Adopt
The ‘T’ Method To Sales Performance
Improvement
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What’s your approach to sales training? Do
you have a process that defines which sales performance
competency to train to and what impact it will have on selected
performance silos if the training objective is successfully
met? Or do you rely on ‘field feedback’ not associated with
actual performance numbers and related ROI to decide where to
put your training dollars? Here’s a simple blueprint to gain
more revenue in less time while maintaining fiscal
accountability to the ‘Top-floor’.
At JDH Group, our go-to-market strategy is
to understand a sales organization’s revenue goals and define
what key results are needed in performance improvement. To
illustrate it, we produce diagnostic performance solution
‘Blueprints’ for sales organizations that utilize the ‘T’
method; both vertical and horizontal.

Horizontally, we look at each KPI and help
companies understand how to identify, train to, improve and
measure competencies in each of the critical performance
indicators.
The ‘T’ method of training evaluation is a
process that utilizes both a horizontal approach to key sales
performance indicators (KPI) and a vertical examination to
calculate the impact, or ‘Return on Training Investment’
(ROTI). Aligning the two will not only give you the path of
least resistance to your overall revenue objective but will
point to performance silos that will produce more revenue
and/or recover unnecessary costs from sub-par sales
performance.
Horizontal
Examination
Here’s an example of sales organization
KPI’s that sells business solutions to small and medium size
companies:
• 1st Appointment to Proposal ratio
(60%)
• Closing ratio (40%)
• Average Revenue per Sale ($3500)
• Sales cycle (38 Days)
• Revenue goal ($25,000)
• Average New appointments generated per rep (5)
This model represents a sales team that
statistically has an opportunity to reach 67% of their revenue
goal. So let’s take a closer look at which KPI performance
training could achieve the required result the quickest.
One way would be to focus on front-end
activity. Improving the average appointment generation to 7 new
appointments would achieve the revenue goal, all other factors
remaining the same.
Option 1: Establish a
Prospecting Methodology; a single, documented and agreed upon
prospecting method across all sales regions. The training
objective should be to spend less time to gain more ‘Targeted’
business appointments to initiate your current sales
process.
Another choice might be to evaluate your
current sales methodology to understand if there is any room
for improvement in your current closing ratio of 40%. As an
example, improving this KPI to 60% would secure the monthly
revenue target with no other KPI changes. Or splitting the
difference; improving the 1st appointment to proposal ratio by
10% and the closing ratio by 10% would achieve the same result
while maintaining the necessary new appointments at (5).
Option 2: Initially, choose
a ‘Top-down’ approach versus a bottom up; target and initiate
your sales process with a fiscal level of authority. Develop a
diagnostic sales process that points to the prospect company’s
business objectives parallel to you product/service solution.
Speak in terms of Return on Investment, Soft and Hard Dollar
recovery and Investment Payback Period. Sell the diagnostic
parts to your process in line with the prospect’s annual
business objectives; don’t rely on ‘Features & benefits’.
Then customize your proposal as a hypothetical case study with
measurable results.
Vertical Sales Performance ‘Impact Silo’
Examination
Whether you are initiating sales performance
training internally or outsourcing a niche training
organization, most folks sitting on the ‘Top-floor’ now require
accountability in line with budget expenditures.
Another way to say it is the CFO knows he’s
wasting half the sales training budget, he just doesn’t know
which half. Approaching sales training expenditures with a
Vertical ‘Silo’ inspection will help score points to the fiscal
authorities within your own organization.
Let’s take a look at this same sales
organization’s vertical performance silos:
• Average New-hire Ramp-to-Quota (5 months) (35 hires per
year)
• Sales employee Turnover due to low appointment activity
(30)
• Percent of sales reps at or above Quota (70%)
First, calculate your ‘sub-par’ average
revenue. This number reflects the average monthly revenue a
new-hire achieves before they achieve quota attainment.
As an example, if your current Average
Ramp-to-Quota is 5 months, take the average total Revenue sold
in the first 4 months of a new hires routine and divide it by
4. That will give you the average 'Sub-Quota' Revenue per Month
during Ramp.
In this example, we will use $8,000 as the
average ‘sub-par’ revenue.
One of the overall training objectives could
be to improve the New-hire Ramp-to-Quota. So you consider the
training result and impact as it relates to revenue recovery by
selecting a ramp-to-quota goal that’s more efficient than the
‘status quo’ of 5 months. In this case a 1 month ramp-to-quota
reduction would recover $595,000 in additional new sales. That
equates to $17,000 per new-hire. And if you have determined
that the performance training Cost-per-head is $2500, there’s
your internal training ROI; 680%.
And we’re not done yet.
You have defined that 30 sales reps per year
go out the door directly related to low activity, not setting
enough new business appointments to justify the required
revenue result.
Let’s take a closer look at it pertains to
related costs and potential recovery. Here are your expense
breakdowns relating to a new-hire sales rep:
• Average Salary: $28,000
• Recruiting Costs: $1,200
• Training Costs per Rep: $2500
• Monthly Sales Quota: $25,000
If the focused KPI training initiative
reduces your sales rep turnover by 50% (15 reps), that recovers
$1,953,500 in measurable dollars, something everyone can
actually put their finger on.
That’s over $130,000 of real return for
every rep that learns how to effectively set new business
appointments.
Considering this cause and circumstance
versus the realistic training benefit as a ROI factor, you
choose Option 1 to establish a Prospecting Methodology across
all sales regions. And in this case, that also justifies the
training investment to the “Top-floor’.
In the 3rd Vertical Sales Performance
‘Impact Silo’ we determined that an average of 70% of the sales
reps are achieving quota per month. And the average month
‘sub-quota’ revenue achieved for the 30% of reps not reaching
quota is found to be $16,000.
We also determined the average new
appointments generated per week is (5), but by improving the
1st appointment to proposal ratio by 10% and the closing ratio
by 10% we would achieve Quota consistently.
Next, let’s determine our Return on Training
Investment if we meet our training objective of improving the
70% team Quota ‘water-mark’ up to 90%.
• 1st Appointment to Proposal ratio (Improve
to 70%)
• Closing ratio (Improve to 50%)
• Average Revenue per Sale ($3500)
• Sales cycle (38 Days)
• Average New appointments generated (5)
• 100 sales reps
Implementing a focused performance
improvement system to advance our middle KPI’s in supporting an
additional 20 sales reps per month to achieve Quota would
increase our monthly revenue results by $180,000.
That’s an annual return of $2,160,000 or a
training ROI of 864% based on a $2500 cost-per-head training
investment. And with a 38-day sales cycle, the training
investment ‘break-even’ point would be approximately 80
days.
Because of this cause and circumstance
versus the realistic training benefit as a ROI factor, you
choose Option 2 to establish a ‘Business acumen’ sales
methodology, develop supporting diagnostic tools to establish
financial business metrics parallel to your prospect’s
initiatives and your product/service solution.
Adopting this ‘T’ method to sales
performance training will allow you to determine the shortest
path to your revenue goals, determine and implement ‘Best
Practice’ sales performance training and justify the training
investment to the “Top-floor’.
Because at the end of the day… it’s all
about Return on Investment.
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About
The Author
Jeff Hardesty is a National
sales speaker, Sales performance improvement
consultant and the Developer of the X2 Sales
System®, a blended sales prospecting training
system that teaches sales professionals the
competency of setting targeted C-level business
appointments. Jeff can be reached at jeff@salesspeakerpro.com.
Submit your sales performance numbers and
receive a complimentary Sales performance
Check-up with Jeff and a 15-minute Evaluator
web-cast complete with (3) Sales Performance
Improvement Blueprints @
http://www.salesspeakerpro.com/sales-performance-appraisal.php
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