That’s why American corporations spend $7.2 billion (1) every year on sales processes, account management skills, negotiation, and opportunity management training. That’s an average of $347,000 per company, according to Selling Power. But beyond proprietary (and perhaps biased) consulting reports and high-level academic papers on change, there’s little information available on whether those that invest money are achieving a return on their investment that’s at least equal to—if not better than—their cost of capital.WHY IS ROI ALLUSIVE?
When we started researching the ROI challenge, we found others were asking the same question. What follows begins to paint the picture...
HOW DO WE FIX IMPLEMENTATION & ADOPTION?
Do any of these challenges ring true? Have you been wondering or been frustrated with the ability to implement sales training programs and get them to “stick?" We were too, so we underwent an exhaustive search to determine: what drives implementation and adoption?
In partnership with Selling Power Magazine, The Professional Society for Sales and Marketing Training, and The Standard Register Corporation we reached out to 30,000 executives to get this question answered. We found 150 companies who felt they had “deeply embedded sales training into the DNA of their organization.” Of those responses, the ratio of end user to sales training consultants was about 2-1. Once we had survey results tabulated, we executed one-on-one interviews and focus groups with respondents to get a better sense of the data.
What emerged from this work was the top three drivers of implementation and adoption:
(1) Sales Training as Enabler of Corporate Growth Strategies
Rather than executing sales training simply for the sake of training, they recognized that sales training can and should be used to strengthen core sales competencies that directly enable key aspects of growth strategy.(2) Strong Executive Sponsorship
Senior executives in sales as well as other functions sponsored and got directly involved not only in funding the initiatives, but in attending workshops and using the methodologies.
(3) Coaches Who Measure and Are Measured
Field sales management not only formally measured those who reported to them but were, in turn, formally measured by those to whom they reported.
Clearly the lead issue was #1, linking a training initiative to execution of corporate strategy. If #1 is achieved, numbers 2 and 3 follow. Here are some quotes from the focus groups to better defined what #1 looks like:
When asked how to determine if training is being tied to their company’s growth strategies, some respondents said it occurs when it’s:For the complete and detailed report, click here.
CHANGING THE CONVERSATION FROM TRAINING AND METHODOLOGY TO STRATEGY EXECUTION AND ROI
For us, the next logical step of this work was a bit harder. In it we had to ask, how does one connect a corporate strategy to a training initiative? The short answer is:
Those who matter need to define their own needs and make the decision on the best way to execute… prior to a decision.
While this takes a little more work, it ultimately leads to a much higher probability of adoption and ROI. We’ve spent the last few years adding rigor to this upfront work to understand the needs of stakeholders and then help them make the highest value decision on a sales enablement initiative that drives growth.
The steps are:
1.Identify those who matter
From Cross-Functional Leaders:
From Sales and Leaders:
From all:
When you are ready for a more in depth look at a sales enablement diagnostic, click here.
SUMMARY
In our interview with Dave Stein (CEO if ES Research Group) on this subject, Dave states:
"In many companies, the sales team is last in line with respect to the adoption and institutionalization of not only effective measurement mechanisms, but basic process as well. Standards and methods are employed by every other department within a company. Manufacturing has Just-in-time, Lean and the Toyota Production Systems (TPS), Finance has GAAP, and the list goes on. Sales has a lot of catching up to do to be depended upon as a critical enabler of corporate growth strategies."
We are aware there are many levers management pulls to execute a multi-pronged corporate growth strategy. Our world class benchmarking process is designed to assist those who choose to use sales training as one of those levers to enable a specific aspect of growth strategy. The summary of lessons learned from those best in class companies is below.
If you would like to discuss getting more ROI from your sales training initiatives, send me an email to schedule a time to connect: bjd@think5600.com
(1) Journal of Personal Selling
(2) CSO Insights “Sales 2.0 Whitepaper"
(3) Sales Executive Council of the Corporate Executive Board
(4) Axiom Consulting Partners, Winning Axiom #2