Triggering Sales Productivity by Understanding Return-on-Effort | January 26, 2010
| Triggering Sales Productivity by Understanding Return-on-Effort | January 26, 2010 |
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There is much talk these days of a need for better, deeper, integration of marketing and sales. In my view, it’s desperately needed, but must be done in ways that address the underlying reason why executives are demanding it – they want a higher return on investment (ROI) from marketing and sales. At its core, this requires finding ways to improve the return-on-effort (ROE) in sales.
The second key to improving sales productivity is to deliver much simpler views of the massively useful information now available. Today, in many sales teams, there’s an all-you-can eat 24/7 information buffet in play. There’s so much work to be done, and so much information available with which to do it, that important callbacks aren’t occurring. Often it’s because sales people don’t have the time to call. In some cases, they’re flooded with so much information that they’re missing opportunities to re-engage with interested prospects. In my experience, the more information sales reps have the less of it they'll ever consume. Barry Trailer's noted the same in CSO Insight's formula for sales productivity. What's needed therefore are interfaces that reduce the flow of information to sales people and add some smarts to the information that’s flowing. What’s needed are interfaces that make it much easier for sales people to understand everything that's going on and then choose, wisely, where best to invest their efforts. In my experience, when Sales Reps’ can make smart choices, easily, of what to do next, and with whom, their efforts have more impact. It’s an important second step. The third key to improving sales productivity is measuring, in the aggregate, the impacts of selling efforts. In my view we've come to a point where our ability to measure content consumption and do clever things with it (like lead scoring) is really impressive. Being helpful, however, requires sales conversations, not just content consumption. In my view, this requires new metrics that reveal the impact of conversational sales efforts. Metrics which reveal, for instance:
I’ve been privileged to witness the impacts on sales productivity of doing these three things, and doing them all at once. They’re seeding improvements in the return-on-effort for both marketing and sales. It’s what keeps me coming into the office every day. John Cousineau Informed Innovation in B2B Sales Productivity Posted January 26, 2010 Categories: General Comments Add Your Comment |
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