During most of  my keynote programs, I discuss my three  rules for creating a "gourmet life." In  most of my client engagements I've also been discussing the elements for creating a  culture of high performance. In both situations I like to reinforce that there  is a need to align the soul of your team  to goals of the organization. 
		Focusing on the soul is  critical for creating an environment that drives success. Certainly, building emotion  is a major objective in leadership; having it and creating it must be a focus  for all leaders. In previous blogs I  discussed "Building Belief"  (if you want a copy of it, send me an e-mail at [email protected]). While that blog discussed  how to build belief in your product/service and company, I also believe there  needs to be a focus on the greater good.
		In my keynote  program I show a PowerPoint slide that displays a Hall of Fame list of people -- some whom I  know and some I don't -- who have made a  difference in others' lives. I personally  believe the more you contribute to the success of others, the more successful  you will be. Getting others to feel good about their professional and personal  success is part of the job of sales leadership. 
		On my Hall of Fame list is a man in New  Hampshire who takes his guitar to hospice patients and sings to them. Another  is the man who started Habit for Humanity. There are the two sisters who started The  Love Kitchen, which cooks for the homeless or less fortunate. Then there's the family that  once a year asks their grandchildren to present their ideas for how they will choose their charity for the year. How can you bring this idea to your  organization?
		During your 2013  sales kickoff meeting, ask "How can we impact our community?" It would be a great session where individuals  can contribute their ideas, thoughts and actions. The outcome? Assign three people  to a task force, give them 45 days and ask them to present their ideas to you  and then to your company's management team. Build a complete action plan where everyone becomes committed, involved  and excited.
		Getting  your team together and working on an ongoing  community project to improve the world will build team work, morale and improve  the good feelings everyone has regarding your company. This action becomes the bond and feel-good  element in building a high-performance sales team. Today there  are many ways to impact your community, your world and your people. Start with being a  better person.
		I normally close my keynote with the following three words: "And then some." These three little words are  the secret to success. They are the difference between average people and top  people in most companies. The top people always do what I expected...and then  some. 
		They are thoughtful of others;  they are considerate and kind...and then some.
		They met their obligations and  responsibilities fairly and squarely...and then some.
		They are good friends and helpful  neighbors...and then some. 
		They can be counted on in an emergency...and then some.
		I am thankful for people like this,  for they make the world move livable. Their spirit of service is summed up on  these little words...and then some.
		What is your cause for 2013? 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on December 17, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Last week, I  was speaking at a conference on "Building  and Maintaining Sales Motivation." After the program, several  people came up to discuss my concept of a "drive statement."
		At this time  of the year, everyone is working on their sales business plans for 2013 and  finishing budgets and forecasts. While every  plan should include goals and objectives for training, marketing and sales  incentive programs, this is also the perfect time to consider how you will  maintain your sales team's emotional focus on exceeding your goals. Creating a drive statement can  assist you.
		A drive statement is a series of words or  a sentence that describes your overall theme for your sales team for an entire  year. This statement is reinforced at  every potential opportunity. It may  appear on your internal letterhead or made into a banner and hung in your sales  area. It's used to reinforce your training programs. 
		For example, I have seen one that was simply "Growth!" This word reinforced the company's focus on  sales growth, professional growth, market share growth and company growth. Another was "Brilliant  Execution." This particular company wanted to reinforce the sales  process and sales strategy execution, as well as increase the focus on customer  service. The company had defined specific steps to improve all aspects of  the sales function and it wanted everyone to know that it expected  brilliant execution!
		A more complex statement was "We will dominate our market with an assertive  approach and create a unique experience." This company wanted to make  the statement that becoming No.1 in the market was important. Using the word  "assertive" meant the company wanted a more aggressive attitude within its sales and  marketing departments; the additional use of "unique experience"  meant a touch of creativity or the opportunity to stand out was important.
		Think through  your goals for  2013. What approach and attitude do you want your sales team  to consider or act on throughout the year?   Then engage several team members to assist you in developing a sales  theme or drive statement. I   encourage you to share your thoughts on this topic in the blog comments below.
		At your 2013  sales kickoff meeting, create an atmosphere of  excitement when you unveil  a well-planned-out business plan where sales, marketing and operations are coordinated  and your sales team leaves the meeting motivated to exceed their goals. Plan a fun event but make sure your team  knows your drive statement and how it relates to your vision for the year. 
		 If  you would like a few ideas on creating a sales kickoff meeting send me an  e-mail at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on December 03, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		On a recent flight  to Seattle, I  pondered what this week's blog might contain. While   reflecting on the past year and looking forward toward 2013, it occurred to me that a quick  summary of a few basic actions sales leadership must take to succeed would be  of value.
		
				Step One: Build an Active Recruiting Plan 
Most sales managers get fired for not hitting  the desired sales goals. Normally, the reason is because they have a lack of  salespeople selling their products/services.  You must know  your average transaction value versus your yearly  or monthly sales objectives. The key question is: "Do you  have enough salespeople on board to achieve your monthly number of required  sales transactions?"
		A sales manager must look ahead by 90 to 120 days at future potential revenue objectives and understand your manpower  requirements.  Recruiting is sales  leadership's marketing campaign for sales leads. Build an ongoing program to  ensure you have the right talent in place to exceed your goals.
		
				Step Two: Know Your Pipeline Metrics  
This is something I have written about before but it is what can bite the sales  manager. You must know the accurate value of the pipeline 90 to 120 days out  (depending upon your sales cycle). The question you must ask is: "Do you  have enough number of opportunities both in value and number of opportunities  to achieve your upcoming monthly quota?"If not, what can you do to ensure you  build up the pipeline values so that you will have enough opportunities to achieve  the monthly objective? It's November; what is your February pipeline value? Do  you have the necessary values to achieve February's goals when it's Feb. 1?
		
				Step Three: Is Your Team Trained?  
Recently, one of my new clients, a technical team member and myself listened in as two of their  salespeople gave a demonstration to a major new client sales opportunity. It became obvious to the president that the  salespeople were not professional or even capable of handling the meeting. It  was enlightening and a crucial step toward increasing the need for continued  focus on sales training. The sales team  had been neglecting our recommendations for how to improve their skill level, and  now there will be an increased buy-in by management and peer levels to focus on  sales skills.  
		  - Make more sales calls with your  team.
- Build in a quarterly salesperson skills-evaluation  process.
- Increase more role-playing in  your sales-training meetings.
- Build a quarterly sales-training program.
				Step Four: Improve Your Professional Business Acumen
				
 Make  sure you read the local business sections in your local papers, The Wall Street  Journal, business magazines and Web sites. Read three business books a year and join  a sales leadership "peer group"  of other sales managers to learn how others are increasing their leadership  skills. This step will improve your ability to discuss the business trends of  the day with prospects and your sales team, increase your stature within your management  team and improve how you manage your team.
		Follow these  four steps and your odds of surviving the usual 18-month window that most  sales leaders live under will improve. If you have not downloaded  our whitepaper, "Top  40 Sales Management  Actions To Build Predictable Revenue" from our Web site, send me an e-mail at [email protected] and I will send it to you. 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on November 26, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		My speaking  and sales leadership consulting practice causes me to work with many people who are experiencing stressful situations, like having to learn to manage a sales team for the first  time or realizing that their organizations are not performing at optimal levels.
		James Robbins, the author of Nine Minutes on Monday, captures the reader immediately by  building on the story of him climbing a mountain -- at one point, almost at the  summit, he becomes unsure if he can make it to the top. As the book moves forward, Robbins continues to share stories that  make his points and describe his easy-to-follow plan to enhance your leadership  and the performance of your team.
		While any  student of management and leadership  may be familiar with a few of Robbins' tactics, what makes his book a must-read for  all  management levels is his formula and his challenge to simply spend nine  minutes each Monday to consider nine simple questions. An example is: "How can I promote a feeling of autonomy in one employee this week?"  Each question is simple, but profound in its  potential impact on your team.
		Too many times in this fast-paced world -- especially if you're a sales manager -- we neglect the basics of  leadership and the need to build the appropriate culture that drives  performance. Those of you who read my blog regularly know that this is a favorite topic of mine.  Robbins can provide you a pathway to  becoming the real leader you need to be in any sales leadership position.
		The author  builds his case for his formula by beginning to address the fundamental needs  of all employees and yet provides answers and direction with examples of  individuals who have applied his techniques. One of his nine points is "The Need to Play." In that chapter, he  describes the importance of having fun...with an example from a funeral  home!   
		At the end of each chapter  is a "Summary" page that  recaps the chapter's  lessons and provides one of the nine questions to consider and a  key action step. At Robbins' Web site you can download other  tools, as well. Buy the book,  read it, apply Robbins' plan and find out how in the end, he made it to  the top of the summit by learning the ultimate leadership lesson. 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on October 22, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		An  upcoming election, roller-coaster days on Wall Street, Middle East issues, budgets being cut...there are many distractions.
		With  that economic domino effect hitting us all as 2012 begins to wind down,  ending the year on a high note will be more challenging than ever. At Acumen,  we've been offering the following advice to our clients and their sales teams:
		  - Keep  it in perspective. Recognize that if you are in the IT sector,  it is the best place to be in tough economic times. You sell what's especially  in demand right now -- solutions that can increase efficiency, cut costs and  enhance customer relationships.
 
 
- Stay optimistic. Remember that clients and       prospects are seeking help and you're in a position to both reassure and       assist them. 
 
 
- Work harder. (Sorry, but that's what's       needed.) Try to stretch yourself both in terms of attracting new customers       and better serving existing ones. Sell professionally; execute       brilliantly.
Meanwhile,  the standard end-of-year scenario still applies, too. As always, this is when  accelerated compensation programs kick in. More importantly, it's when many  management bonus systems take effect, rewarding executives for driving certain  levels of pretax income to the bottom line or attaining their revenue  targets.  And it's no wonder that, just  like every year at this time, sales teams feel like they're in the last 100  yards of a big race. 
		Following  are five additional steps to help you stay out in front as you approach the  2012 finish line: 
		  - Count the days. In the same way that consumers       track holiday shopping days, know how long you've got left to sell this       year. Doing the countdown adds urgency to the process for you and your       prospects. (Hint: How can you use the remaining weekends to boost       business?) 
 
 
- Consider all your resources. Can you turn to colleagues to       strategize about opportunities and develop winning tactics? How about       doing site visits? Can an existing client or a vendor contact help create       credibility with prospects?
 
 
- Plot closing strategies. Think about why prospects need       your solution and exactly how they'll benefit from implementing it,       whether it's generating revenues, improving productivity or better serving       customers. Then figure out a reason for them to act now. You may have a       sense of urgency driven by end-of-year deadlines for quotas or bonuses,       but you need to show prospects how moving forward at this point will       benefit them. 
 
 
- Make contact twice weekly. Never let a week slip by       between meetings with prospects. If you see them on Tuesday, see them       again on Thursday. Stop by at a convenient time, but always have a valuable       reason to visit, such as providing an implementation plan or a reference       letter.
 
 
- Keep prospecting. Sales organizations often       drain their pipelines by the end of December. January may be strong with       leftover business, but February, March and April typically lag. It's       important to ensure that marketing and prospecting levels remain constantly       focused on future pipeline development. We recommend that you take your       calendar and block out specific times for prospecting between now and year's       end. 
One  last tip for coping with today's economy: In the downturn following the 9/11  terrorist attacks, I developed a short personal motto that successfully  reinforced the need to keep moving forward. It was: "Take action. Stay  positive."  I suggest that you  develop a similar slogan to help you navigate these difficult times. Having a  strong foundation can make all the difference in how you end the year and  position yourself for 2013 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on October 16, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		 During the past few days, I have been  suggesting to my clients several ideas to ensure they finish off the year in a  strong style. I thought I would offer  them below and ask for more ideas from our team of readers.
		
				During October
		
		  - Increase the number of days per week you perform one-on-one sales strategy coaching   to verify that all salespeople know where they are in the sales cycle and have  asked the proper questions. Make an extra  phone call where you can coach and question sales actions.
 
 
- Encourage your salespeople to work together on challenging each other's  sales strategies. Team them up. 
 
 
- Create an end-of-year sales contest with individual and team goals.
 
 
- Add two mornings of telephone blitz days for prospecting. Invite  people to a November seminar/business breakfast meeting. Increase your prospecting ratio to load up  December and January pipelines.
 
 
- Create a fun event -- Halloween parties, fall seasonal events and so on. There is a lot of stress and pressure in the end-of-year push. Thank your own team.
 
 
- Assign a certain number of customers (say, 10) to each salesperson each  week. Make sure they have a good reason/strategy and product/service offering  for each client. Make sure they make the calls to the appropriate person at the  client's office. Inspect this!
 
 
				Setting Up November
		
		  - It's the Thanksgiving month! Create a Customer Appreciation Event. Via a postcard or a letter from the president, invite everyone to your  offices. Add a few vendors, as well, and offer additional services/product  offerings. Invite your best end-of-year  prospects, too.
 
 
- For those early-stage prospects in October who will make a decision in  November, a special Thanksgiving discount/promotion code that ends on Nov.  23 can be suggested and then launched in November.
 
 
- Roll out a 25-point weekly sales game where each salesperson must earn  25 points a week based upon activity (for example, 5 points for a presentation, 5  points for an order, 5 points for prospecting, and so on). Send me an e-mail and I  will send you a  sample.
 
 
- Make each salesperson review their entire 2012 calendars from January  to October. Ask them to look for missed appointments, suspects that did not  make a decision or any  networking individuals  that need to be follow up with. 
Let me hear  what other ideas you might have -- e-mail me or leave a comment below. Let's all work together to make 2012 finish   strong! 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on October 08, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Last week I  had the opportunity to participate in another conference -- my 14th of the year.  Conferences are always a great time to hear other speakers, learn new ideas  and meet new people. During the session, I led a panel discussion titled "Killer Strategies for Prospecting"  and spoke separately on "Leveraging  Your Business by Partnering." I  thought I would highlight a few points from both sessions since they  are pertinent for everyone as we move into 2013.
		
				Panel  Discussion
				
  There were  four panelists, all with real-world experience in selling and marketing. We  talked about a variety of topics, but specifically discussed the topic of what marketing's contribution and responsibility to growing the sales funnel is versus what is  expected from the sales team. As you  would expect, there was a lot of give and take and great audience interaction on  this topic.
		Some thought that marketing  was simply meant to build awareness of the products and company to soften the entry for a  salesperson. Others believed it was to  increase the relationship position, as prospects today more knowledgeable  because of Web site and Internet access (see "The Well-Equipped Prospect"). Still others believed sales  must prospect and any leads from marketing were simply "gifts."
		The key element, I believe, is to realize that there is a relationship  between the marketing funnel and the sales funnel. Both  are  responsible for keeping the sales funnel full and adding X number of prospects  into the funnel each month. Some thought that it was a four-to-one ratio.
		Here are some other tips:
		  - Your Web site must be a sales tool. Make sure your salespeople use it in  your sales process and that it includes customer testimonials.
- Instead of lunch workshops, making them "business breakfast  sessions," especially for net new prospects.
- Develop a select profile of who you want to market to.
- Direct mail is back (compared to e-mail blasts).
				Leveraging Your Business by Partnering
				
In this  session, I encouraged my audience to recognize that prospects are looking for  longer-term relationships from fewer vendors and they want their purchasing  decisions made easier. It must also be recognized that as businesspeople, we  cannot possibly offer every solution to every client. 
		However, by learning to  partner with other organizations, we can increase the value to our prospects. I proposed, based on my experience, that  working a partnering model will bring  your organization one salesperson's quota per year without absorbing the cost  of sales in hiring another person.
		The key element is that from an executive level,  every organization should develop three to five "business-eco systems partners." These are defined as organizations that sell non-competitive but related products and services to the same markets  you address.
		The model for  a successful partnering program should include the following:
		  - It must be based upon trust and a true win-win approach.
- A written plan  that  includes metrics for six, 12 and 18 months must be agreed upon by all partnering members.
- Cross-training of sales teams and cross-marketing programs must be  developed.
- Executives must meet quarterly to review the program's success.
- It is critical to select the right partners that fit your culture and market profile.
- Salespeople should also continue to develop their network of referral  sales.
If you would  like a copy of Acumen's Partner Analysis Guide book, send me an e-mail at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on October 01, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		This occurs almost every time I speak or at every initial client visit.  Whether the organization is using CRM or not, chances are it has not taken the time to define, write out and train the sales team on how  to use prescriptive a sales process. 
		Why  is this important enough to write about? A sales process gets results!
		Recently, a client and I spent about two hours simply  documenting what a salesperson should do on each of the various steps of the sales  process. It enlightened the  sales manager and created the beginning of  a new sales-driven culture for the company. What happened?
		  - In  thinking through the  logical progression and the actual actions the salesperson should take, we  altered the second step and changed what the salesperson was to say and sell during that stage.
 
 
- We created one additional professional service  product that could be re-sold.
 
 
- The sales manager began to fully understand not  only what the steps in the sales process were, but more importantly why the  salesperson needs to execute on them.
 
 
- Actual definitions of each action within each  stage were specifically defined. Why is  this important? Pipeline values become  more accurate. Let me describe this in more detail: Let's assume there is a "demonstration" stage  in your sales cycle. Ask yourself when do your salespeople move the prospect to the demo stage. When it is scheduled? Or after it is completed? This is an example of the kinds  of details that will come out during the process.
 
 
- During the sales process your company's value  proposition must be proven. You can build a step or an action that takes place  at the appropriate stage that can validate your messaging. We created what we expect to be a unique idea  for the client to prove theirs.
 
 
- One of the most important aspects of creating a  prescriptive sales process is changing the sales process! What I mean is, if you and your competitors  use the basic sales stages in the same sequence and say and do the same things,  no one stands out and the prospect becomes confused. When there is confusion,  generally there is no decision. Change  your sales process to stand out, be different and make the customer remember  you. Refer to my previous blog on the end of solution sales.
 
 
- We added  a last step: a follow-up at 90 days post-implementation or -installation to  validate customer satisfaction and ask for a reference letter.
The next step is for the sales manager to teach  the salespeople how to execute and then "inspect  what you expect" -- that is, make sure the sales team is using the process as it is  defined. Set a 90-day plan in place to  implement and evaluate the results. Create four or five metrics to measure its effectiveness, validate it is  being used and to listen to your team. If it needs to be altered to increase  effectiveness, that is OK. But before you change, make sure you are fully  understand the impact.
		Let me know your thoughts on creating a sales process. What has worked  for you? What hasn't? Leave a comment below or e-mail me at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on September 24, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Last Tuesday around 10 p.m., after getting back to  my home from a neighborhood activity, I turned on the  TV to catch the last news of the day and checked my phone for e-mail. The latter is not an unusual routine for me as our  client base can be in multiple time zones around the world. On that night, I had  two e-mails from a sales manager from the Eastern time zone that had come in after 9 p.m.
		While there are always instances where our jobs require us  to put in the extra time, it is important to find balance -- the time to clear  your mind and seek fresh air.
		After  I  responded to the client, I received two e-mail responses in return; it was now  10:30 p.m. While the week had been  stressful for him -- he let go a salesperson, hired another major position  and discovered a few major problems -- I  sent back an e-mail: "Rest, sleep, you will need more fresh air in the morning!"
		With the day-to-day stress levels that sales leaders  face, it is critical to focus on your personal self as well as the health of  your team and company. The most successful  sales leaders are creative, have high levels of energy and are mentally alert to the  variety of situations they face each day. If you are stressed out, you burn out and become ineffective.
		I have written often in my monthly newsletter,   Why Sales Managers Succeed, on the various responsibilities of the sales leader. Maintaining a personal and fresh perspective is the most important. If you are  tired, you will not coach effectively or think clearly when working  on various sales strategies with your team, and you will not provide the  leadership that is necessary to propel you revenues to the next level.
		Each of us must find a means to "open up the  brain" (I always say that the brain is like an umbrella -- it only works when it  is open). I know in my professional life,  I need quiet time to recharge. Some need physical activity while others need  people or games to let them find that fresh air. 
		In my keynote program, "Gourmet Living: Building a Personal and Professional Recipe for  Success," I provide a variety of ideas to help individuals build a better  life. When you have fresh air, your life  will be in balance and success will follow. Check out my YouTube.com videos to listen to my thoughts  on life.
		How do you find your fresh air? Love to hear your ideas -- share them below or e-mail me at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on September 18, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Over the Labor  Day weekend, I picked up a book titled Sales Growth: Five Proven Strategies from the World's Sales Leaders. It was authored by Thomas Baumgartner, Homayoun Hatami and Jon Vander Ark, with a foreword  written by  Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff.
		What makes this a great read for sales leaders at any size organization  is the real case-study examples  the authors used to prove their  strategies. Within each defined strategy, the authors broke out the specific   steps required to achieve the stated goal. This provided a detailed  description of how specific sales leaders approached a problem.
		The authors, all consultants from McKinsey and Company,  took data elements and individual interviews to produce almost a  handbook-style guide that should be on every sales leader's shelf. When I read  these kinds of books, I tend to have a pen in my hand and fold over the page corners  where I find the key important points; after 225 pages of this book, I counted 19 pages folded!  
		While many of  the authors' examples are from enterprise and global organizations, the concepts and  lessons  are appropriate for any sales organization. The first key point  that I came across is in a section called "Sales Experience Matters." There, the authors emphasized the importance of the customer's sales experience. They challenged sales leaders to ask themselves, "What do my customers want from the sales experience?" I know that when I craft sales process maps  for  clients, this question is always considered, and I always focus on  creating some sales action or tool that is unique and that our  competition is not doing.
		The second  point I picked up on was the need to focus on improving  sales operations. That's  all operations including all non-quota-carrying activities that support quota-carrying activities. What are you doing is this area?
		Lastly, the authors focus on changing the culture within the organization. They highlight several great examples of  sales leaders building  momentum and driving new program  initiatives. Examples included increasing the tempo within the sales team, increasing the coaching and  sales management interaction, and demanding results, results, results!
		The last  chapter includes a great table with 12 questions that can  be used to assess your sales organization. Within each question, the authors define "Good"  and "Great" best practices.
		Overall, this is a good read with many  ideas that will keep you occupied during any airplane ride or a day on the dock! What  good business-oriented book have you read recently? 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on September 06, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		During a meeting with a new client,  several old topics cropped up. Since I seem to run into these issues quite  often, I thought it would be  good to address them on this blog. 
		The client has been  growing -- not at an aggressive pace, but slowly -- and the sales organization was in  chaos, working opportunistically on various sales deals and randomly in the  marketplace. The result: The delivery organization is bogged down, low  profitability and no insights into the pipeline or sales activity.
		While I don't  have the space to fully outline each of my recommended actions to the client, here are the five necessary actions to increase the level of focus. 
		First, inspect  what you expect. As the president or VP of sales, your job is to ensure that  the sales team is acting in the manner you expect. Can the team sell your company  effectively? Can it discuss your products/services professionally? Is it working intelligently? Is it focused on increasing skill levels? 
		Second, determine whether your sales team accurately and consistently uses your CRM software. I often  find that reports are inaccurate because the salespeople are not fully trained  on how to use the software, or are not focused on how to enter certain data properly. CRM training should take place each quarter.
		Third, "working  smart" is smart. Have you determined the ideal profile of your most profitable  clients (i.e., their top five characteristics), and is your marketing and sales team focused on finding and selling  them? Both of these will increase the velocity of your order pattern and   profitability. Your messaging must also  be aligned to these prospects. Check out your competitors' Web sites to determine  how their messaging compares to yours.
		Fourth, ask yourself whether you are  focused on penetrating your existing accounts. Rather than creating salesperson business plans, which I discussed my post  on forecasting for the second half of  the year, this particular  client  will be implementing "account planning." Account planning should be done quarterly with each salesperson creating a standardized plan for  X-number of clients. The exercise asks each salesperson to describe  their relationship with and knowledge of the account. The key  is the sales  manager and salesperson must agree on the account  strategy and five tactical actions the salesperson will act on to further  penetrate or even sell the account. Like the salesperson  business plan, each account plan is presented to the entire sales team. 
		Fifth, build a  recipe for your business. Frequent  readers of my blog know of my "gourmet living" program that assists people in finding their ingredients  for success. At my client's office, we  are in the process of determining what leading indicators of future business  are appropriate to track and what level of actions by the salesperson are  necessary to ensure they exceed quota. For example, for this client with an "inside  sales team," we simply went into the phone  logs to identify how  many calls per day were made by each salesperson. With remote salespeople it  instantly showed extremely low volumes of activity. Focus on managing the  details.
		These five  steps are only the basics, but by focusing on them, your business will  improve -- guaranteed! What are your  recommendations for other actions? 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on August 27, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		I normally don't  focus on specific sales training topics, but after several sessions of  training sales managers on how to create effective sales strategies -- and even  experiencing several sales situations within my own business -- I thought I might  raise this topic via three points:
		  - When I was selling business-focused software to the midsized market,   we were trained to spend time with the people in the office during the  early stages of the sales process and build a solid relationship with them.
 
 
- During  the demonstration phase the president of those companies always brought   the key people that would be using the software. During the proposal phase,  those individuals were normally there when we introduced the investment and  training programs.
 
 
- It  seemed like 90 percent of the time, the president always looked at those individuals or "influencers" -- who had no ownership in the company and may not have had a management title -- and said, "What do you think?"
The power of  the influencer is amazing. If those  influencers had confidence in my solution and recognized that the benefits of  my proposal would improve their job and the company, their vote was always, "I  think it makes sense!"
		While in many  sales situations we find that the salesperson is not calling high enough in the  decision-making process, don't forget to nurture those key individuals that can  bring power to your recommendation. It  maybe informal power, but it is still power. In developing  your sales strategy make sure you seek out those individuals that your  product/service will impact within the organization and include them in key  steps of your sales process. 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on August 22, 20120 comments