According to ES Research between 85% and 90% of sales training has no lasting impact after 120 days. At the same time, companies are spending billions of dollars on sales training each year. That’s billions of dollars being wasted on limited sales performance impact and only short-term boosts in sales at best.
Training can be a disappointment right away when it just doesn’t go well, or it can be a disappointment months later when results don’t materialize. Regardless, sales training strikes out a lot. When it does, it’s usually because of common and predictable reasons. But if you can avoid these mistakes, you can set yourself up for a successful training initiative that leads to increased sales performance and long-term revenue growth. Here are 7 reasons why your sales training might be failing:
Sales training programs have virtually no chance of producing lasting results if business leaders:
Salespeople know what they sell and sell what they know. Most sales training focuses on building sales skills. While sales skills are essential, they are only one side of a very important coin: capability.
The other side of the coin is sales knowledge. Your salespeople have to know and be able to speak fluently about your products and services, the customer needs you solve, the marketplace in general, your company, the competition, and more. Yet most sales training ignores sales knowledge and focuses solely on sales skills.
It’s not enough to give your team the capabilities to sell; you have to know if the individuals on your team have the attributes required for top sales performance. We call these attributes drivers and detractors of sales success. Together these will tell you not only who can sell, but who will sell and who will sell at a high level.
Many sales training programs neglect to provide a process and methodology that salespeople can follow to systematically move prospects through the pipeline. Without a process or methodology, training gets forgotten and salespeople end up recreating the wheel over and over again.
Salespeople leave too many training programs saying things like:
Adults learn by doing and you need a training program that engages and gets salespeople practicing and putting the new skills to use.
Most sales training focuses on a two- or three-day event in which salespeople learn and practice new skills. The problem with event-only training is that the effects of the event fade. Without reinforcement, as much as participants might have loved the program, it’s the rare salesperson who goes home and curls up by the fire with their cup of coffee and reviews their sales training binder 3 times a week.
Without reinforcement salespeople forget learned skills and knowledge, forget how inspired and motivated they were, and the learning effectiveness decreases.
Few companies actually evaluate the effectiveness of their sales training and sales performance improvement. Sales training can fail simply because companies have no idea if it has succeeded. Furthermore, without evaluation, it’s nearly impossible to hold salespeople accountable for changing and improving behavior, or for taking actions and achieving results.
As we have said before, instead of learning from your own failures, start by avoiding the failures others have made, and build on their successes.