Selling: It Takes a Human to Engage, Inquire and Listen to Your Customers

Here are several excerpts from an article by Neil Sikder, a vice president of Maia Strategy Group, Speak With Your Customers:

Automation. Efficiency. Sales growth. That is what best-of-breed CRM technologies provide and if implemented in support of the right strategy and surrounded by the right processes and people, it works beautifully. No one can argue that.

However, in this age where technology drives automation, standardization and efficiency, we often overlook very basic and often manual efforts to learn how to sell our products and services to our customers. The most ancient of practices — and sometimes the most effective — is to speak with your customers.

It’s simple: Engage. Inquire. Listen.

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Posted on 9th October 2008
Under: CRM Best Practices, Sales and Selling | No Comments »

Convincing Your Sales Force to Use SFA

Here are several excerpts from an article by Rick Cook, Convincing Your Sales Force to Use SFA.

About the only thing I’d add is that I believe that it’s critical that representatives from the sales organization, (both management and staff) be integrally involved in the SFA technology selection process. Also, once you’ve narrowed down the SFA technology alternatives to two or three finalists, the sales organization should have the opportunity to compare and contrast the usability of each. They will be expected to use the solution every day. So, you want them to be happy with (and excited about using) the solution you choose.

An SFA (Sales Force Automation) effort is only as good as its implementation— and its implementation is only as good as the degree to which the sales staff, CSRs (customer service representatives) and others use it.

The old apothegm “Technology is easy, people are hard” is never more true than in SFA. If your people don’t buy into your SFA effort, it will at best be only a partial success.

The proof is easy to find. Another old CRM truism holds that the majority of SFA efforts fall short of success — more than two-thirds of them, by some studies. According to those same studies, the most common reason for poor performance is the problem of getting employees to adopt SFA.

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Posted on 2nd September 2008
Under: CRM Technology, Project Mgmt-ROI, Sales and Selling | 1 Comment »