How To Improve Your Sales Calls in Five Minutes
/TLDR: Our recent
Professional Skills training has highlighted that most sales teams are
not routinely debriefing and asking each other for feedback. Here is a
simple, quick process you can use to get tips from your colleagues on how you
can improve for the next sales call.
One
question is “how often do
you debrief with the FSR after a customer sales call?”
“We always debrief” is the common reply.
“What do you cover in the debrief?” we respond.
“Oh, we agree on Next Steps and Account Strategy!” says
the SE.
“What about discussing what happened during
the call? The good, the bad and the ugly?”
“Well, we hardly ever
make time to talk about that. There’s always another call..”
We believe
you are missing out on a wonderful opportunity for improvement. Just a 5-minute
investment into a true call debrief can make a major difference in your overall
team performance and personal productivity.
The T3-B3-N3 Process.
The process
is simple. You ask the FSR (and anyone else who sat in on the call) three
simple questions. Adjust appropriately for culture and title.
T3 – Top
3 |
What are the top three things I did in
the sales call that I should repeat every time I am in that kind of
situation? |
B3 – Bottom 3 |
What are the three things I did in the
sales call that I should never ever do again? |
N3 – Next 3 |
What are three things I did not even do
in the sales call that I should consider including next time? |
It’s a non-threatening collection of positive reinforcement, constructive feedback and new ideas mixed in with a little “don’t do that”. Now you need to take notes, try to get specific examples (my example: “When you interrupt the customer before he finishes asking his question it shows a lack of respect and professionalism. Next time pause and count to two before you answer”) and if appropriate, put a plan in place to fix or to reinforce the behavior. Then follow-up with that person within a few weeks – that way they will give you some more feedback once they know you are listening to them.
Feedback is a gift, and together with learning more about your own solution, it’s the #1 way you have of improving. You may not always like what you hear, but it is still a gift.
Advanced
T3-B3-N3
Summary
After the
next sales call – if you want more than “you
did good” or the truly terrible “it
was fine”, try the T3-B3-N3 approach and see what happens! You will be
amazed, and a little scared, by the responses you receive – especially once
you’ve established some trust with that individual.
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