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 Sales Training Tips:
    Training Your Sales Staff
    Defining Sales Training
    Sales Management Coaching
    The Importance of Sales Training
    Increase Your Sales
    The Impact of Sales Training
    Confirming the Sale
    21 Ways To Increase Sales
    The Top 3 Fatal Sales Mistakes
    How to Shorten Your Sales Cycle
    Enticing Voicemail Messages
    Salespeople Bore Me
    Don’t Sell Like You Buy
    Goal Direction and Sales Success
    Good First Impressions -
        Handshakes
    Addressing the Elephant in the
        Room
    Position Yourself As A Leader
    Appointment Setting Tips: Using
        Power Language
    How To Overcome the
        Smokescreen Objection
    Opportunities in our Tough
        Economy
    Five Secrets To Writing Killer
        Prospecting Scripts
    COLLABORATIVE versus
        TRADITIONAL SELLING
    Seven Ways To Build Rapport
        With Anyone
    Power Pitching: Get the
        Personal Edge
     Marketing Savvy and
       Customer Focus
     Increase Your Bottom Line With
        Sales Training That Sticks
     Measuring Sales Training
        Effectiveness
    Sales Tips: Don't Bring a Knife to
        a Gun Fight
 

    More Sales Training Tips...

 




Sales Training Seminars and Tips

When Sales Training Isn’t Working

Nothing is more frustrating than investing the time to identify the need, design, develop, and deliver great sales training and then discover that sellers aren’t implementing what they learned when they get back to the field. Whether you’re delivering product or soft skills training, participant time away from the job is expensive and your organization has a right to expect to see a sizeable return on their investment.

Executives and sales managers often lament that while they can quickly tell us how much they’ve spent on training their sellers in a given quarter or year, pointing to actual behavior changes and sales increases is not always as easy. Increase the value of your training by changing the way you think and plan for sustainable implementation.

Design and Develop

Confirm with your stakeholder, the business value and observable behaviors the organization is expecting at the end of the training, then 3 and 6 months later. Are they looking for an increase in new client opportunities in the pipeline, reduced sales cycles, or more up-selling?

As training is designed and developed, use learning objectives and module goals as beacons to create the training content. Conceptualize and then validate exactly what it is you and the stakeholder expect from participants at defined milestones. Use those measurable behaviors as a yardstick. Hold the developing content and activities up against it to ensure their value.

Deliver

Tell sellers early exactly what’s expected of them by the end of the training. Show them the WIIFM, what’s in it for them, and how the improvement in their skills will directly impact their sales results, goal attainment, and pocket-book. Finally, tell them how their skills will be observed and measured by their manager.

Today’s adult learners are sophisticated, constantly seeking short cuts to get results quicker. We’ve found that compulsory learning paths don’t always work, especially with sellers. Learners will implement only those skills and tools that make them more productive, faster. We’re amazed at the success achieved when we involve learners as much as possible in the interpretation and application of the content. They feel a sense of ownership and want to try new techniques. Be flexible in your delivery even if it means diverging from the path you’ve defined. Let them share their own experiences and hardships and apply them to the techniques you’re training.

Use the measurable sales behaviors as the goal you’re all striving for. For example, if you’re focused on moving a solution sales force to a consultative approach, measure behaviors like executive meetings and quarterly business reviews.

Evaluation

Involve the managers and team leads who’ll be supporting and helping implement the desired sales behavior changes throughout the design, development and delivery process. They’re busy people who’re often challenged when told it ‘s their responsibility to “coach” their teams. Managers that we repeatedly work with expect us to interview them early in the training process to clearly understand their team’s current – and desired behaviors. With a clear picture of how the sales training is designed to help reach the measurable business goals, they buy-in early and support participation from pre-class prep work, through delivery, and into implementation.

A component of our classes that managers now look for and appreciate is a checklist of content covered paired with expected, observable sales behavior, and desired business results. As managers discover what behaviors to look for and have available resources from the class content and activities, they’re ready to “coach” at every possible opportunity from listening in on a sales call to participating in an on-site demonstration or assisting in negotiating the final contracts.

Waiting until after sales training has been delivered to consider how it will be implemented and who’ll be responsible for supporting it doesn’t work. Insert the implementation conversation earlier in the instruction design process and watch how quickly sales behaviors change.

Kendra Lee: http://www.eyesonsales.com/content/article/when_sales_training_isnt_working/

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