The focus of this blog is the first of two on  Improving Sales Effectiveness.  The first is the Quality of Sales Managers Matters. It is based on findings from the Conference Executive Board, PDS Groups and Huthwaite Research Group studies on sales management and coaching. All three agree on 5 Main Factors: (Listen to the Radio Show)
#1 High-performing sales manager’s impact reps engagement and financial performance. Reps reporting to great managers report high job satisfaction with four times more revenue than those working for poor managers.
#2 Coaching Is KingThe manager activity most linked with sales rep success is coaching. However, their coaching ability to coach individual sales reps is the weakest.
#3 Who they coach is selective— Coaching low or star performers does not statistically improve performance. Core performers, the 60% center of the performance Bell Curve make significant improvements with coaching.
#4 Bottom-Line ImpactsEffective coaching hits the bottom line. Core sales reps receiving great coaching reach on average 102% of goal in contrast to sales people reporting poor coaching who achieve only 83% of goal. Good coaching can improve core performance by 19%. This is lower than with PDS’s and Huthwaite’s sales productivity projects (18%-30% sales increases)
#5 Great Coaching Is a Learned SkillQuantitative analysis shows that five elements account for 77% of coaching effectiveness. Armed with this information, we can develop great coaches by focusing them on specific activities such as emphasizing the importance of targeting the best opportunities and spending at least three, but no more than five, hours coaching each rep per month.

What difficulties do firms face in getting Sales Managers coaching to impact results?

Increasing their impact is easier said than done for two reasons; they are counter-cultural to traditional sales performance improvement. First is their changing role; most managers are still promoted based their sales performance as a rep, whereas when they are mangers the skills are different. Second is the changing sales model; the manager profile itself is simultaneously changing with the product-to-solutions transition. This “double jump” represents a vexing challenge to aspiring solutions-ready managers

How do more traditional sales managers fare during these transitions?

How do more traditional sales managers fare during these transitions?

The indications give cause for concern. Many Sales Managers fail to make the transition at an unexpectedly high rate. And, most alarmingly, sales leaders readily concede their first-line managers are ill equipped to succeed in the future model. Nearly 75% of current managers are judged to lack the skills to meet future performance requirements.

So, this must present a real challenge to finding and retaining good managers, right?

Right, demand for good sales managers has never been greater. Research shows that quality managers are significantly more likely to positively impact rep job satisfaction and retain top talent. Indirect benefits of strong managers.
The Manager Performance Premium
The financial impact of star managers compared to underperforming managers. In one industry (pharmaceuticals), a top manager can drive $20 million more production from a sales team than a low performer. Even more promisingly, star managers can grow revenue production at a rate 4X+ than that of poor managers—a difference even more striking over time.

So what is the business case for developing such star managers?

Well we know that teams receiving less than two hours coaching per rep per month only achieve 90% of goal. Whereas Managers who coach their reps 3hrs+ coaching each month perform at 107% of goal. The data is striking; coaching explains a 17%-50% performance difference between those coached and not coached. Even more powerfully, coaching is the difference between reps making or not making goal. Coaching also provides the additional benefit of increasing returns on training investments.
Skill “training decay” rates for traditional training. Reps fail to recall 87% of what they learned 30 days following the training. However, the research shows that when training is complemented by in-field coaching and reinforcement, productivity is quadrupled from 22% to 88%.

I know many organizations that I see that don’t ever mention the “C” word yet the case seems so clear So???

Yes, the business case for coaching is clear but the opportunity is not easily realized by most sales organizations, as you have seen. The problem is that so many sales managers lack coaching skill. Sales managers repeatedly under-perform in two critical solutions-management skills: developing and coaching their reps.

So how do you address this problem?

The path good Sales Coaching is a journey. This journey consists of phases starting by simply recognizing the significant performance improvement that coaching provides, moving through stages that create time and tools to ensure coaching can take place, and ending with the ongoing measurement of coaching success.

But, What are the difficulties of getting it right?

The common difficulties of embedding coaching behaviors is hard and, more importantly there are landmines and “coach” is not in the Company mindset for example:

  1. Coaching is not a priority
  2. Coaching is seen as criticism
  3. Coaching is seen as closing for their Reps – Give a man two fish or teach him to fish”
  4. Coaching when it occurs, is focused on the poor performers not the body of the sales force
  5. Coaching focus, frequency and performance are  not measured

Let’s get to solutions, What can you do if you have these issues?

First, Direct Managers on Who to Coach


Who is coached is at least as important as what is coached in achieving breakout sales results. The business case for directing first-line managers on whom to coach and develop their skills is overwhelming.
Great coaching does not improve the performance of all reps equally. Great coaching improves the performance of core reps while having relatively little impact on underperformers and stars.
The finding regarding coaching star performers may not be too surprising. One of the hallmarks of star sales reps is continuous improvement; if there’s a better way to sell, stars tend to find and adopt it more readily than others. However, the finding regarding low performers—that coaching does not boost their performance—is far more troubling because many managers spend significant time in this area.
The insight is that the largest segment of sales forces, the core, represents the biggest opportunity to improve sales results through coaching. Core reps who receive great coaching attain on average 102% of goal. But core reps who report receiving the lowest level of coaching effectiveness reach on average 83% of their goal. The 19% difference represents the opportunity for sales organizations that significantly improve their coaching programs.
In summary, two very important conclusions for first-line managers:
1. A serious investment in better coaching can improve sales results dramatically in most organizations.
2. Coaching efforts should be targeted on core performers yields the greatest returns.

What’s your prescription for success?

The Prescription for Success
Sales executives need to find ways for their managers to achieve outstanding coaching success by:
1. Building strong relationships with direct reports
2. Dedicating themselves improving team results
3. Emphasizing with their reps to target the best opportunities
4. Aggressively pursuing deal profitability
5. Creating a role for specialists to support opportunity creation
6. Coaching the core performers and the stars for retention
7. Spending between three and five hours per month coaching selected reps
8. Adapting their coaching style to the individual
9. Delivering coaching in person and in the moment
10. Recognizing the importance of rep job satisfaction in coaching delivery and effectiveness

Have you got an example where these 10 were implemented?

In one Project with a Canadian pharmaceutical company’s sales organization

  • Implemented an intensive coaching program based on a new Sales Competency framework
  • Increased repeat access to Key Opinion Leaders
  • Empowered key sales personnel to view themselves as independent CEO of their territory
  • Developed an Influence Model

Results

  • Customer Satisfaction ratings improved from 4th to 2nd equal inside 12 month period
  • Company made their stretch sales target whilst going through a merger (15% to $800m CDN)
  • Senior management attributed increase in sales to:
    • Level of coaching of reps increased 300%
    • Call averages rose 110%
    • Canada was rated as best managed merger by Corporate HQ

Tip of the Month
If you work with sales people, ask their manager how much coaching they do each month per rep. E.g. A manager with 10 reps should be doing 30 to 50hours per month coaching, if not……..
Listen to the Radio Show of this blog
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Great, but how can this help me?

This is probably the  first thing on your mind after reading this Blog.   How about asking us?  The first call is free!  Just email me to set it up.  Don’t wait, get PDS working for you!. If our conversation leaves you needing more, we offer at a reasonable fee telephone and video coaching on change, alignment, and personal and executive performance that improve the bottom line.  If that still doesn’t do it, we’ll work with you on a solution.

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For Help in Getting Your People on the Same Page
Contact: Nick Anderson, Senior Partner, PDS Group LTD
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© Copyright All Rights Reserved, PDS Group LTD and Walk the Talk – A Blog for Agile Minds, [2010-2011]. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Nick Anderson, PDS Group LTD and Walk the Talk – A Blog for Agile Minds with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.