It’s not always about redesigning the growth organization; it might be time to refresh the business growth process
As many professional services firms are struggling to reach their growth goals, they are questioning the effectiveness of their sales organizations. Business growth organizations are well-designed and likely to succeed as long as they have all the necessary elements aligned with the growth strategy of the firm: support tools, systems and skills, as illustrated in this simple grid.
Before undertaking the complex and time consuming process of re-designing the sales organization, I’d first look at updating the sales process, sales tools and the roles of the various business-growth-related parties, such as marketers, business developers, billable professionals and sales leaders. These upgrades are driven mainly by smarter and better informed buyers who are squeezed by constant cost cutting demands.
Much has been written and said about the evolution of the business growth / sales process over the past few years, especially for professional services firms. You’ve most likely run into a number of proprietary ones with fancy acronyms. They still follow the very traditional process of “awareness – education – sale – loyalty”, albeit the various stages being called something else or further segmented into smaller ones. One thing that’s become clear and I’ve been advocating is the shift from pre-packaged solution-based approach to “insight selling”, as coined by Brent Adamson, Matthew Dixon, and Nicholas Toman at CEB. I have been referring to it as a consultative or problem solving selling technique. Its differentiation and strength is multifold:
(i) Cultivating prospects who are most likely off the radar of competitors (because the identification criteria are different from the traditional ones of industry, size, etc.);
(ii) Gathering intelligence and developing business understanding that goes beyond the orthodox one of budgets, purchase decision maker, etc.;
(iii) Sparking dialogues that don’t steer towards uncovering already recognized needs and solutions, but leading to unrecognized problems and drafting solutions jointly; and
(iv) Building client value and long-term relationships, which facilitate future, post-engagement conversations and additional opportunities to work together.
It’s an approach that calls for upfront investment in terms of updating the roles and skills of the business growth parties, as well as the sales tools, and in return positions the organization on a different level from competitors to avoid price bidding and dictate deeper terms of engagement.
Based on extensive research, Adamson, Dixon, and Toman recently released another article on “insight selling,” titled “Dismantling the Sales Machine” (for HBR, November 2013). As always, I appreciate their professional research, which further supports the consultative approach I’ve been advocating. In this paper, the authors refer to “insights selling” as a process where “sellers challenge customers with disruptive insights into their business and offer unexpected solutions.” It no longer encourages certain “check-the-box” compliance sales process and activities, but rather emphasizes the importance of identifying the right prospects, giving professionals the freedom to make judgment calls, and expanding the use of innovation and creativity to design solutions. I wholeheartedly agree with this approach and couldn’t have defined it better myself, with one exception. Unlike Adamson, Dixon, and Toman, I am a supporter of “compliance” of the sales process and believe its value should not be understated. A couple of the statements in the article make it sound as if the authors believe that results justify sales actions, regardless the associated cost. When it comes to compliance I am not referring to supporting the use of certain sales activities, but the process, which is critical in measuring efforts and effectiveness and efficiencies of these activities. What I support is that when it comes to sales activities, a/k/a business growth tactics, one size fits none. Successful sales tactics vary from one professional to another. Compliance should ensure that there is a process in place that guides the sales professionals and ensures that activities that work for professionals are taking place.
As I’ve mentioned in the past and as spelled out by Adamson, Dixon, and Toman’s research, this new sales approach calls for updating the various business growth roles, changing team formations, skills and tools. Sales professionals (a/k/a business developers, billable professionals, etc.) should work on developing their advisory skills and use both emotional intelligence and IQ. Sales leaders (a/k/a CSO, CMO, Managing Partners, etc.) should become coaches, facilitators of information and encourage idea generation and collaboration. They should emphasize the power of individual networks and a long term view to prospects. The latter dictates a fundamental shift away from the traditional transaction oriented approach towards the one of creating value for clients and developing true relationships. In order for that to succeed, sales leaders must look for quality of their business growth pipeline opposed to velocity as key performing indicators (KPI’s) and most likely re-write the existing compensation model. Sales leaders and organizations should equip sales professionals not only with new skills, but also with tools that help identify prospects and prioritize actions, create demand and spark solution innovation, and lastly, provide decision making guidelines for making confident judgment calls.
Is it time for you to refresh your sales process, cease the bidding war with your competitors and improve your business growth results?
By Mira Ilieva-Leonard
© 2010-2013 Copyright Mira Ilieva-Leonard / iStile All rights reserved
Accenture's "outcomes selling" process http://www.accenture.com/us-en/Pages/insight-giving-customers-want-growth-selling-business-outcomes.aspx provides another supportive point that B2B organizations might need to revisit their existing go to market approach
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