I have been reflecting on the value of a sales team in a world where the riches and spoils seem to be going to those that disrupt how we communicate, consume, and relate to each other. It would seem that sales teams are being pushed aside as social media, technology and online interaction receive all the focus, budget $, accolades, and ‘C’ suite attention.
It would be easy to believe that those wonderful, warm, funny, sexy videos reinforcing our brand, making out that if you don’t have what we’ve got then you are missing out, are all that is needed to build trust between the company and the customer. It would be easy to believe that when marketing puts slides up of how many likes, shares or hits their latest social media campaign delivered, the job is done. All we have to do is sit back and wait for customers to knock down our doors wanting what we have. It would be easy to believe that if we embrace the online selling phenomenon that all we have to do is get our products in front of consumers, on a platform of choice, and all of our revenue issues are fixed.
With all of this going on, it is very easy to see how much of what we sell has become commoditized, that price has become a key differentiator and sales managers and teams are struggling to stay relevant in a changing world.
All this reinforces is that great sales teams led by great sales leaders are more relevant and needed, now more than ever.
The disruption has created opportunity and it has also created noise. Noise makes it very hard for customers to make a choice and so price can become the only thing they can compare.
The social media campaigns, the ‘feel-good’ brand awareness initiatives, and the brilliant websites only establish our permission to play, our right to be here talking with you, our capability to be considered. These do not establish trust, they do not create a lasting relationship with the customer, in fact, they do more for the ego’s internally in the company than they do in building trust with the customer.
The sales team's role is to bring to life, customer by customer, the brand promise, through their stories, interactions and deep customer understanding based on a deep-seated belief in why they do what they do. It is the Sales Leaders role to articulate and align the team to the belief, help them understand the brand promise, ensuring that every interaction leaves the customer feeling better about the brand and teach them to deliver this in ways that build trust and long term relationships.
A great sales team is the magic that sits between what our brand promises and how the customer feels. A great sales team is the personification of the brand. When we take on this responsibility, we are well on the way to selling on value, building customers for life - in a purposeful way.
Or we can continue to sell on price and actively participate in the race to the bottom.
Andrew Nisbet




