Last week I attended the executive briefing from Miller Heiman which just released its Sales Best Practices Study for 2009. We covered the 2008 Sales Best Practices Study here. This year 3,900+ sales professionals participated in the research.
Some highlights from 2009:
“Successful sales organizations do not do one or two things well; they maintain a high level of performance across all of the selling and sales management activities required to support the sales process.” These include
- Opportunity Creation
- Opportunity Management
- Relationship Management
- People and Organization
- Support and Enablement
- Management Execution
Nearly a third of organizations think they have only a 50% chance of hitting their Q1&Q2 targets this year, and another 50% felt confident with concerns. 80% of World Class organizations expected growth this year and 65% of non-world class organizations. Given current economic climate, I would say that’s a fairly bullish crowd.
World Class organizations (7% of respondents qualify) were able to achieve a higher level of growth vs peers across these metrics:
- Average account billing
- Sales force quota attainment
- Number of qualified opportunities/leads
- Customer retention
- Forecast accuracy
Characteristics of World class organizations that make them different than others:
- high degree of alignment between sales marketing and customer needs (trending up for the last 3 yrs)
- standardized processes for qualifying and selling
- formal strategy for getting concessions in return for price reductions
- clear understanding of client issues prior to offering proposals
- cross department collaboration to manage strategic accounts
- joint long-term planning with key customer,
- knowledge of why top performers are successful and structured programs to share that insight across the team
- sales metrics are aligned with business objectives,
- CRM systems geared to greatly improve effectiveness of the sales organization
- organization is highly structured to learn and adapt.
One interesting factoid as it relates to sales performance – was that top performers placed equal emphasis on the importance of discipline/planning as ability to access and influence senior execs, while average performers placed higher emphasis on senior exec access. There is a lot to be said for the science of sales even at the individual level.
Click here to access the full 2009 Miller Heiman Sales Best Practices Study.
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Eliot Burdett
Eliot received his B. Comm. from Carleton University and has been honored as a Top 40 Under 40 Award winner.
He co-authored Sales Recruiting 2.0, How to Find Top Performing Sales People, Fast and provides regular insights on sales team management and hiring on the Peak Sales Recruiting Blog.
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