Choreographing Sales Transformation to Produce a Masterpiece

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Perhaps you recall the Seinfeld episode, “Little Kicks”, in which Elaine Benes dances at a party in a fashion George describes as a “full bodied dry heave set to music.” (http://tinyurl.com/3y6anm6) To be sure, what Elaine lacked wasn’t just a well orchestrated set of movements and perfect timing, but timing certainly compounded her general lack of ability.

Which brings me to sales transformation. Perhaps you have read our white paper on Sales Transformation and are considering a project for your organization. Or possibly, you are looking to improve results and sales transformation is one of several possible approaches you are evaluating to achieve this end. Maybe you are simply curious about a term that is fast becoming one of the most talked about initiatives in business. Whatever the stage of your interest, you can quickly see that achieving trusted advisor status with your customers, and the corresponding impact on revenue and margins, involves more moving parts than Elaine’s famed “little kicks” dance move.

Successful sales transformation isn’t simply a training class, an improved CRM solution, anew comp plan or some updated set of sales tools and presentations. In fact, transforming your customer engagements may require all these things and more. And because of this, sequencing and choreographing your project can be the difference between Elaine’s random movements and a Baryshnikov masterpiece. So what is the appropriate order and how do you ensure your efforts produce the desired result?

For starters, consider what it is that you are trying to transform. Results? Of course. Customer perceptions? Absolutely. But these things change ONLY AFTER you transform the selling behavior of your people. Given that transforming behavior is the fundamental objective of your project, it only makes sense that the first order of business will be to define, clearly and completely, the desired behavior model for your sales team. This includes everything from how they should prospect for new opportunities to the manner in which they should present your solutions and address customer objections. It also extends to your sales managers and senior leaders and includes the methodology by which they will coach members of your team. Finally, this model must define the metrics that can be used to measure behavioral progress prior to the production of business results so that systems and reporting can be properly aligned. Absent a clear understanding of what you want people to do (process), how you want them to execute (methodology), and how you will track the degree to which they are executing effectively (reporting and metrics), it is extraordinarily difficult to make effective decisions about the other elements of transformation – all of which must support this fundamental change.

Does this mean that transformation projects must be a linear progression whereby each single step is completed before another can begin? Absolutely not. Your transformation projects are akin to independent parts of a single body in motion. Effective choreography will engage people responsible for each element early and continually throughout the project and sequence their activities for maximum impact and efficiency. Ongoing communication among the individual project owners is critical to keeping the project on track and properly coordinated.

By laying a proper foundation and defining your ideal behavior model while investigating alternatives for CRM, compensation, analytics, etc., you can ensure your project flows like a Baryshnikov ballet and delivers maximum results with tremendous efficiency.

Republished with author's permission from original post.

Bob Sanders
Bob Sanders serves as President and COO of AXIOM. He is dedicated to advancing the effectiveness and professionalism of sales people and the companies that employ them. He has helped dozens of companies, hundreds of managers and thousands of sellers to increase their sales results and improve customer satisfaction. Bob is co-author of AXIOM's "Selling Sciences Program™" workbook and audio program. Prior to joining AXIOM, he ran the marketing organization for Sprint Products Group, a division of Sprint North Supply. In this capacity, he lead the company through a complete marketing overhaul.

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