How to Create Perpetual Revenue Growth
Colleen Francis
Follow Me: LinkedIn's #1 Sales Influencer, Hall of Fame Keynote Speaker, Award-winning Sales Strategist, Best Selling Author.
In my work with top performing sales teams, I’ve found that leaders who exhibit three consistent traits create perpetual revenue growth.
1. Enforcing a High-Performance Culture
In a typical sales organization, 10% of salespeople overachieve. Another 20% underachieve dramatically and are considered “dead weight.” And 70% are average, performing inconsistently and regularly missing their quotas. Perpetually growing companies, on the other hand, build an entire team of top performers. To do this, they get rid of their average, not merely their underachieving.
Their tolerance level is far below what most companies will endure. I call this “Finding the best, removing the rest.”
For example, some sellers tend to repeat what they prefer doing regardless of what is actually required to exceed their targets. In your business, this could be costing you continued growth. Make sure that your sellers are doing the job required of them, not only the job they want to do.
And if they think anything is “beneath them,” (like actively prospecting) it’s time to let them go.
2. Alignment of Compensation with Goals
Your teams do what you pay them to do, which I realize is not exactly a conceptual breakthrough. Yet, many organizations forget this and continue to pay their sellers out of alignment with the behaviors they expect. If you pay a seller more for new sales than repeat sales, the momentum will be to coach towards new client development rather than cross-selling to the existing customer base.
For example, a software sales VP noticed that all deals over a million dollars were being ignored or disqualified in the pipeline. He later learned that his team’s compensation was clawed back on all deals over a million. As a response, the sellers simply ignored the big deals and worked on achieving their full quota on smaller deals that they were going to be paid full commissions on. As soon as the compensation plan was changed, the sellers’ behavior was corrected, and revenue soared to 25 percent over target in one year.
3. Nonstop Training and Coaching
Selling is a learned skill and sellers must be trained and coached, like any other professional, regularly.
Here’s a story that vividly demonstrates the importance of coaching.
The vice president of sales of an office furniture company discovered that his installation team was routinely criticizing the products being installed, in front of their clients. They had not been hired for their customer service skills nor were they trained in customer retention. As a result, growth opportunities were lost because trust was eroded and perception of the product diminished before the installation was even complete. When the installers were trained and coached in sales and service skills, customer retention and growth soared and the company has since been able to sustain a Nonstop Sales Boom.
Even with the best intentions, perpetual revenue growth can be sabotaged by an organization’s strategies, and people. Yet, with a focus on compensation, training, and performance that are aligned with your overall strategy, the evidence is overwhelming that organizations can hit 100% of their growth goals, 100% of the time.
The question is not about ability. It’s about willingness.
Are you willing to take the leap?
Illco HVAC-R And Guardians
5 年I really believe in #3. You have to learn your products and be able to educate other's on that product. I have a Product on my counter that I call my science experiment. I have generated more interest in that product just by leaving the moldy bread in the container. IWave is the product.
VP of Market Development at ECS | Chief Relationship Cultivator
5 年Straight to the point - love it! I couldn't agree more, Colleen. The willingness to do what it takes is key to being successful no matter what you do. You can have all the tools and the best compensation structure out there but if you're not willing to put forth the effort, it all goes to waste. Love the article!