Sales Enablement Can Prevent Success
I'm here at Dreamforce and Brent Adamson from CEB (now Gartner) opened the Quotable Sales Summit. He spoke on sales enablement... something that everyone needs to own within the enterprise. Sales Enablement, like Customer Experience, is something everyone is responsible for so that the process of finding and securing new clients, and retaining existing customers, works as seamlessly as possible.
Brent nailed his presentation and highlighted the fact that there is often an unintended consequence of 'sales enablement' where an increased burden on sellers inhibits success.
"Sales conversion / win rates have falled by 12% and the burden on sellers is growing and the research clearly shows that the help is not really helping at all." - Brent Adamson
CEB researched more than 2000 sellers and 40 heads of sales. 98% of sales leaders say they have increased the level of investment in sales resources in their business yet sellers have never struggled more as they drink from the firehose of sales enablement.
Here are the key findings from Brent with recommendations for anyone committed to creating effective sale environments.
76% of salespeople say that complexity of sales support is worse. In other words, their burden is higher.
Add to this that sellers believe product complexity is higher with 72% saying their solution set is growing and 37% have to customise for buyers.
The average number of live opportunities per B2B seller today is 27 and there are up to almost 7 stakeholders representing more than 3 parts of the customer's business. Thee are clearly more moving parts to consider: systems, people, product complexity, solution complexity, and customer complexity.
Yet from the seller's perspective, it's NOT the complexity in buyer organizations that creates the increased burden... 62% of complexity is from internal sources and 9% from product.... customer complexity barely rates at all when salespeople were asked!
Amazingly, sellers believe that 20% of stalled deals are stuck or lost because of factors within the seller's own organization. Clearly tripping over our own shoelaces is a real factor. Every leader should ask themselves how they can get out of their own way when it comes to sales enablement and sales execution!
Key conclusion: 'Supporting the sale' and 'supporting the seller' is not the same.
Here are key things to do according to Brent:
- Reduce internal complexity
- Streamline workflow
- Ease of resource navigation
- Focus selling support on those moments matter the most
- Less is more... ruthless simplification is the key to effective sales enablement
- Reduce distractions for sellers and ensure tools actually help sellers sell
An impressive and thought-provoking list but here is the most powerful point Brent made for me.
"Properly cost the time of sellers and properly account for the time that others seek from them. Protect thir precious time." - Brent Adamson
Creating world-class customer experience (CX) is a direct result of the experience you create for your employees. Salespeople are typically busy and stressed, wondering how to best prioritize their time, find what they need, and how to best progress the most important sales. Don't let others in your organisation take there time without good cause and without understanding the real cost.
"Creating a world-class Customer Experience (CX) depends very much on creating brilliant employee experience" - Brent Adamson
Calculate the cost of inane cadence calls at the end of the quarter where everyone has to dial-in just to hear others say: "Nothing has changed since yesterday." Seller time is expensive in terms of salary input cost but also in opportunity cost when they are taken away from productive selling activities.
Dreamforce has been brilliant. Make sure you plan to come to San Francisco next year!
I also cover these topics in my new book, COMBO Prospecting. If you valued this article, please hit the âlike' button and also share via your Twitter, LinkedIn, Google+ and Facebook social media platforms. I encourage you to join the conversation or ask questions so feel free to add a comment. Please also follow my LinkedIn post page for all my articles and visit my website at www.tonyhughes.com.au if you would like to engage me. Or www.RSVPselling.com for sales methodologies that generate pipeline and manage complex opportunities. main image from Dreamforce 2017 and courtesy of Salesforce.
CRO Enabler & Coach. Scaling Sales.
6yInteresting article and presentation. Focusing on the right things that will speed up the sale is key for sales teams and most importantly, the CUSTOMER! To fix these issues you have to think differently = b2b growth hacking your business at every customer touch-point.
Senior Partner & Practice Head @ Korn Ferry | Sales Transformation, Growth Strategy
7ySo true - 'Supporting the sale' and 'supporting the seller' is not the same.
Partnership Manager at VantagePoint
7yHaving experienced this at first hand I know only how frustrating, time wasting and, ultimately, costly this can be. Sales prevention unfortunately hides in many corners of the business from Risk & Compliance to Solution Design and everything in-between.
Hi Tony, thanks so much for sharing this. It is really helpful for those of us who aren't there. Ryan Paugh
Coaching sales leaders for Salesforce in APAC. Helping develop world class leaders to drive growth, multiply talent and be trusted partners to our customers. Co-lead of Sales Enablement Society Sydney chapter.
7yIt was an interesting perspective. I think what I took away from the presented research was that it was a lot of increasing product and internal complexity driving the seller burden - approvals up the sales hierarchy, supporting teams like pre-sales, legal, operations, alliances etc, as opposed to enablement activities that drive capability and sharpen the saw.