by Thomas Coles
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10 Jan, 2022
As promised last week, some thoughts on what makes a good sales kick off event. 2022. The year we put the pandemic behind us and GROW GROW GROW, right? Well, I'm not going to predict that my kids' sunflowers are going to do any better this year than last year, nor that the pandemic is finally becoming endemic, but I will predict that if you organise a fantastic sales kick off event then you'll see better achievement of target by your team than you might otherwise. It might not be possible to have a face to face kick off, depending on current restrictions when you operate, but online events can save travel expenses and time, giving you more money to underpin either a keynote at this event or a future event when everyone can travel. Plus, less travel equals more selling time. Far too many sales leaders and marketers believe a kick off is about conveying data to their team: the company's achievements last year, the business plan headlines this year and therefore what each sales person's target/quota is this year. Impersonal, boring and probably using PowerPoint. I find that you get the best results from making those formal comms as informal, and incidental, as possible. Make anything backward looking no more than 10% of time on the agenda. Instead, focus on (safely) getting the team together to learn best practice from each other, deliver training that they find valuable to help their sales technique but by far most important to motivate them . Roleplay How to motivate a sales team? Refer to last week's blog for one idea. Remember that motivation can strike an individual from any number of subconscious places as well as from incentives; conveying an idea how to increase their average deal size could motivate someone just as much as offering a driving day. Your sales leaders should know your individual sales people well enough to know what to put on the agenda to motivate them. "Roleplay?" I hear you and your team wail. Maybe get an external expert to help (no, not me, an actor) play a prospect, and the sales leader should observe to deliver feedback alongside the actor afterwards. The single most useful skill to teach subliminally? Active listening. Measure with a stopwatch (or online tools can do it during a Teams meeting) what percentage of the mock sales meeting the sales person speaks compared to the prospect. Get them to roleplay a blind qualification call that you know the outcome they should reach by identifying, probing and listening, but the sales person doesn't at the outset. Then, if qualified in, roleplay the first face to face meeting. Improvisation Another useful way to teach active listening is to get a world expert to do it for you. Nowhere is a person more exposed than on stage doing an improv gig where they forgot to listen to the actor delivering the line that should prompt them. I very highly recommend asking John Cremer to deliver his famous half day improv session to your sales team. I've done it before and the results in terms of teaching old sales dogs how to listen are remarkable. Plus, John will make sure everyone has a real laugh, one of the best motivators and best retention tools I've come across. Sales kick offs may involve other team building events, but alcohol mixed with improv will be more fun than mixed with PowerPoint! If you focus on motivating you'll achieve more than focusing on delivering formal data. I can't promise growth, growth and more growth to my kids or to your business, but I can promise to help you make it all seem a bit easier and more predictable. Everyone prefers forecasting certainty and reliable growth over uncertainty and feast and famine sales results, so contact me now to transform your sales. [Photo by Anastasia Shuraeva from Pexels ]