How Much Is That Unsustainable Sales System Costing You?

How Much Is That Unsustainable Sales System Costing You?

It's time for another edition of the?Art & Science of Complex Sales!?If you're new, this is where we talk about all things related to putting HOW you sell at the core of your business -- from sales process execution to best practices in sales coaching to driving winning behaviors to enabling growth in your sales organization.

Every week, I share ONE idea or strategy that sales leaders and teams can use to enable consistent growth for their organization. Whether you're a sales leader, sales consultant, sales manager, sales enablement expert or sales team member ready to accelerate your performance -- you'll find one action item that you can implement each week to get you one step closer to your goals.

My mission is to elevate the sales profession with technology and partnerships so that we can all improve our sales effectiveness and raise the bar in sales.

Now, onto this week's topic! ????

How Much Is That Unsustainable Sales System Costing You?

I often talk about the importance of developing a sales system that is consistent , scalable , and continually improved . But I haven’t really addressed the question of what happens when it’s NOT sustainable. The cost of not being sustainable is high, and, unfortunately, the vast majority of sales systems are not.

What Does It Mean to Have a Sustainable Sales System?

A sustainable sales system is one that is consistent, scalable, and can be continually improved. It does not rely on a few superstar salespeople or a few superhero moments throughout the year. It doesn’t falter when something in the marketplace changes, and it doesn’t crumble when you add more salespeople.

A sustainable sales system is grounded in a clear sales strategy based on value differentiation and deep understanding of your Ideal Customer Profile . It is made consistently executable through clear processes that are flexible and dynamic. These processes are reinforced by the platforms and workflows your sales teams use every day.

A sustainable sales system is consistent, scalable, and can be continually improved.

It is supported by consistent and effective sales training and coaching . And it provides for a proactive feedback loop that makes it easy for you to adjust and maneuver through a changing competitive landscape. This requires analytics that enable strategic and tactical insights, as well as systems that are flexible and easy to upgrade and roll out across your organization as processes change.

The benefits of a sustainable sales system are detailed extensively elsewhere. But now let’s talk about what it’s costing you to NOT have a sustainable sales system.

What Is the Cost of Not Being Sustainable?

When your sales system isn’t sustainable, it costs your company on many fronts. Here are a few of them.

  • Hiring and firing: A system that relies on individual salespeople and their managers to “sink or swim” results in a long chain of wasted time in the form of bringing people on only to have to replace them soon after. This turnover also represents substantial unnecessary cost.
  • Slow ramp-up: Without a sustainable sales system and guidance through standard sales processes, salespeople will take much longer to ramp up and become competent. This can lead back to the hiring and firing loop, as well as simply slowing down the time to productivity even for those who do continue with the company.
  • Manual creation of forecasts: When your system is complicated and lacks a consistent framework for qualifying and moving prospects through the pipeline, you can’t rely on analysis from the data in your system. Chaos in = chaos out. Instead, sales managers are tasked with wasting precious time “doctoring” forecasts according to their understanding of the pipeline to try to achieve some level of accuracy.
  • Unnecessary back-and-forth conversations between managers and salespeople, as managers try to understand and gain insight into what’s happening for salespeople, and as salespeople try to get information to help them move through the sales process.
  • Low win rates due to wrong ICP and poor process execution. In a sustainable system, your salespeople spend their time with the right people, doing the right things. In an unsustainable system, salespeople close fewer deals because they don’t know who to spend their time with or the best way to move them toward a sale.
  • Brand damage due to off-brand messaging and losing control of the story. When sales teams communicate off the cuff instead of according to your sustainable sales process and messaging, and when customers are left to explain your story to others within their company in their own words, you end up with confused customers and potential brand damage.
  • Overly complicated management for geographically dispersed teams: The larger and more geographically dispersed your teams, the more critical a sustainable sales system becomes. Without it, it is very difficult and overwhelmingly complicated to keep up with what everyone on the team is doing and what’s working for them.
  • Frustrated workforce Sales teams forced to operate inside an unsustainable system become frustrated by all the above factors. Frustration can lead to disconnection, low performance, and, ultimately, more workforce turnover.

These costs only scratch the surface of everything it costs to have an unsustainable sales system. I’m sure you could think of more to add to the list.

When viewed through this lens, it makes it easier to justify investing in building and maintaining more sustainable sales systems. Our partners can help you get on the right track .


This article was first published on the Membrain blog here .



Christian Maurer

Sales Leadership Methodologist -- measurably increasing the productivity of B2B sales organizations with system thinking

8 个月

Hope you are heard by the people who can do something about it. Unfortunately many of those are though ignorant and arrogant when it comes to SALES.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了