Mastering Technical Sales – Sales Engineer Guidebook

Learning about Mastering Technical Sales? If yes, then this book is a must read!!! Mastering Technical Sales by John Care and Aron Bohlig covers the full spectrum of what Sales Engineers need to know in order to be successful in their technical deals. It starts by covering fundamental concepts around:

-Qualifying Leads
-Determining Go/No Go strategies for RFPs
-Needs Analysis Tactics
-Delivering the Perfect Pitch
-How to Avoid ‘Dash to Demo
-Remote Demonstration Tips
-Objection Handling
-Branding
-Channel Selling with Partners
-Hiring SE Talent
-Time Management & Metrics

This book is a must-have in any Sales Engineer or SE Managers collection!!!


How Good is Your Customer Intelligence?

We’ve all heard the many stories about how bad a customer database can get, but my recent experience with this issue is just too good of a story to let pass by. My wife called me at work the other day to let me know about a nice gift that we received in the mail: an entire case of toothpaste from a consumer healthcare company. No hitch here, they just wanted to share some of their latest, greatest product with Dr. Gerard’s dental patients as part of a free sample give-away. A few problems with this strategy though: 1) I’m not a dentist; 2) no one in my household is a dentist; and 3) my father, who had been a dentist for 40+ years, had retired over 25 years ago and unfortunately is also no longer alive. Maybe it was a special message from my father to get my kids to brush their teeth more. Regardless, another example of customer intelligence gone wrong.

This only happens in the BtoC space you say? From our research, I continue to observe that business IT buyers also perceive a lack of customer intelligence from their vendors. How does this perception take hold? A CIO panelist from a $10B+ company at one of our events indicated that he has to continuously teach vendor sales reps what he has purchased from them in the past. During the same meeting with a rep, the IT buyer notices that the rep is either unwilling or unable to let go of the generic PowerPoint deck and to engage in a deep and customer-specific conversation. Poor customer intelligence was a significant factor in each of these cases, leading to poor credibility on your front lines. (Sales enablement, talent management, sales methodology and sales management are other potential factors of concern in these examples.)

So what’s happening across our marketing and sales organizations to result in this break-down of intelligence. There’s plenty of blame to go around, from a people, process and technology perspective. But let’s keep our efforts focused on fact-finding versus fault-finding. Here are a couple of places to start in improving these problems as well as some insight from our research of better performing sales organizations:

  • Establish one team or organization to be accountable for ensuring that there’s one source of truth for customer data – from a process and governance perspective, not necessarily controlling all input and editing of data. The following quote represents the position of many multi-billion dollar companies today: “Our company has many customer databases. Also anyone can create customer records and update data. The result is that it is very difficult to get to ‘one source of truth’ for customer data; and we also have severe data quality issues.”
  • Provide a process to update and edit your customer data, either centralized or decentralized. One example of this from a multi-billion dollar tech firm: “Our reps are responsible for creating and updating prospect and customer data. However, we also have a master data team to ensure high data quality.
  • Leverage your customer data across the entire sales engagement process, from account planning up to and including the on-site customer/prospect visit. Another company example: “We have an up-sell wheel as a tool to help sales reps identify what existing customers own as well as what additional products and services from our portfolio may be appropriate for those customers.”
  • Embed customer data (internal and external) within your sales force automation platform to improve the ease of access and leverage of this data by your sales reps.

This is only the tip of the iceberg of course. Focus in on some key short-term wins as you improve the quality and leverage of customer intelligence, while in parallel maintaining your course along a longer term strategic path.

Please do reach out to me if you would like to participate in our ongoing research, including a best practices study in account planning for BtoB sales teams that is currently in progress.

The Importance of the Email Signature

In past blog entries I’ve discussed sales enablement, sales productivity, the need for sales reps to get closer to customers, etc.  Let me get a bit more tactical here . . . in fact, much more tactical.  The Email Signature.

I can’t tell you how many emails that I’ve received that lack even the most basic information in the signature part of the email.  I recently had a need to contact a vendor to get a quote from them for a project I was working on.  The sales person at this vendor had recently reached out to me after I met her at an event.  As I opened up her email to phone her, I was dismayed to find that there was no phone # or other information in her email.  Yes, I did have her email address, however, in my rush to get a quote for this project, I wanted to simply pick up the phone and call her.  I suppose that I’m a bit old fashioned in that sense.  I did eventually email this vendor and get their full contact information, however the lack of an email signature did inhibit my ability to reach out to this salesperson. 

The point here is not that you’ll lose every deal if you don’t put your full contact information in the signature part of your emails.  However, in this digital age you want to make it as easy as possible for your partners, prospects and customers to connect with you; either by email, phone, Linked-In, your web site, your blog or other means.  That said, we also need to be careful about including too much information in our email signature, leaving your readers thinking “that’s more than I wanted to know about you”.  (here’s a relevant blog with additional information: http://www.sitepoint.com/blogs/2009/09/18/creating-an-effective-email-signature/)

Here is what I think are the bare essentials to include in your email signature:

Name, Title (helps your contacts understand your role in the organization as well as your business needs/interests)
Company
Phone #
Web site
Legally Required Information

And for you crackberry addicts out there, have you updated your email signatures on your mobile device recently?

Any good or bad examples to show?  Please share below.

Best Regards,
Michael

Michael Gerard
VP, IDC Sales Advisory Practice
Phone: 508-988-6758
Linked-In:  http://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelgerard
Twitter:  http://twitter.com/michaelgerard
Important Email Information: The information in this email is confidential and may be legally privileged. It is intended only for the recipient(s) listed above. If you are neither the intended recipient(s), nor a person involved in delivering this to the intended recipient(s), then you are prohibited from  disclosing, distributing, or copying the information in this transmittal. If you believe you received this in error, please notify me immediately and dispose of this email.

The Evolving Sales Engineer – Sales Engineer Manager Book

For Sales Engineer Managers, who are looking to expand their knowledge on new techniques and tactics to bring their Sales Engineers to the next level, then I would suggest the following book, The Evolving Sales Engineer. Key Concepts include:

-How to pick talented SEs
-Coaching Tactics
-Managing Office Politics between Account Managers/SEs

The author Edward Levine has a great grasp of the challenging world of Sales Engineering.
I would suggest this book to both SE Managers and SEs alike
Good reading!!!