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4 min read

Sales Qualification Tip to Eliminate “No Decision” Losses

By Mark Gibson on Aug 12, 2022 12:00:00 AM

As a sales professional, you know that there are three possible outcomes for every sales encounter with a buyer.  In the best-case scenario, you end up closing the deal, or in complex sales, you get an advance to the next step. But what about the deals you forecast to close, how many of them actually do close?

Topics: sales productivity qualification confirmation
2 min read

2016 Sales Productivity Tips from the Experts

By Mark Gibson on Oct 27, 2021 11:23:06 AM

I've been consulting on sales productivity for 12 years and published my first blog on the subject, Sales Performance Tools for Getting Started on Sales Effectiveness on my new HubSpot website in early 2008.

 

Topics: sales productivity
5 min read

The Role of Content in Ramping New Sales Hires

By Mark Gibson on Oct 27, 2021 11:23:06 AM

Onboarding and Ramping New Hires  

Executives responsible for hiring and ramping new marketing and sales hires have a whole host of challenges in finding and hiring good candidates and in getting them productive. For new marketers it's usually a brief, sink or swim induction that starts with a content immersion and then the writing begins. 

Onboarding new sales hires is a longer process, commencing with indoctrination in the product; demo, presentation, pricing, followed by CRM and sales process training.

After meetings with the sales manager to discuss territory and key accounts, the sales rep is off-and-running.
 
Unfortunately for sales reps in many companies, from this point on, they are on their own. They have to source their own leads, figure out how their customers buy their product and through trial and error, how to sell the product.  

Sound familiar? 

It should, this is pretty standard stuff in mainstream technology companies.  

For a straightforward product with a 1-month sales cycle time, it might take 3-4 months for a rep to become fully productive. For a complex enterprise solution with a 6-month sales cycle, it will likely take a year or more.  

Dave Kurlan’s formula for Ramp up time = the length of your sales cycle + the length of your learning curve + 30 days. Dave adds a couple of months to ramp time for either lack of industry knowledge or lack of sales experience.  

The only variable in Dave’s formula is the length of your learning curve.
 
CSO Insights suggests that the factors causing long ramp-times are:

Topics: sales productivity sales ramp new hire
1 min read

LinkedIn Selling for Business

By ed callahan on Jun 2, 2009 12:00:00 AM

                                                            

Topics: sales productivity linkedIn for business