This week, I'm giving a talk called "Economic Recovery: Growing Revenue  and Share During a Recovering Yet Volatile Economy" to a group of NSI  partners in Redmond, Wash. These tend to be the larger-sized  Microsoft partners, but the message is applicable for any size partner  organization. 
About 18 months ago, while we were helping our clients create their 2009  budgets, we asked them to create their revenue and expense pro formas, reduce  projected sales by 25 percent, and then redo their pro formas again. This  exercise was designed to help the clients gain a perspective on what changes or  cost reductions they might need to make if expectations weren't met. This  helped everyone manage their business well during the past year. 
2010 will be a different year.
A recent USA Today headline got it right: "Key To This Earnings Season:  Sales." And the deck reads, "Investors want to see profit growth that's not  from cost cuts."
This clearly states the objective for 2010: Be aggressive and focus on  earning market share and building your customer base. Specifically, the message  of my talk will be around creating a culture of success -- what I call "brilliant  execution" at all levels of the organization -- and focusing on being  aggressive in sales and marketing. 
I'll also talk about focusing on the little things: putting up signage on  positive messages, celebrating wins and providing positive reinforcement every  day. Why is this important? Sales teams are mentally tired, support and technical  people are stressed out, and as the business climate improves, retention and  development will be important. People might consider moving to other  organizations where the internal climate seems more employee-friendly. 
The other reason sales leaders must be more aggressive is that many of  your competitors are still "sitting back," waiting for the economy to  bring them out of the sales slump and recession they've experienced. My recommendation?  Be proactive, not reactive.
Final note: If you're going to be in Charlotte, N.C.  soon, join me Feb. 16 for the Sales Leadership Summit. Register by Feb. 5 and  save! Sign  up here.
Ken Thoreson, president of Acumen Management Group Ltd., "operationalizes" sales management systems and processes that pull revenue out of the doldrums into the fresh zone. During the past 12 years, our consulting, advisory and platform services have illuminated, motivated and rejuvenated the sales efforts for partners throughout North America. Move up and move ahead! Acumen Management provides keynotes, consulting services and products designed to improve business performance. 3f4qb8v9ge
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on February 02, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		If you think  you did great in January, or that there's no more work to do, ask yourself: "What  else could I have done? Why didn't I exceed my sales? Did I have enough top  talent in place?" While short-term success is critical and must be your  focus, a larger lesson needs to be considered. 
In  coaching our clients, we're more interested in looking at September's sales  goals than January's. If your revenue curve for 2010 ramps up during the second  half of the year, then you must actively recruit and hire now to ensure you  have the necessary salespeople in place to achieve your objectives. Many sales  leaders get caught in the trap of having to achieve increased levels of sales  dollars with either not enough salespeople on the team or with increased  expectations for the existing sales team's productivity levels (which might be  below-par to begin with).
Sales  management training will tell you to plan on unexpected sales force attrition. If,  as a sales leader, you have set sales standards for your sales team, there may  be "planned" reductions by way of you letting go of  underperforming sales representatives. If it takes you 90 days to recruit a top  performer and 90 to 120 days for those individuals to contribute at acceptable  or quota levels, your organization could be short of overall quota attainment, putting  the sales leader behind on a year-to-date basis. 
Specifically,  if you begin recruiting in February, using the hypothetical timeline above means  an April hire and July/August sales production (consider summer month seasonality).  Of course, this all assumes that you hire a top performer, that you train them  properly, and that they become successful.
Though recruiting  is 20 percent of the job focus for sales managers, it should be a consistent  focus. Why? The top performers may not be looking when you believe you have  opportunities open. Consider actively promoting your organization every 60 days  using a variety of media.
For more guidance on this, consider joining other sales leaders at our  one-and-a-half-day training workshop. Listen, learn  and actively participate in our Sales Leadership Summit, which takes place Feb. 16 and 17  at Charlotte, N.C. Get all the details here.
Ken Thoreson, president of Acumen Management Group Ltd., "operationalizes" sales management systems and processes that pull revenue out of the doldrums into the fresh zone. During the past 12 years, our consulting, advisory and platform services have illuminated, motivated and rejuvenated the sales efforts for partners throughout North America. Move up and move ahead! Acumen Management provides keynotes, consulting services and products designed to improve business performance. 3f4qb8v9ge
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on January 25, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		The role  of the sales leader at this time of year is to focus on building or maintaining  a great atmosphere of success, dedication and fun. All the marketing plans  should be in place, sales systems completed and training planned for the next  90 days.
Here are several  actions you should focus on:
  - A shared sense of       mission or purpose. Your overall sales goals and "theme" for the       year must be reinforced each day, each week, and in every way. Do you have       your 2010 theme on posters in your sales areas? Does each salesperson have       their "goalboards"       hung in their cubes? (These are pictorials of where salespersons rank       according to their sales/activity goals, and pictures of your annual sales       trip or other goals they have based on their 2010 salesperson business       plans.)
 
 
- Clear and       attainable goals. Everyone needs a quota, but high-performance sales teams       have "stretch goals," as well. These must be realistic. Are your       compensation plans or sales contests designed to reinforce the stretch       goals?
 
 
- Frequent objective       feedback. A sales leader must find the time to coach, mentor and provide       insights to keep their sales team focused and constantly improving.       Reinforce the positive actions as well as the need to fix the areas that       need to be improved. A great phrase you should always use: "If you       had an opportunity to make that sale call over again, what, if anything,       would you do differently?"
 
 
- Positive rewards       for appropriate performance. Do you have a first-quarter sales       contest to start the year off properly? Having a yearly sales incentive       trip is a must. Now is the time to design your second-quarter contest to       build sales activity and required pipeline to ensure your summer will be       successful.
 
 
- Timely support and       help when requested or needed. Sales leaders gain respect when they provide       the atmosphere of "being there" for their team. When a       salesperson walks into your office or calls you on the phone, your first       response should be, "How can I help you?"
Remember,  when you walk into your office each day, your body language, your attitude and  your actions will be transferred to your team.
Ken Thoreson, president of Acumen Management Group Ltd., "operationalizes" sales management systems and processes that pull revenue out of the doldrums into the fresh zone. During the past 12 years, our consulting, advisory and platform services have illuminated, motivated and rejuvenated the sales efforts for partners throughout North America. Move up and move ahead! Acumen Management provides keynotes, consulting services and products designed to improve business performance. 3f4qb8v9ge 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on January 19, 20101 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Every  holiday for the past 20-plus years, I have sat down with my wife to discuss the  previous year and think about the upcoming year. We consider what we've  accomplished and what we want to accomplish during the coming 12 months. Certainly,  we've experienced difficult economic swings along with the positives. And  always, there are new challenges. 
We've  saved these as written documents, and whenever I reread our goals from years  past, it makes me appreciate life more fully. However, the most important thing  to learn from this exercise is that there are no unrealistic goals -- only  unrealistic timeframes. 
As Acumen  Management moves into our 13th year (yikes!), I thought I might share the  various categories we use to focus ourselves. It's my hope that if you haven't  created a formal one-, five- or 15-year plan, you'll consider it. Start with  2010 and build from there. 
  - Social: What  will we do to have a full social life with friends? Dinner parties?
- Personal: What do I want to do this year? Travel?
- Physical: How  will we continue to be healthy? Run two miles a day?
- Professional: What are my career goals? Gain a promotion?
- Financial: What are my objectives as they relate to money? Pay off the mortgage?
- House: What are our major projects? Build a backyard patio?
- Societal: How  will I give back to society to make it a better place? Work in food banks?
One of the  major issues to not only make the objectives or achievements about just you. In  one of my keynotes, "The Passion of Impact,"   I address the need for personal and professional life balance. The real success  lies in the ability to positively impact the lives of others, and how YOUR life  will grow because of the feeling you get from helping someone else. Make this a  better place or help someone make their lives more livable. Make that a part of  your yearly plan, as well. 
All the best  in 2010, and think positive!
Ken Thoreson, president of Acumen Management Group Ltd., "operationalizes" sales management systems and processes that pull revenue out of the doldrums into the fresh zone. During the past 12 years, our consulting, advisory and platform services have illuminated, motivated and rejuvenated the sales efforts for partners throughout North America. Move up and move ahead! Acumen Management provides keynotes, consulting services and products designed to improve business performance. 3f4qb8v9ge 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on January 06, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		It's Dec.  14 as I write this, meaning there are only 17 days left to exceed your numbers. 
What? Well,  if you count Saturdays and Sundays, you can still work to ensure that your  year-end numbers will be hit. Maximizing time, increasing sales strategy  sessions and focusing on every opportunity can make the difference at this time  of year.
I can  recall one year, on Dec. 27, we'd been told that a PO  had been approved...but we hadn't received it by fax or mail. We called our  contact who confirmed it was in purchasing and had been approved. We then asked  him for the purchasing agent's name and phone number to follow up. When we  called the purchasing agent, we learned that he was taking his year-end vacation  time. 
We were  stuck, and our sales contact had neither the power nor idea to process the  paper work. 
In our  strategy session, I brought up the movie "Watergate," which was about  the investigative reporting of Robert Woodward and Carl Bernstein after the  Nixon presidential campaign break-in. The reporters had one contact, one phone  number, but couldn't determine who that person worked for in the White House or  what department they worked in. 
What did  they do? They started dialing all the telephone numbers that "surrounded"  the number they had and began to put the pieces together. We decided to do the  same thing.
After  multiple attempts, eventually we found someone who actually answered their  phone. After we explained our dilemma, the person we spoke to realized that she  actually sat next to the purchasing agent we were looking for. She went over  the person's desk, found the PO and faxed it  to our salesperson. That PO was enough to put  that salesperson over 100 percent for the year!  
It took  some creativity, extra work and pushing the envelope, but the numbers count.
What are  your stories of doing "extra' to win the business? Please share with all  our readers by e-mailing me at [email protected]!
Ken Thoreson, president of Acumen Management Group Ltd., "operationalizes" sales management systems and processes that pull revenue out of the doldrums into the fresh zone. During the past 12 years, our consulting, advisory and platform services have illuminated, motivated and rejuvenated the sales efforts for partners throughout North America. Move up and move ahead! Acumen Management provides keynotes, consulting services and products designed to improve business performance. HQNHTN8GWN7Q
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on December 14, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		During the  last week, after many conversations with various organizations and spending  some time monitoring my LinkedIn groups, I've noticed that many people are  concerned with 2010. After talking to various individuals and probing some chat  rooms, I realized that, as usual, the critical success factor that many are  finding missing is consistent sales. 
However, what  was causing the lack of volume or profitability in sales was unique to each  organization. I heard comments regarding marketing, lack of salespeople, no  sales training, compensation plans not working, no leads, salespeople not  working hard enough to win, etc. The list could go on.
What are  your problems? Send me an e-mail at [email protected] with your No. 1 problem, and I'll attempt to give you a few quick ideas that  might help. Think of it as a holiday gift to all my readers!  HQNHTN8GWN7Q 
Meanwhile,  since there's no one answer for each situation, try to do some self-inspection  and then go here.  What's there? A list of almost 30 past columns I've written on a variety of  sales and sales management topics. 
Ken Thoreson, president of Acumen Management Group Ltd., "operationalizes" sales management systems and processes that pull revenue out of the doldrums into the fresh zone. During the past 12 years, our consulting, advisory and platform services have illuminated, motivated and rejuvenated the sales efforts for partners throughout North America. Move up and move ahead! Acumen Management provides keynotes, consulting services and products designed to improve business performance. 3f4qb8v9ge
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on December 07, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		At the  recent Atlanta Sales Leadership Summit, we held breakout sessions titled "What  Can We Do Now To Boost Sales in the Next 90 Days?" I've compiled the following  list of tips from the various teams that participated. As always, the key is to "execute  brilliantly." 
If you  have questions or have other ideas you'd like to add to the list, send me an e-mail  at [email protected] and I'll compile  them for next week's blog.
  - Conduct  a thorough customer review and determine what you've sold to each client -- and  what you have not sold to each client. Create a specific action plan to contact  each customer with a special offering to show them your "other services or  products." Make the plan easy (i.e., contact 10 a week). This is a great  sales meeting idea.
 
 
- Create  a weekly Blitz Day program, either by telephone or by cold-calling teams in  selected areas of your territory. Set up a contest for the most "hits"  and make it fun.
 
 
- Put  more executives on every face-to-face sales call. Team selling will improve  sales; more ears and eyes on every prospect leads to better strategy.
 
 
- Increase  sales skills and product knowledge. Schedule intense training to improve  objection handling, selling your firm and closing skills. An increase level of  product knowledge builds confidence.
 
 
- Conduct  a companywide contest with a focus on generating referrals. Create teams of sales,  support and customer service personnel. The team with the highest number of  referrals wins!
 
 
- Create  new marketing campaigns with "special packages" (year-ending or new  year offerings). Work your vendors for "specials."
 
 
- Create  a 90-day sales contest with a weekend hotel/dinner package. This could be for the  highest percentage of quota for the period, sales or new customers.
 
 
- Host  two executive forums with an "expert" to speak on business challenges  (i.e., CPA, ROI on project management, business management ideas).
 
 
- Increase  your focus on securing your existing opportunities. Make sure you have a  visible list (on a whiteboard, for example) of the top 10 sales opportunities  and hold strategy sessions with multiple people discussing each opportunity.
 
 
-  Create a Customer Appreciation Event at your  office. Invite every customer, user and selected prospects to this event. Give  tours and promote existing packages and new packages. (See No. 1.)
Ken Thoreson, president of Acumen Management Group Ltd., "operationalizes" sales management systems and processes that pull revenue out of the doldrums into the fresh zone. During the past 12 years, our consulting, advisory and platform services have illuminated, motivated and rejuvenated the sales efforts for partners throughout North America. Move up and move ahead! Acumen Management provides keynotes, consulting services and products designed to improve business performance. 3f4qb8v9ge
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on November 30, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		In  challenging times, average sales managers tend to get exposed -- they can't  hide. So why is the average tenure of a sales leader less than 18 months?
The reason  for failure is simply that many sales leaders don't fully understand what their  real job is, or have never been trained effectively to lead, manage and  motivate their organizations. 
The Top  Sales Experts Roundtable, which takes place this Wednesday, Nov. 18, at 11  a.m. Eastern time, will address the challenges of sales management with a prescriptive  approach to defining the duties and responsibilities of the position. I and four  of the top sales leadership coaches in the world will discuss what really  separates top sales leaders from the sour cream.
I'll be joined by Dave Brock, founder and CEO of Partners in Excellence; Steven Rosen, founder and CEO of Star Results; Danita Bye, founder and CEO of Sales  Growth Specialists; and Jonathan  Farrington, chairman of The  Sales Corporation. 
So are you  ready for 2010? The sales "holy grail" of sustainable  increases in revenue and profits --achieved consistently, reliably and by  design -- is achievable. Join us to discover how! Reserve your complimentary  spot at the roundtable here.
Ken Thoreson, president of Acumen Management Group Ltd., "operationalizes" sales management systems and processes that pull revenue out of the doldrums into the fresh zone. During the past 12 years, our consulting, advisory and platform services have illuminated, motivated and rejuvenated the sales efforts for partners throughout North America. Move up and move ahead! Acumen Management provides keynotes, consulting services and products designed to improve business performance. 3f4qb8v9ge
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on November 16, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		In challenging times, the mental  strength of our sales teams is key. Positive reinforcement and  recognition are important factors in building a high-performance team. Sales  compensation and great sales management are important, but now Top Sales Experts  is making it easier for you.
Strategic sales  management means learning to use tools, sales training and emotion to build energy  into their sales organization. This easy-to-use program can do it for you. As a member of this worldwide group,  I wanted to share this unique opportunity -- and it's free! 
| 
| 
| Sales superstars close more deals  and ramp up business for their companies. Do you know one? |  
| AllBusiness and Top Sales Experts want to  honor the top-performing salespeople who deliver results in today's competitive  market. You can help make that happen. We need your nomination. The panel  of top sales coaches and experts will select one salesperson each month from  among the nominees.  Monthly winners will: 
  Be recognized by their peers for their outstanding  contributions.Be profiled in a feature article for AllBusiness and its  sister site, Hoover's.Receive free a 12-month VIP membership at Top Sales  Experts.Receive a signed copy of a panelist's book.Be offered the opportunity to receive a free sales profile  (value: $195). One  annual winner will receive a package of sales  training and coaching programs (value: $3,000), lifetime VIP membership in Top Sales  Experts, a selection of signed books from the panel, plus, of course, the  AllBusiness Sales Star trophy.  Top salespeople inspire those around them and help drive  company success. Take this opportunity to recognize them for their leadership  and contributions to the selling profession. Nominate a true sales star! Every nominee will receive a free six month VIP membership  over at Top Sales Experts Full details here. |  |  |
 | 
P.S.: There is no deadline for entries each month; all  nominations received are carried forward.  
Ken Thoreson, president of Acumen Management Group Ltd., "operationalizes" sales management systems and processes that pull revenue out of the doldrums into the fresh zone. During the past 12 years, our consulting, advisory and platform services have illuminated, motivated and rejuvenated the sales efforts for partners throughout North America. Move up and move ahead! Acumen Management provides keynotes, consulting services and products designed to improve business performance. 3f4qb8v9ge
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on November 09, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		In the past  few blogs, we've been covering various topics to prepare sales leaders for  2010. The strategic sales leader is already thinking of compensation, sales  training, budgeting, and hiring and recruiting for next year. 
To help our  clients fully understand all of the components of job sales management, we've compiled  a whitepaper describing the purpose of and the steps necessary to build a high-performance  sales organization. Below is an excerpt of the document (to download  the entire article, go here):
  A  Prescriptive Approach To Defining the Duties and Responsibilities
  The ideal sales manager acts as a sales leader, a catalyst for  change and continuous improvement, and a positive force within the entire  organization. They understand their priorities and their team and have a vision  for the future.
  The purpose of this document  is to define key actions that the sales manager (SM) must take to be effective,  describe the purpose of each action and explain why it's important. Note that  the actions are not placed in any order of priority.
  Sales Achievement
  
    - Purpose: The top objective of sales management is to drive sales,  capture new revenue, and exceed monthly sales and margin objectives. The  purpose of the action list below is to keep the objective of sales achievement  as a constant focus. 
 
 
        - Perform  sales strategy development with each salesperson on Monday morning, at a  minimum, and in a formal one-on-one meeting during the week. 
 
 
            - This  action is to ensure the salesperson is focused, has effective strategies in  place and is working on the right opportunities.
 
 
 
- The  sales leader must use strategic tools and questioning techniques to ensure the  prospects are qualified and the strategy is valid. This will also teach the  salesperson to use the same tool set, how to think strategically and to work  smarter. 
 
 
- Attend  key sales calls early in the sales process and help close sales opportunities.
 
 
            - This  action is to help the SM better understand the opportunity and the people  involved; when the SM is involved at the end of the sales process, a  relationship with the prospect is initiated.
 
 
- The  SM's role is important in establishing company credibility, if required; early  visitations will help the SM be a better coach.
 
 
 
- Review  pipeline analysis and qualification to ensure adequate values exist.
 
 
            - This  action is critical because the SM must be looking 90 days beyond the current  month to make sure sales and marketing pipelines carry the necessary sales  opportunities in units and dollars to meet goal...
 
 
To keep reading, go 
here.
And finally, as a parting thought, check out the comment reader Donald R. Hacker recently gave in response to this document:
  In the fourth paragraph of your Sept. 28 blog entry, you summed up the attitude of #4 as, and I paraphrase, "telling your team(mates) that we can still win." Nicely said! Leaders lead with attitude, followed by action. Such values cannot be merely taught; they must be caught! There must be buy-in to the principle that you can fail your way to success if you persevere. Perseverance takes character and character is earned through results-driven action. Albert Einstein said, "Genius is 90 percent perspiration, 10 percent inspiration." In this vein, I have observed that those considered lucky tend to be those who also work hard, persevere and do not give up until they create a new opportunity.  
Ken Thoreson, president of Acumen Management Group Ltd., "operationalizes" sales management systems and processes that pull revenue out of the doldrums into the fresh zone. During the past 12 years, our consulting, advisory and platform services have illuminated, motivated and rejuvenated the sales efforts for partners throughout North America. Move up and move ahead! Acumen Management provides keynotes, consulting services and products designed to improve business performance. 3f4qb8v9ge
 
	
Posted by Ken Thoreson on November 03, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		These past  five days, I've had relatives visiting -- and it's been great! We enjoyed lots of great food, golf and the  beginning of fall in East Tennessee. My sister-in-law is very successful in sales and we spent many moments discussing her  career and mine, and talking about everything from cold calling to various sales management topics. Even though she's  considered a "top performer" in her industry, she's still focused on net-new business  development -- one reason she's still a top performer!
She knows I  enjoy cooking and has heard my keynote on creating your own personal menu, "The Passion of Impact." She felt that  cold calling was her most challenging ingredient. But the more we talked, the more we realized that cold calling wasn't her biggest challenge -- it was time management. Or, more specifically, blocking out time. Because she's so busy, we explored  a resource for prospecting that she has been overlooking.  
Cultivating  your existing clients for referrals or gaining access to targeted accounts via  your current clients must be included in your sales plan. One idea I used to implement is scheduling, at  a minimum, two calls a year to all my "old" clients to perform a quality-control check and see if they had other needs  to service. But most importantly, I always asked, "Do you  know anyone else we should be speaking with?" (After a few calls, they came to expect that question from me.) Schedule all of your clients into Outlook or whatever  CRM tool you're using during the next few weeks and begin the process.
The other  marketing activity we recommend is to schedule a "users  conference" twice a year. These would include new product updates, client panels, industry  or vendor teams, and a special speaker or program. One my clients does this and gets  terrific results including not only "up-selling" existing clients, but inviting all of their existing prospects to the same event to let them be sold by  their existing clients.
As sales  mangers, our strategy is to focus our salespeople on closing every opportunity  that is on the table. Tactically, that is correct. However, at this time of the year,   sales leadership must be focused on  achieving the sales quotas for the first quarter of 2010.  
What are  your ideas for cultivating your customers for more business? Comment below or send me an email at [email protected]. I'll collect your contributions and list them in the next  blog.
Ken Thoreson, president of Acumen Management Group Ltd., "operationalizes" sales management systems and processes that pull revenue out of the doldrums into the fresh zone. During the past 12 years, our consulting, advisory and platform services have illuminated, motivated and rejuvenated the sales efforts for partners throughout North America. Move up and move ahead! Acumen Management provides keynotes, consulting services and products designed to improve business performance. 3f4qb8v9ge
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on October 26, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Last week, I received a call from a firm with 700 salespeople in a somewhat commodity market. The person I spoke to was in charge of the firm's sales training programs; we discussed a variety of programs we've created to develop sales certification programs for other sales training organizations. When I asked this person why he was considering the need for sales certification when most organizations are cutting back on sales training, he told me that in their tough industry, sales leadership felt that building a higher-quality sales team can separate the firm from the competition and add value to their sales offerings.
Adding sales value will be a critical success factor in 2010. This is true for organizations with five or fewer salespeople and certainly for those with more than 500.
With many clients, we simply work to install a three-week new-hire-on-board training program, and then build quarterly sales training programs that cover product/technical knowledge, sales skills, competition and company operations (CRM) industry awareness. These are designed to increase the professional value of the salesforce. 
Sales certification takes this concept one step further. Sales certification requires a philosophical commitment from management to building a strong sales culture. It will result in more analytical sales data, less turnover, higher margins and long-term client relationships. A sales certification program requires sales team training, testing and validating that the training has been accepted and acted upon by the sales team. 
This is the "inspect what you expect" approach we've written about before. We recommend to all our clients that twice a year (at minimum), each salesperson must be videotaped selling your company and your solutions and presenting a solutions recommendations or sales proposal. This not only allows sales management to access the skill levels of each salesperson, but it also builds a sales training library of the "best" sales training videos for each of the presentations.
Sales certification can also take it much further. In one situation, we hired professional actors to roleplay sales scenarios. Each salesperson had 30 minutes to read the sales scenario prior to walking into the sales situation in which the professional actors (a panel of three judges) evaluated the sales call. One note: The professional actor had a slightly different sales scenario. This forced the salesperson to react in real time -- just like a real sales call. Each sales call was videotaped and judged on a pass/fail basis. This pressure and need to perform added the edge to getting it right! We also did this in their account planning process each quarter.
The last piece of sales certification is a tie to sales compensation. As each phase of certification level is achieved -- you may have three to five levels of certification -- higher levels of compensation can be paid. We like to recommend a quarterly percentage bonus if 100 percent of QTD quota is achieved.
2010 won't be an easy year. The economy will still be fighting back, there will be worries of inflation and devaluing of the U.S. dollar, unemployment will still be high, and terrorist threats will still exist. Creating teamwork among quality salespeople will the way to ensure you sell your way out of the recession. In fact -- and this is our message for 2010 -- successful companies will have to create the policies, strategies and people to create their own opportunities and sell, sell, sell. Taking orders is a lost strategy. Sales leadership must set the discipline, accountability and control within their sales organizations to separate themselves from their competition with sales certification.
Ken Thoreson, president of Acumen Management Group Ltd., "operationalizes" sales management systems and processes that pull revenue out of the doldrums into the fresh zone. During the past 12 years, our consulting, advisory and platform services have illuminated, motivated and rejuvenated the sales efforts for partners throughout North America. Move up and move ahead! Acumen Management provides keynotes, consulting services and products designed to improve business performance. 3f4qb8v9ge
 
	Posted  on October 19, 20091 comments