Hey, 👋 Scott from The Sales Mastermind here. Today’s edition only takes 4 minutes. Founder sales is simple, but that doesn't mean it isn't hard. Simply meet with enough prospects, and eventually, someone will want to buy from you—then the hard part is maintaining your motivation and activity and improving win rates. ​ Today, we'll cover:
​ ​ ​ Sales Success is Simple, Sales Execution… Not so Much Sales success starts with a measurable goal. Ideally, net new revenue closed. Let's pretend your goal is $100k; each deal is ~$10k. Basic maths says you need ten average deals. Simple. Progression to your goal is clear and binary. Either you close the deal and get ~10k closer to 100k, or you don't. The hard part is that sales is an outcome of a chaotic system. In isolation, no single activity directly moves you close to the $100k goal. Therefore, sales is a balancing between new leads, warm prospects, qualified buyers, happy customers, and 100 other activities. This is doubly difficult if you're inexperienced in selling AND you're the boss of the sales org. Many founders make basic mistakes that are not their fault. They literally do not know any better. For example, a new client asked me, "Should we be emailing proposals or meeting with clients to present proposals?" Any experienced sales leader will tell you: Always present the proposal. It appears as a simple answer to what my client thought was a complex problem. It's only simple through experience. ​ What is SMaaS The client above and three others are case studies for my new product, "Sales-Manager-as-a-Service." Essentially, founders who lead their sales efforts ask me to be their extra pair of eyes and lend my experience as a Sales Manager. In practice, I provide leadership and accountability for all sellers and train founders to become the sales leaders they're capable of. Some of the basics that often get missed are:
Sales founders (without a team) love SMaaS because they get an experienced and external nudge of accountability for efforts they know they need but probably won't do without said nudge. Sales Founders (with small teams) love SMaaS because they get to learn what it takes to be a sales leader from someone with experience. The education is timely, practical, and specific, rather than book learning, which is often theoretical and vague. ​ What Does a Sales Leader Do? (Practical Steps) If you've read this far, let me walk you through the practical steps we take every week. The below is enough for you to self-manage, or if you want some support - let me know you're interested ;)​ Minimum Weekly Cadence:
​ Activity Review Ultimately, sales is a numbers game:
Therefore, the most straightforward leadership job is ensuring everyone on the team has enough dials, emails, leads, and deals to achieve their goal. I also suggest checking the quality of the activity. For example, is the seller:
Lastly, over half a sales cycle or two, you want to track each seller's dials > meetings > deals > revenue ratio. Benchmark these and use them for expected activity KPIs. ​ Pipeline Review: High level: This is a weekly call to ensure all deals are being worked appropriately, nothing is slipping through the cracks, and every deal in the pipeline is real. I have spoken about pipeline reviews in more detail here.​ ​ Call/Meeting/Pitch review Reviews are the main qualitative activity for sales leaders. We want to find out if the seller is effectively engaging with buyers and setting themselves up to have a chance of progressing every deal. A leader reviews the pre- and post-meeting communication and the meeting itself to be effective. You must record video meetings and, ideally, inbound and outbound dials (pending local laws). For video meetings I use Avoma. Pick any active deal with an early-stage meeting (typically discovery and/or presentation) in the last 7 days. And:
​ That's ~4 minutes of reading time; if you want more, either show your interest or reply with specific questions, and I'll answer them in future newsletters. ​ Until next week, ​ PS Did someone forward you this email and it seems like something you want more of: Link to subscribe​ PPS Have you seen my back catalog of over 60 newsletters with hyper specific sales tips? Check it out here.​ |
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