Sales Training Success: CCS™ Helps BSD Improve Prospecting and Sales SkillsCategory: Sales Training | Permalink Published: Wednesday, August 24, 2011 Sales Training Success: CustomerCentric Selling® takes the pain out of prospecting for BSD's salesforce, unleashing greatly improved skills and sales performance.Business Problem BSD sells specification writing software to architects and engineers nationally. Most of the sales are by the seat and sold over the phone after a salesperson-led, web-based demonstration. The good news up to that point was that 30-40% of all web demos resulted in wins, though often accompanied by a discount. The bad news was that the other 60-70% of the web demonstrations did not close. Sometimes they lost to a named competitor, but usually losses were to the status quo. Hendricks realized that he needed to address the following key challenges: 1. Lack of a defined, time-efficient sales process BSD's sales force was made up of younger, less tenured salespeople. On the positive side, they were eager and committed to making sales. They were also tech-savvy and able to deliver quality webdemos. The current sales process, though, was illdefined and without any controls. Salespeople were skipping important steps. First, there was very little qualifying going on. Salespeople didn't know how to figure out if opportunities were real, meaning they never knew if prospects had any real interest or authority to buy. Immediately upon learning that a prospect was interested in hearing more about BSD's software, salespeople jumped right into offering a web-demo, since web-demos were in their comfort zone. Jumping right into demos, however, resulted in either: 1) free consulting - where attendees only wanted to see the software, but had no interest in buying; 2) the beginning of an unnecessarily long sales cycle, because eventually others at the prospect's firm needed to see the software; or 3) poor negotiating and discounting, because they had skipped important value/measurement steps. Second, they didn't know how to project manage the buyer's evaluation process and either leave the opportunity early or close in a timely fashion. 2. Lack of quality sales calls BSD had successfully sold into the Early-Market - those architects that "got it" immediately upon seeing an advertisement in a trade publication or reading about the software on the BSD Web site. However, the majority of the new prospects were beginning to exhibit the behaviors of the mainstream-market, meaning they were not technologists and did not know why they needed BSD's software. These prospects would not just quickly "jump in" to buy like the early market. Salespeople-all of whom were not architects themselves-were avoiding having business conversations about how architects successfully used BSD's software. This led to a confidence gap among the sales team preventing them from conducting quality sales calls that built the proper vision in their prospect's minds. Hendricks was worried that when the 'Early-Market' dried-up, BSD would be unsuccessful selling and marketing to the mainstream architects who would need a vision of usage, value and implementation in order to make a buying decision. He understood that this market segment needed to understand why they needed to change, the impact of not changing and ultimately, how they can use BSD's technology to solve their spec writing issues. The CustomerCentric Selling® Solution
After the team defined the sales process and created the initial messaging toolkit, BSD had all its customer-facing personnel participate in a skill development workshop in December 2005. At this workshop, CCS transferred the skills/tactics necessary for the BSD team to execute and repeat the customized sales process, and taught them how to use the new messaging. The BSD team "unlearned" the unproductive behavior of traditional salespeople and learned the behaviorally correct techniques for facilitating a prospect's buying process. They also learned the scientific rationale behind each of these techniques. Salespeople practiced how to help prospects identify solutions specific to BSD's offerings to overcome their specification writing issues or challenges, as well as how to qualify and close, or disqualify, opportunities after having such conversations. Benefits to Building Systems Design (BSD):
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