Sales Training Seminars and Tips
How To Measure Sales Training Seminar Effectiveness
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sales training seminar
You've seen those enticing ads in magazines or on the Internet
claiming you can double or even triple your sales overnight if
you purchase their sales system or take their
sales
training seminar. Don't believe them! Anyone who makes those claims is
making just that, a claim, and probably an unsubstantiated one at
that.
Most sales managers, and almost every
professional sales training
organization, have wrestled with the challenge of trying to prove
that their
sales
training seminar will produce results, increase
sales productivity, or improve sales effectiveness.
Is there a way to measure the results of a
sales
training seminar?
I don't know, you don't know, and unless you have a lot of
resources available to run an elaborate and expensive controlled
test along with the ability to control world events, it's a safe
bet that neither of us is going to find the ultimate answer.
If it were just a matter of conducting the
sales training
seminar and
watching for an increase in sales, there would be no problem
measuring the effectiveness of the sales training. Unfortunately,
there are simply too many other factors involved.
Poor Training Seminar, More Sales
Let's assume you get some
sales
training seminar that,
unfortunately, misses the mark. You would expect sales to remain
the same, or perhaps even drop, as a result of the demotivating
effect of the poor sales training. Not necessarily so. If, during the
evaluation period, one of your competitors goes bankrupt, you
bring out a new and innovative offering, and the economy takes an
unexpected upturn, your sales are likely to go up.
Great Training Seminar, Poor Sales
On the other hand, let's assume you get some outstanding
sales
training seminar. In addition, you've done the post-training
exercises and are in the field coaching the troops to make sure
they are using the principles taught during the training. You
would expect that your sales should take off. Maybe, maybe not.
What happens if, during the evaluation period, a competitor
reduces its prices dramatically, you lose two of your best
salespeople, and one of your major clients puts a buying freeze
into effect? Your sales could go into the toilet no matter how
good your salespeople are.
The point of these two scenarios is, no matter how good or poor
the training, there are a host of other factors that make it very
difficult to measure the effectiveness.
Problems, Problems
It would be nice if you could eliminate or neutralize the problem
of the impact that the marketplace and world events have on your
sales, but you can't. What you could do is run a test where you
establish a control group who receives no
sales
training seminar
and compare their results against a second group who receive the
training and follow-on coaching. Both groups would be equally
affected by these outside influences.
There are two reasons why this is unlikely to work well. One is
that you need enough people in each group to make it
statistically valid. For example, you would need a group size of
15 people in order to have a margin of error of 25 percent (at a
confidence level of 95 percent, or 19 times out of 20), which
means you need 30 salespeople, 15 for the control group and 15 to
be trained.
The second problem is that the ones not being trained (the
control group) are likely to be annoyed and, knowing the
competitive nature of most salespeople, they would probably end
up putting in extra effort so the trained group doesn't leave
them behind.
Interestingly enough, the end result is that both groups are
likely to see increases in effectiveness with the trained group
doing somewhat better.
Getting Results
Sales training works, even if you can't always quantify the results
well. If nothing else, the Hawthorne Effect kicks in and you get
a momentary boost in sales. The Hawthorne Effect gets its name
from the late 1920s study that was conducted at the Hawthorne
plant of Western Electric in Cicero, Illinois. Researchers were
doing a study of the effects of lighting and other conditions on
employee productivity. To the researchers' amazement the
employees' productivity improved no matter whether they increased
or decreased the light intensity. They came to the conclusion
that the increases in productivity were a result of the study
giving the employees attention. A
sales
training seminar can have
the same effect on your salespeople.
The problem with the changes brought about by the Hawthorne
Effect is that they are not long lasting. People tend to fall
back into their old habits and productivity levels off once the
"attention" disappears.
Making Permanent Improvements
Here's a two-step process for making sure you get the biggest
bang for your investment in a
sales
training seminar.
1. Select the right
sales
training seminar (and while you're at
it, the right sales training company). There is little benefit in
providing major account selling techniques to salespeople doing
transactional-type selling or
relationship/consultative sales
training to salespeople in the retail trade. Make the right fit.
2. Put a system in place to make sure your salespeople are using
the skills they learned during the training. If you don't do
this, they will fall back into their comfort zones and stop using
their new-found techniques.
Measuring Sales Seminar Efficiency
Probably the simplest way to measure sales efficiency is to
divide the salesperson's sales by their income. This can be done
monthly, quarterly, semi-annually or annually. For example, if a
salesperson's annual sales were $1,500,000 and she made $80,000,
then her efficiency factor would be 18.75. If another salesperson
sold the same amount but made $90,000 that person's efficiency
factor would be 16.67. The higher the number, the more efficient
the salesperson.
If you want to get an even more meaningful measure of sales
efficiency, divide the margin (profit, not gross sales) by the
salesperson's income plus expenses.
Using this technique, we now have a way to properly evaluate
sales training effectiveness. Establish a baseline of the team's,
or individual salesperson's, sales efficiency before the training
and then redo the measurement two to three months after the
sales
training seminar is completed and compare the results.
Sales Training Works
Done well and properly supported, sales training does work. You may
indeed double or triple your sales (if they were really miserable
to begin with), but probably not. However, think about what a
five to twenty percent increase in sales might mean to your
bottom line. Now that's worth thinking about.
Brian Jeffrey: http://www.SalesforceAssessments.com/
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