Mark W. Johnston | Greg W.
Marshall
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Part 2
Implementation of
the Sales Program
10
Sales Training: Objectives,
Techniques, and Evaluation
Military Training and Sales Careers
What skills
Can be trained?
Must be trained?
Are a pre-hire requirement?
What previous training has
transferability and value?
Managers must focus on
critical success competencies
10-4
Source: HR Chally Group (2009).
Identify key issues in sales training
Understand objectives of sales training
Discuss development of sales training
programs
Understand training of new sales
recruits and experienced salespeople
Define topics covered in a sales
training program
Understand various methods for
conducting sales training
Discuss how to measure costs and
benefits of sales training
10-5
Training Magazine’s Top Training Companies
10.1
10-6
Source: Source: Manage smarter.com July, 2009.
Sales Training Issues
Who should be trained?
What should be the training
primary emphasis?
How should the training process be
structured?
On-the-job training and experience?
Formal and more consistent
centralized program?
Web-based?
Instructor-based?
10-7
Sales Training Objectives
Increase productivity
Improve morale
Lower turnover
Improve customer relations
Improve selling skills
10-8
10.1 Challenge of Effective
Training: Follow-Up
Share post-training
experiences
Provide coaching to support
the training
Define management
expectations
Consider changes to
compensation system to
support training objectives 10-9
Credible Sales Training
Development
Allows for adequate Subjects itself to
development and timely, evaluation and
effective implementation review
Sets specific, realistic, Modifies to achieve
measureable objectives greater effectiveness
Analyses sales
force needs
10-10
Obstacles to Introducing Training
Top management not dedicated to
sales training
Lack of buy-in from frontline sales
managers and salespeople
Salespeople’s lack of understanding
of what training is supposed to
accomplish
Salespeople’s lack of understanding
regarding application of training to
everyday tasks
10-11
10.2 Failure – Causes and Cures
Delivering “fad” vs. “function”
Off the shelf delivery
Unreasonable time constraints
Little reinforcement
Sources: Chuck Mache, “Sales Training that Sticks,” Agency Sales 37, no. 2 (Feb 2007), pp. 58–
61. Heather Baldwin, “Rethinking Sales Training,” SellingPower.com, August 2006 online
issue. Tony Hughes, “Why Does Sales Training Fail?” Training Magazine, April 2004, p. 27. 10-12
10.2
Analyzing the
training needs
of the sales force
10-13
Shifts in Training New Sales
Recruits
Companies with less than $5 million in annual
sales are spending more on sales training per new
hire - $5,500 worth of training per salesperson.
Training in smaller companies has increased from
3.3 months to 4.4 months.
Smaller companies are placing more emphasis on
training than several years ago.
Companies are spending time and money on
training experienced salespeople
Companies with more than $5 million in annual
sales, are spending less money on training
Source: Christen P. Heide, Dartnell’s 30th Sales Force Compensation Survey: (Chicago: 10-14
Dartnell Corp., 1999)
10.3
Length and cost of
sales training for
new hires
Source: Christen P. Heide, Dartnell’s 30th Sales Force Compensation Survey: (Chicago: 10-15
Dartnell Corp., 1999), p. 143.
Shifts in Training Experienced
Sales Recruits
Experienced sales reps are given,
on average, 32.5 hours of ongoing
training per year at a cost of
$4,032 per rep
Continuing increasing amounts of
training reflects a commitment to
provide ongoing learning
opportunities for senior salespeople
Companies are spending an
increasing amount of time on
product training and less on
training in selling skills
Source: Christen P. Heide, Dartnell’s 30th Sales Force Compensation Survey: (Chicago: 10-16
Dartnell Corp., 1999)
Length, type, and cost of sales training for experienced reps
Source: Christen P. Heide, Dartnell’s 30th Sales Force Compensation Survey: (Chicago: 10-17
10.4 Dartnell Corp., 1999), p. 145.
Sales Training Topics
Product or service knowledge
Market/Industry orientation
Company orientation
Selling skills
Time and territory management
Legal and ethical issues
Technology
Specialized topics
10-18
Product Knowledge Topics
Critical information for rational decision-
making
Company’s product specifications
Common product uses/misuses
Competitive products comparison on
Price
Construction
Performance
Compatibility
Technical products require more time on
product knowledge training
10-19
Market/Industry Orientation Topics
Industry fit into overall economy
Knowledge of industry and
economy
Economic fluctuations that affect
buying behavior and require
adaptive selling techniques
Customers' buying policies,
patterns and preferences in light of
competition
Customers' customers needs
Wholesaler and retailer needs
10-20
Company Orientation Topics
Company polices that affect their selling
activities
Personnel
Structure
Benefits
Handling customer requests for price
adjustments, product modifications,
faster delivery, different credit terms
Sales manuals
Hard copy, online
Product information
Company policy information
10-21
Time and Territory Management
Sales trainees need to learn to
manage time and territories
Time spent training out of the field
is costly
80/20 rule applies:
20% of the customers account for
80% of the business and
Require the same proportion of time
and attention
10-22
Legal/Ethical Issues
Federal law dictates corporate action or
avoidance of action in areas of
marketing, sales and pricing
Sales personnel need to understand the
federal, state and local laws that
constrain their selling activities
Statements made by salespeople carry
both legal and ethical implications
Lapses in ethical conduct often lead to
legal problems
10-23
10.3 Ethics Training Part of
Sales Training
Insurance industry suffers
reputation of unethical behavior
IMSA certification requires
Ensuring salespeople pursue ethical
practices
Ethical practices training for all agents
and staff
Administering an exam for all sales
professionals
Sources: IMSA, www.imsaethics.org, Fall 2009. Chris Amrhein, “Building Trust Is the Goal of Ethical Behavior,” American
Agent & Broker 79, no. 3 (Mar 2007), p. 12. Robert W. Cooper and Garry L. Frank, “The Highly Troubled Ethical Environment
of the Life Insurance Industry: Has It Changed Significantly from the Last Decade and If So, Why?” Journal of Business Ethics 10-24
58, no. 1–3 (May 2005), p. 149.
Technology
Notebook computers
Presentations
Connecting to company intranet or extranet
Delivering documentation quickly and accurately
Home offices eliminate the need to go to another
office
Salesperson can be almost totally self-sufficient
with
High-speed network connection
Computer
Printer
Cell phone
Effective computer use affords sales personnel
more face-to-face customer contact time
Effective use requires training
10-25
10.4 Internet Training
Increased control over content
Less costly
Comprises 25-30% of all
training today
Expected to be 50% within 5
years
10-26
Specialized Training Topics
Specialized, job-tailored
training most effective
Sample topics
Price negotiations
Trade show effectiveness
Reading body language
Addressing SCA
10-27
10.5
Common instruction
methods
10-28
10.6 Sales training methods
Source: Christen P. Heide, Dartnell’s 30th Sales Force Compensation Survey: (Chicago: 10-29
Dartnell Corp., 1999), p. 141.
10.5 Creative Sales Training
Effective training can take place
beyond the classroom or computer
Requirements
Focus on knowledge, selling skills for
success
Understand deliverables
Examples
Boot camps
Product “immersion”
Cooking classes
10-30
Keys for Effective OJT
Teaming - bring together people with
different skills
Meetings - set aside times when
employees can get together
Customer interaction - include customer
feedback as part of learning process
Mentoring - provide informal mechanism
for new salespeople to learn from more
experienced ones
Peer-to-peer communication - create
opportunities for mutual learning among
salespeople
10-31
Source: The Education Development Center (www.edc.org)
Classroom Training
Advantages
Standard briefings in
Product knowledge
Company polices
Customer and market characteristics
Selling skills
Formal training sessions save executive time
Interaction among salespeople builds
camaraderie
Disadvantages
Expensive
Time-consuming
Too much material = less retention
Role playing a popular technique
10-32
Electronic Training Methods
Online training > $18billion industry
(2009)
Makes J-I-T information possible
IBM plans 35% sales training to be over
Internet
CD-ROM currently #1 delivery method
30% of server-based training over
intranets
Effectiveness not well-documented
Not likely to eliminate one-on-one
training
10-33
Measuring the Costs and Benefits
Sales training consumes
substantial time, budget and
support resources
Relationship between sales
training and revenue is
difficult to measure
Relationship between sales
training and other broad
objectives difficult to measure
10-34
10.6 Training Road Blocks
Training can’t solve the problem
Busy, jaded salespeople are not open to
learning new skills
Conflicting methods and philosophies are
taught at each session
The training isn’t relevant to the
company’s pressing needs
The training format doesn’t fit the need
E-learning is overused, or used in wrong
situations
There’s no follow-up after training
The trainer can’t relate to the sales team
10-35
Sales Training Costs
Training funds are often allocated
with little regard for results
Results and benefits are difficult to
measure
Difficult to isolate training impact
from
Economic conditions
Environmental changes
Seasonal trends
Competitive activity
Etc.
10-36
Evaluation options matrix
10.7
Source: Thomas Atkinson and Theodore L. Higgins, “Evaluation Obstacles and Opportunities,” 10-37
Forum Issues, February 1988, p. 22.
Measuring Broad Benefits
Improved morale
Lower turnover
Higher customer satisfaction
Management’s commitment to
quality and continuous
improvement
Measuring changes in skills,
reactions and learning assists both
new and experienced sales
personnel
10-38
10.8
Overall ranking of evaluation measures
10-39
Mark W. Johnston | Greg W. Marshall
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.