By Jonathan Farrington
In my opinion, hundreds of millions of pounds (dollars) world-wide are wasted every year on irrelevant, unnecessary or inappropriate sales skills development and there are four obvious reasons.
To begin with, the one off programme may supply a short term motivational buzz and provide the delegate with a number of thought provoking ideas. However, in reality, once they are back at the “front-line” the day to day pressures of hitting quota etc take over again and the reactive mindset returns. It is rather like the Chinese meal effect; when you leave the restaurant you feel full but by the time you arrive home you want to eat again.
Secondly, most, not all, but a very high percentage of courses on offer today, deliver what I term “generalised” skills development.
For example, a guy operating within the aerospace sector, negotiating multi-million pound contracts can find himself sitting next to a young saleswoman who markets insurance policies and is based in a call centre. On her right is another guy who is developing a successful career in manufacturing, selling hydraulic components and next to him…..I think you will appreciate my point. To achieve sustained success in all of these disparate industries requires specific skills sets and the “generalised” workshops simply cannot deliver them.
Thirdly, most and again I would estimate it is at least 80% of training
organisations today, make the assumption that all delegates are at the
same level in terms of experience, expertise and have the same
“commercial bandwidth”. This is of course, totally unrealistic.
Whilst it is not possible to equate age and experience with success,
the reality is that although some professional salespeople do have ten
years experience, most have one year’s experience ten times!
The very best salespeople – the ones that consistently exceed
expectation, have usually received ongoing skills development from the
“emerging” stage all the way through “advanced” right up to
“consultative” level, if appropriate but the keyword is “ongoing”
Finally, and this is the most significant and blatant error of
judgment most Sales Directors make, is that every member of the team
receives the same training,

Finally, and this is the most significant and blatant error of
judgment most Sales Directors make, is that every member of the team
receives the same training,
i.e. they are all dispatched off to the
same course regardless of whether or not they already have those skills
or if indeed they need to have them in their current role.
The point here is that there is far too little planning, assessing,
and objective setting; it is much easier to abdicate responsibility to
the training company. The downside to this approach is of course, so
much money is wasted. So what is the answer?
The first step for any company deciding to make a change in their
sales approach is always an assessment of the situation. What processes
and methods are currently being employed by the company? What has their
sales performance been? What percentage of sales people are delivering
against plan? What are the biggest obstacles to success? How dynamic or
stable is the company’s environment? What are the practices and
expectations of the buyers? These are only a few considerations.
Training must be based on what the salespeople need and
should be tailored to address diagnosed performance gaps.

Training must be based on what the salespeople need and
should be tailored to address diagnosed performance gaps.
Using a diagnostic approach – a formal sales team skills
audit, saves
an organisation money and time because there is nothing to be gained
from teaching people something that they are already doing well or,
conversely, that they don’t need to do in the first place. A
well-targeted programme is far more likely to engage participants’ full
interest because they’ll see its immediate relevance to their daily
results.
Any training programme will be more effective when the skills that
participants learn are reinforced on a regular and continual basis. For
maximum impact, every level of management must reinforce training. Such
reinforcement can come in many forms, but the best way is for the sales
manager to serve as a “model of excellence” who provides an ongoing
demonstration of required skills so salespeople begin to live and
breathe them.
How Do You Choose The Right Training Company For Your Needs?
Most sales training companies have a unique philosophy and therefore
a specialised approach. Perhaps they are strong in the area of selling
business value to board level members at the expense of competitive
positioning. Perhaps attention on strategies for winning very complex
sales situations dilutes their efforts toward working with students on
the details and tactics that they need to execute in order to win—down
to the actual words they need to be saying and to whom.
A training company that specialises in one or more areas of
sales expertise will not necessarily perceive or look for your
requirements in other areas. If the training/consulting
provider is left to define your approach, there will more than likely
be a gap in the methodology, and of course a resultant gap in the
subsequent training.
One way to handle this is to employ two independent providers. One
would assist in assessing your situation, defining your requirements,
and perhaps in building your methodology. The second would provide the
training and would be evaluated and selected based upon their ability
to meet your specific (and complete) requirement set. That would insure
that the first provider would not be defining your requirements to meet
their expertise.
The best alternative is to employ a firm that is completely
independent of any training or sales consulting provider and can offer
the proper guidance throughout these steps to achieve the best possible
result. Important to any company that makes an investment in sales team
development is measurement.
Benchmarking current levels of performance, setting reasonable goals
and objectives based upon a careful assessment of the situation and
measuring progress against those goals is a necessary, but for the
large part overlooked component of most training initiatives.
When progress is at or above plan, everyone is encouraged, motivated
and continue to perform and excel. If expectations are not being met,
the opportunity exists for immediate problem diagnosis and adjustment,
assuring that the initiative will get back on track and provide the
return on investment expected.
Summary:
At jfa we have developed a range of assessment tools which allow us
to benchmark current performance levels and provide a totally objective
view of a sales team’s current and future requirements – typically our
report costs a fraction of the training programmes currently being
utilised and in fact, in nearly every case, results in considerable
savings.
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