The role of sales and startup leadership in enterprise deals
As someone who has been both an individual contributor and a leader in the startup enterprise sales world, understanding how and when assisting reps with deals is a big, challenging grey area.
Should you be on calls… or should you let them handle it? When is the right time to get involved? When is the right time to back off?
You want to help… and it often feels like if you don’t, the deal could go south.
Full disclosure, I’ve had more instances where leadership involvement has actually hampered my deal rather than helped it… including a few deals lost.
On the flip side, I’ve been fortunate to have some incredible leaders show me how their involvement can be a good thing in the right circumstances too. Including some that have helped me get deals across the finish line, I never could have by myself!
Here are two examples from my own career to help illuminate this.
The first illustrates this delicate partnership done well.
The second showcasing where it wasn’t, along with things to think about to determine whether your involvement is necessary and in what capacity.
What effective leadership involvement looks like
Figuring out the right level of involvement all comes down to how (and if) you’ll actually add value to the process as a leader. My time with Jacobson is a great example of this done well.
I had been working on a deal with CIGNA for almost a year — knocking on their door, connecting the dots, leveraging other clients like them, keeping close attention to what was happening in their business, working across multiple buyers, etc. — when FINALLY, I had a breakthrough.
I got the ‘big meeting’ with the key decision-maker and his team and flew out solo to diagnose the situation.
As it turns out, they were in a major crunch with a mega backlog and potentially hefty fines to boot. Translating to a potential multi-million dollar, year+ long engagement (service-based solution versus product) was on the table.
However, there was a significant amount of modeling to be done to make sure we set proper expectations and I had never done something like this before. This is where my leader was the perfect example of helping me break apart a deal to think about it differently and challenging me to do so.
We built the model and agreement together. And without his support, I would’ve been in deep trouble. I learned a TON and was able to apply that moving forward on future deals.
Why it worked
My leader’s involvement was priceless in this situation because he knew the modeling process better than I did and could point out blind spots along with effective solutions. His skills and expertise complemented mine to bring the deal to fruition in a way neither of us could have done individually.
Disclaimer — much of what I learned from him meant that I wouldn’t need the same level of involvement in the future.
What ineffective leadership looks like
While the leader from my example above did a tremendous job of working with me to collaborate and was instrumental in helping me bring the deal to fruition PLUS delivering the promises made, far too often this is where leadership involvement goes awry.
Too many leaders in my career have gotten involved when there was no real need to do so… and they usually ended up just getting in the way.
Or in the case of one mega-deal with a unicorn startup you’ve definitely heard of, almost derailed it completely.
The deal was humming along smoothly — the head of product, the CS lead, and myself were all over it to make sure we could deliver what we were proposing — and we were setting up a call to go after more budget.
This is when my revenue leader decided he needed to feel relevant and bulldogged his way onto the next strategy call. But rather than riding along and looking for opportunities to help, his ego took over from the start, leading with “Let me educate you on our business…”
The client called me right after and said verbatim “If he’s involved, the deal is off.”
Key Takeaway
It doesn’t make sense to hire smart people and tell them what to do; we hire smart people so they can tell us what to do.” — Steve Jobs
If there’s no reason to be in the foreground, don’t be. Work with your team to talk about blind spots and ways you can truly help versus inserting yourself into the equation. Your involvement could do more harm than good, especially if you haven’t done your homework to get up to speed on what’s been done thus far like the story above.
Joining the call and listening in is fine if your team is ok with it. But let them run point and tap you in if and when needed.
Questions to ask yourself to determine your involvement
Here are a few questions you can ask yourself to assess whether your involvement is necessary and in what context:
- What are the desired outcomes?
- If the roles were reversed would I want/need help?
- If I’m going to jump in, what can I do that hasn’t already been done/worked well/blind spots to get through together?
- Has my team explicitly asked for help on something I’m uniquely qualified to assist on?
- Could I help them break it apart behind the scenes so they can put it in front of the client instead of me?
- Will my involvement undermine my team in any way?
- If I am going to take a more prominent role in the deal, am I fully aware of what my team has done/agreed to/said thus far and on the same page?
There is no room for contradictions, perceived incongruencies, or inefficiencies on deals of this magnitude. Things must be seamless, consistent, and crisp! If it’s messy internally, think about what that might look like for your buyers.
Final thoughts
In my experience, most of the involvement that makes deals go south starts with the wrong expectations from the top down.
As a general rule, trust your team to run point, work with them behind the scenes on what they need, block and tackle internally, and participate in meetings when you can help the process not hurt it.
Lastly, if you are going to be front and center with the client, do your homework to ensure you all are on the same page.
According to Biznology, 82% of B2B decision-makers think salespeople are unprepared as it is. So ensure you’re not adding to this perception. Nothing puts doubt in an enterprise buyer’s mind like inconsistency and sloppiness!
Originally published at https://avenuetalentpartners.com.
?? AI Certified Consultant l ?? B2B Sales Advisor l ?? $25M+ Sold l Top B2B Sales Influencer l Top 300 Women in SaaS l ?? Speaker l ?? Mentor
4 年This is a great post and the article referenced is excellent also! As others have stated, I’ve also been on both sides as a solution sales rep (good leader/bad leader). The most important part is learning from all experiences to achieve next level success.
AEs win Enterprise deals with my strategies & systems ?????? Coaching & Free Resources ?? krystenconner.com?? ex Outreach, Salesforce, Tableau ???????????? Click bell to be notified when I post ??
4 年Amy Volas Have always appreciated it when my leadership has approached their involvement through a lens of “how can I help here” v. “What can I control here”
Small Business Bookkeeping and Fractional Controller
4 年Amy Volas great article and advice. For me as a leader, John in as needed but more importantly it’s the jumping out at the right that is the most important. Sometimes you just have to let them see it through
Head of Sales at Arketa
4 年When jumping on a call, I'd always say, "I'm not going to say anything unless you ask me to, or unless they ask me a question." And then that's exactly what I would do. #1 priority is help people get better. Maybe I have something for the rep, or maybe I learn something we can share with the rest of the team. Needed to feel relevant is just not being able to check your own emotions at the door.