In any given year, sales can be a roller coaster of exhilarating highs and crushing lows. But lately it seems as though the ride is getting more thrilling—and stressful—by the minute.
Technology is giving us (and our customers…and our competitors) access to more information than we sometimes even know how to manage. Decision-making is more complex and often involves more people—but just as often needs to happen at a faster pace. And through it all, relentless marketplace volatility is threatening deals and making it harder than ever to plan, forecast and shift attention in the moment, even as those activities become more critical to ensuring sales teams hit their numbers.
The pressure’s on, and sales leaders are expecting their teams to rise to the challenge. To hang on and stay ahead, they’ll need to be able to:
In light of all this, it’s not surprising that companies overall are spending $20 billion annually on sales training, according to ATD. But even as budgets increase, ATD has found that companies are having a hard time showing ROI from those efforts.
Sales training and coaching programs are often designed to address many of the issues outlined above, typically by focusing on behavior—changing behavior on the part of the salesperson and looking at the behavioral patterns of potential buyers.
This can certainly be helpful in creating comfort, building relationships and helping a salesperson manage a conversation. But there’s a critical missing ingredient here. Behavioral approaches don’t reflect the mental processes that actually drive the sales activities or the purchasing decision. Put simply, buying decisions are rooted in thinking, not behaviors.
Add to this the mental energy required to succeed in a world that demands continual learning, growth and agility, and it becomes clear that behaviors only scratch the surface of the issue. Too many sales leaders are wasting time and risking revenue—not to mention doing a disservice to their salespeople and to the customers their organizations serve—because they’re not paying attention to the thinking that produces results.
On the other hand, when you understand how both the salesperson and the customer think, it can make all the difference. That’s because a person’s thinking preferences affect how they process information, how they buy and sell, what they pay most attention to, and how they want to interact with you.
Widen the lens and you’ll see that not only do thinking preferences affect the salesperson-customer relationship, they influence performance and coaching discussions, how engaged people are with the sales systems and processes you’ve put in place, what motivates different people, and how they react under pressure and stress. They’re the driving force behind everything we do.
Take a closer look at the engine that drives your sales results—the brains of those who make it happen and the systems they need to use to achieve those results. You don’t have to throw out your current training, models and processes, but there are some immediate actions you can take to bring thinking into the mix to improve sales performance:
The thrilling twists and turns that are a fact of life in today’s environment mean many external factors are going to be impacting people’s behavior; thinking is what’s constant. Bottom line: If you focus only on behavior and not the thinking that drives it, the results are only going to be temporary at best.
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