During our time working with customers’ sales teams, we’ve found a few common problems that companies with flat growth often suffer from. As is the case with any difficult change, the first step is understanding that you’ve hit a snag.
Once you’ve done that, you can begin to diagnose and treat the root cause of the problem, moving beyond simply triaging symptoms.
Many businesses might know there’s a problem because their revenue dips or their stock is being hammered by analysts. For others, the issues are subtler, with some growth still happening, but not at the level or in the places they’d expected.
Regardless of the symptom, struggling sales people have a myriad of excuses at their disposal. We’ve heard quite a few. Everything from, “The industry we’re in just isn’t growing at the same pace as in the past,” or, “Customers are buying on price and our competitors are undercutting us to win deals,” to, “We don’t do enough marketing,” and “I spend so much time managing current customer relationships, I don’t have time for prospecting”.
In our experience, there are 3 common issues that businesses facing low/no growth need to address:
Before any steps can be taken to fix your sales organization, it’s important to understand what you’re actually trying to solve for. These situations don’t often get solved by just throwing money at the problem.
When we look at a sales organization we assess:
Assessing these aspects of your sales organization identifies root problems which enables you to restructure your processes and your team.
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Steve is the former CEO of MCM, one of the largest privately held insurance businesses in the Pacific Northwest. Steve brings 20 years of Leadership, Organizational Systems, Operations and Change Management experience to Spur.