Five Keys To Sales Coaching Success

Most sales managers are usually promoted into their positions because they were good individual performers. They were consistent sales performers in their work and they showed an interest in advancing their careers by earning their promotion into sales management.
One of the most important jobs for any sales leader is to help his or her people become successful. You have to help your people become the best salespeople they can be. You will be successful when you help your people succeed in their roles. Perhaps they will become even better than you were in the sales function.
So how can you do this? We believe coaching your salespeople on an ongoing basis is the key to achieving sales results. Here are the five keys to sales coaching success for you to implement with your people.

1. Observe and Analyze Performance –
A. Prospecting – Does the salesperson…

have an adequate pipe-line of qualified prospects?
know who is the best person to call?
gather enough information before making the first sales call?
have three initial benefit statements to create interest?
maintain workable customer and prospect files and database?
have testimonials, references and centers of influence?

B. Initial Sales Calls – Does the salesperson…

develop a good pre-call plan? – have a definite sales call objective?
have a good initial benefit statement?
read/adjust to the prospect’s behavior style (DISC)?
Establish credibility, trust and rapport?
gain information about prospect’s needs/problems/dreams?
allow the prospect to do most of the talking?
handle indifference effectively?
gain a small commitment to advance the sale?

C. Sales Interview Techniques – Does the salesperson…

use questions and probes effectively?
uncover the prospect’s needs, wants, goals?
use appropriate sales tools/aids?
translate features and advantages into benefits?
conduct customer focused sales interviews using the FIND System?
gain the prospect’s agreement of key issues and areas to be addressed?

D. Sales Interactions & Presentations – Does the Salesperson…

sound professional and stay value based?
review the prospect’s needs and goals?
provide proof and references to support claims?
answer prospect’s questions effectively?
gain prospect’s agreement along the way? – gain a commitment to action?
ask for add-on business or to close the sale?

E. Managing Trouble – Does the Salesperson…

stay calm and collected – or come to you immediately for help?
handle objections effectively – use pacing statements and probes to lower tension?
become argumentative, make up an answer or an excuse?

2. Suggest Areas of Improvement
A. Ask for their opinion. Examples –

What do you think went well at the sales meeting?
Where do you think you are having difficulty?
What could you do differently?

B. Provide a sincere compliment.Examples –

You did a nice job developing trust and rapport with the client.
You are very accurate with the monthly reports?
You understand the client’s internal structure.

C. Recommend areas of improvement (limit these to 1 or 2). Examples –

Good questions are so important in selling. A few more open ended questions before talking about our products would give you a better understanding of the client’s needs?
Your work needs to be accurate and completed on time. If you worked on the monthly reports in the morning instead of the afternoon, you would have more energy.
Our company has many talented people. Instead of spending so much time by yourself, ask for the help of our technical support people.

D. Explain the reasons a change will help. Example –

Open-ended questions allow the client to do most of the talking. Then you can listen for problem areas, goals and needs. When you do most of the talking you will not uncover their goals and needs. This makes the sale go much slower.
You seem to get more work done in the morning than the afternoon because you are rested. Working on the report in the morning will help you complete it on time.
It is good you want to resolve technical questions on your own. Sometimes, it is better to ask if people have seen this problem before. We provide better service to the client.

E. Ask them to recommend a better way (Socratic Questions). Examples –

How else could you uncover needs and priorities? Is there another way?
What ideas do you have to complete the report on time?
Where else can you get technical questions answered?

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