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A Glimpse at Sales 2.0 - The Potential and Pitfalls Print
Written by Keith Rosen   

For those of you who attended the first ever Sales 2.0 conference in San Francisco this past October, you're probably in a state of overwhelm as well as awe, like many of the people I met with were.

It's a testament to the new age of selling and the role technology will play in how we sell. Sales 2.0; the conversion of technology and sales and the symbiotic relationship between the two; how they can be integrated together and co-exist in harmony. As I was walking through the isles where these venders were displaying their innovative solutions, it was mind-blowing to see that a majority of these well established high-tech companies were less than five years old.

The conference was a huge success, not only in the higher than anticipated number of people who attended but the sheer number of thought leaders who shared their vision of the future of selling and the technology that will drive it.

To that end, the keynote I delivered, "Managing the MySpace Generation: Coaching Salespeople into Sales Champions" was available to view online the next day in its entirety (thanks to the technology that Altus developed) along with a searchable transcript of every word I uttered.

I had the distinct pleasure to interview a number of these innovators and CEO's who are charting this new course as it relates to how salespeople sell, how they are managed and how they are trained and coached.

Not only did I have an opportunity to connect with so many great people and innovators like AllBusiness.com's, Lori Richardson, Selling Power's Gerhard Gschwandtner, Jigsaw founder, Garth Moulton and its CEO Jim Fowler, and William Landers, CEO of xsellense, but here is just a sampling of the incredible roster of people I interviewed:

Bill Hoffman, Vice President of Business Development, CanDoGo.com Ken Luden, CEO of LucidEra.com Stu Schmidt, Vice President of Solutions for WebEx David Thompson, CEO and co-founder of Genius.com Evan Sohn, CEO of Salesconx Razi Imam, CEO of Landslide Sebastian Grady, COO of Altus Learning Systems

Sales leaders, business owners and sales managers need to prepare for the next evolution of selling and what it's going to take to make their sales team a leading force in their space. These are just a few of the companies providing revolutionary and unique services that are going to assist sales teams in developing and maintaining their competitive edge.

Yet, with all the technology that is going to change how salespeople sell and manage themselves, I was surprised to hear the comments made by some of the people who spoke at this event. Here are a few observations I heard that certainly stirred up quite a reaction in me as well as in many other attendees:

1. Cold calling is dead.
2. Technology is going to replace the salesperson.
3. Companies are going to rely less and less on the high caliber, professional salesperson who can take a prospect from the beginning of the sales cycle to the end when closing the sale.
4. Automated, asynchronous training solutions are going to replace training and professional development delivered by a live person (face to face, over the phone or through the internet.)

Sure, technology will automate and streamline many of the functions and tasks salespeople and management are currently responsible for. More specifically, how they manage their sales pipeline and the stages of their selling cycle, how they qualify and mine for new prospects, how they network with other business professionals, how they maintain their contact database as well as how they communicate with their prospects and customers. And the trend for companies to transition from what was once a face to face sale to a virtual, off site sale will continue to dominate more sales cultures.

Yet, as a pioneer in sales coaching and professional development, one thing is for certain. People like to buy from people. As such, the longer your sales cycle and the higher the price tag on your product or service, the more solidified the need will be and will remain for talented sales champions to drive sales and growth.

I have already seen the negative impact that some of these great advancements are having on sales teams across the globe as it relates to how salespeople are interacting with their prospects, customers even their managers. Many managers have reported spending far too much time reviewing a thread of email conversations between their salespeople and prospects when attempting to uncover where a communication breakdown occurred or when trying to identify how a great selling opportunity was lost. Misinterpreted and poorly worded emails between management and their staff are the cause of more costly problems and upsets which deteriorate relations than any additional time-savings they supposedly create.

Moreover, there's the ever-widening communication gap that some of these new technologies promote between the younger, MySpace generation and that of their boss, especially as more and more sales teams are built on a virtual platform where there's little, if any face to face weekly interaction with their manager. Rather than develop their core leadership and coaching competencies and skills, managers are relying far too heavily on these solutions to solve many of the managerial challenges they are up against when building and managing their sales team.

Salespeople are expecting their webinars, proposals, websites, online marketing campaigns and collateral materials to do the selling and prospecting for them. And what's worse, there are those salespeople who attempt to close a prospect or overcome objections via email rather than simply picking up the phone to facilitate a direct, one to one conversation that would appease the person's concerns. Here's just one example of a perfectly good opportunity and a valid reason to reach out to a prospect over the phone that salespeople need to take full advantage of, yet fail to do so.

The introduction of these new technologies into the selling process will continue to proliferate, for change is truly the only constant. After all, there will always be a need to make the selling process easier and more efficient for the salesperson, for your company and for your customers.

While more applications such as the ones I've mentioned are infused throughout each stage of the sale, the technology of maximizing human potential is far from tapped. And as more technology emerges to simplify the selling process, there will be an even greater demand for the elite salesperson who can manage and leverage technology as well as effectively communicate their message to their targeted audience.

The technology of interpersonal, result oriented communication; the language and true art of selling will still reign supreme in the selling profession.

Sure, these new tools we have at our disposal will improve efficiency, cut down on travel as well as timely administrative tasks, and reduce prospecting time and the time it takes to convert prospects into customers, now that there is less of a need to meet face to face with prospects in order to sell your product or service to them. However, it will be the sales leader who is the rainmaker, the fearless and persistent prospector, the conduit to building and maintaining strong relationships and the master of the language of selling who will continue to dominate this era of technological change.




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Keith Rosen
About the author:

Keith Rosen, President of Profit Builders, is the executive sales coach that top salespeople and managers call first. As a prominent, engaging speaker and Master Certified Coach, Keith is one of the foremost authorities on assisting people to achieve positive, measurable changes in their attitudes, in their behaviors, and in their results. A best selling author, Keith has written several books including, Time Management for Sales Professionals, The Complete Idiot's Guide to Cold Calling and Coaching Salespeople Into Sales Champions. For his work as a pioneer in the coaching profession, Inc. magazine and Fast Company named Keith one of the five most respected and influential executive coaches in the country. Software Sales Journal named Keith's company one of the Top Nine Best Training Firms. Keith is also a frequent contributor for Selling Power Live, CBSNews.com, Sales and Marketing Management and has been appointed as the Expert Sales Advisor for AllBusiness.com.  For more resources or to inquire about Keith's coaching and training programs, visit Keith Rosen at www.ProfitBuilders.com where you can also order his proven prospecting and cold calling template, Permission Based Prospecting that's guaranteed to get you in front of more qualified prospects, fast. Call Keith at 516-771-1444 or email him at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it . Subscribe to his newsletter, The Winners Path, http://www.profitbuilders.com/winnerspath.htm .


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written by Steve Watts , July 25, 2008

From other reading I've done, technology will continue to replace people in certain areas of the sales pipeline, but not completely. The divergence will come from the role and quality of the rep.

The "sales rep" as we know it is dead.

Very shortly--in say, 5 to 10 years--there will be "cashiers," and there will be "sales experts," but the "sales rep" moniker as it stands now will become almost meaningless.

"Cashiers," will be people who used to sell, but now do nothing more than handle money. We don't want input from these people. We may ask them a few perfunctory questions, but mostly we just want them to shut up, get out of the way, and let us decide how to spend our money.

"Experts" will still "sell," but not using the standard prospecting/closing model. Instead they will provide solutions to clients from a client-centered engagement. There is no "hard sell," it's a relationship-based process of meeting customer need.

In the long run, technology will replace the "cashiers," but there will always be a need for "experts."

-Steve
InsideSales.com

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