If You Want To Hit Your Revenue Goals For 2019, Sales Enablement Must Be A Top Priority
What’s driving this drop? It’s primarily changes in the buyer journey, the massive amount of information available to buyers and the continued inability of companies to adjust their sales process accordingly.
The way prospects behave isn’t going to change anytime soon, and it’s likely that buyers will take an even more active and independent approach to how they buy products and services. But that doesn’t mean business leaders can’t have a major impact on how their sales teams perform and how effective their company is at hitting its revenue goals.
One proactive step you should be taking is making sales enablement and alignment of the sales and marketing functions a top priority in 2019.
As a recent CSO Insights study shows, companies that aligned their sales process to the customer (buyer) journey achieved a 13.6% increase in quota attainment, and companies with a formal sales enablement charter saw an 10% increase in win rates on proposals submitted.
What’s behind this wave of sales enablement, and how can your company take advantage of this new trend?
Want to know what sales enablement is? A ton of articles define it. For one example, the research firm Aberdeen Group defines sales enablement as “a strategic alignment of resources and actions to produce effective, efficient sales operations.” It’s a little academic for me, but you get the general idea.
Our sales enablement practice lead, Matt Cook, describes sales enablement as a strategic customer-centric approach to improving and updating the technology, processes, knowledge and content that empower sales teams to help them sell more efficiently at a higher velocity.
This description is something we all can use. It highlights what can be done and the expected business outcomes.
When it comes to services, those are as diverse as the companies leveraging sales enablement to drive results. But on the surface, sales enablement services can be grouped into some high-level areas.
These sales enablement services represent 90% of what our sales enablement practice does with clients. While there are always additional requests for help like proposal development and pitch deck creation, these are the areas where sales enablement makes the biggest impact on your drive to hit your revenue numbers.
It’s a good question, and for a lot of you, it’s the right question. Most people think about sales enablement as the traditional sales training and sales coaching services you’ve been buying for years.
Every couple of months an outside sales trainer or sales consultant comes to the monthly sales meeting and provides training on using LinkedIn, asking better questions, using qualification techniques or networking at events.
Or perhaps to you it’s ongoing sales coaching for those reps who appear to have potential but are struggling to hit quota. This includes pre-call huddles, post-call huddles, weekly coaching on their sales activities for the week and so on.
When CSO Insights asked what sales enablement services they were using, 68.1% of respondents said training. However, 58.5% mentioned sales tools like value justification and ROI tools, while 52% said content services. For the first time in the history of their study, the top three services changed, indicating that sales enablement is changing too.
Coaching was mentioned by 50.9% of the respondents, while sales process improvements ranked as the fifth most popular sales enablement service. CRM/sales tech was mentioned by 37.3% of the respondents, an all-time high for their survey.
It makes sense to spend a little more time talking about a few of the areas above in much more detail, and content is one of those areas. The sheer amount of content and the use of content in marketing has tuned your prospects into expecting content from sales.
Their experience with content on the marketing side is expected to continue into sales. Just because there’s a handoff doesn’t mean they expect the experience to change.
You need to arm your sales team with a mountain of content, and that content needs to adhere to some of the same requirements we use when creating marketing content:
Traditional sales training and sales coaching do have a place. While the CSO Insights report is probably a little bit self-serving (CSO Insights is the research division of Miller Heiman Group, a sales training and sales coaching firm), providing ongoing sales training and giving reps access to regular sales coaching is going to make them better reps and improve their ability to hit their quotas.
From our perspective, sales training and sales coaching are more aligned with the changes to the sales process, the use of content, and salespeople’s ability to ask great questions and qualify prospects using any new qualification techniques. Regular training is always going to produce better results.
You can’t build a revenue generation machine that produces scalable, repeatable and predictable revenue growth month over month without technology and metrics. You just can’t do it.
You need platform technology like a CRM system, and you need data analytics dashboards to aggregate data and help you find the insights necessary to make changes to your process in real time.
But you also need automation tools to help your sales reps follow up with prospects, create a consistent experience and tell the same story regardless of rep.
Most importantly, you need to know your numbers up and down your revenue cycle. How many new inquiries or contacts do you need each month to hit your revenue goals based on your conversion rates all the way through your sales process? That is a number you should know.
When you do know it, how can you improve those conversion rates so that your sales execution is more efficient and productive? Basically, how can you do more with the leads you have instead of always looking for new leads?
Once you can drive new leads and improve your ability to close the best leads you’re already getting, that’s when the magic happens, your company grows and you look like a revenue superstar.