SALESTRAINING
By Dr. Jim Guilkey
Statistics indicate most sales training is neither effective nor efficient. According to Forbes magazine, 55% of salespeople lack basic sales skills. Another recent survey found that 64% of all sales training is lost after 90 days. And finally, 82% of B2B decision-makers think sales reps are unprepared.
So, what can organizations do to improve sales effectiveness? It starts with rethinking how you design, develop and deliver training to your salesforce.
Traditionally, sales training follows a predictable approach. Pre-work, classroom and field experience. The major issue is that this model focuses on memorization rather than application and relies heavily on learning on the job. Figure 1 illustrates the traditional sales training architecture.
The traditional sales training program is structured as follows:
The Dreyfus model describes how individuals progress through various levels in their acquisition of skills and includes ideas regarding how individuals learn. When you overlay the Dreyfus stages of expertise onto the traditional sales training architecture, it indicates that the traditional model produces a learner who has only achieved the advanced beginner stage prior to entering the field.
As stated, further learning is heavily reliant upon trial and error. This trial-and-error approach has several disadvantages:
There are four major design canons that should be incorporated to ensure highly effective sales training. The design must be:
As the statistics demonstrated earlier, traditional sales training is ineffective and inefficient. Relying on trial and error in the field to gain expertise can have adverse effects.
By utilizing effective design methodologies and constantly requiring application of knowledge and skills throughout the program, the sales associate will enter the field at a much higher level of competency and will rapidly develop expertise. This will greatly enhance revenue, motivation and ultimate success.
Jim Guilkey is president of S4 NetQuest. Email Jim at jguilkey@s4netquest.com.