she say? When you
shared with the prospect that you couldn't put together a recommendation
until you met with the CFO, what did he say?" The answers from the
salesperson range from, "I can't ask that question" or "I forgot." A
couple of good follow-up coaching questions are:
- What makes you believe that? Is that perception or real data?"
- What is the reason is that you keep forgetting? Is it knowledge or comfort zone?
- What will you do differently the next time?
#2: Document your sales process. If you don't have a defined sales process, you don't have anything to train, coach or inspect.
Many companies state that have a defined sales process, however, there is no written documentation such as key questions to ask during the sales process, value propositions, gaps in the competitors offering or common objections.
Some sales managers respond with the excuse, "I hire people with ten years experience....they should know how to sell." Have you heard of something called the NFL? They hire players with years of experience and pay them millions of dollars to play. The NFL wouldn't dream of a team showing up to a game without working from a common playbook. They know a playbook allows a football team to sit down, review the films and see where they executed well and where they fell short. The players can debrief the game because they have a process to compare, analyze and improve against. Without a defined sales process, a sales manager is forced to debrief 10 different playbooks with very average results.
#3: Eliminate fire hose training. Training is often delivered through an impact training model: two days or two weeks of training with NO reinforcement. Effective sales managers know that reinforcement coaching and training allows the sales manager to take her team from:Unconscious incompetent (don't know what they don't know) to
- Conscious incompetent (they know they don't know) to
- Conscious competent (they know how) to
- Unconscious competent (the salesperson is masterful)
- Developing and delivering customized value propositions for various buyers
- Quantifying the cost of the problem or opportunity
- Ask impact questions
#4: Prioritize your time. There are the corporate meetings to attend, reports to analyze and of course, investing time with the team. If you want to grow revenues in 2012, make training and coaching your number one priority.
A successful sales manager in Denver, Colorado, invests one hour each week with 16 direct reports. Is it difficult for him to find the time to meet with his team and balance all the other responsibilities on his plate? Yes. Did his sales team grow revenues 20% in a flat market and competitive market? Yes. Time is a limited asset. Choose to invest it wisely.
#5: Stretch your team. You signed up for leadership and part of that responsibility is stretching your sales team. Push salespeople out of comfort zones by following Eleanor Roosevelt's quote, "Do one thing every day that scares you." Call on that prospect you've been avoiding. Ask the tough questions during a sales call. Insist on excellence and don't allow your sales team to settle for being average. Vince Lombardi, the legendary football coach said, "If you settle for nothing less than your best, you will be amazed at what you can accomplish in your life." Related Articles
Article Tags: business development consulting, colleen stanley, consultative sales training, emotional intelligence, referral strategies, sales development, sales leadership, sales management training, sales training
Referred by: http://www.page1solutions.com
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About the Author: Colleen Stanley RSS for Colleen's articles - Visit Colleen's website Colleen Stanley is president of SalesLeadership, Inc., a business development firm specializing in sales and sales management training. Colleen is a monthly columnist for Business Journals across the country, author of 'Growing Great Sales Teams' and co-author of 'Motivational Selling.' Her new book, ‘Emotional Intelligence and Sales Success' will be released in fall of 2012. You can reach her at 303-708-1128. Click here to visit Colleen's website 3 Ways to Create Elite Sales Cultures Intent The 1 Factor to Increase Sales Results Something Old and Something New Apply Both for Sales Success Top Three Mistakes Made in Selecting Referral Partners Think Like a CEO |
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