Employees should get the same treatment. Transformational CEOs will remake their organizational structures and streamline processes to free up internal partners from mindless, time-wasting tasks.
Since growth runs through the sales team, their productivity has to be a top priority. Sales organizations have to become more data-driven, less bureaucratic, and, on behalf of customers, productivity-minded.
The goal of reworking sales processes and systems is to do for salespeople what Amazon did for book readers—give them more time to sell. And starting that transformation doesn’t require months of planning and a big budget.
A straightforward example comes from the insurance industry. As low-cost, online options have increased, sales conversion rates have declined. In an attempt to offset that impact, the frontline sales team at one agency responded with an efficiency-minded effort: they increased their cold-calling.
But agency leadership tackled the issue from a productivity perspective. They started by reassessing their purpose in the marketplace. The conclusion was that the agency adds value by managing claims to the benefit of both carrier and client—not by selling policies. So the disconnect became apparent: Clients buy policies based on price, not the expectation of dealing with a claim.
The actionable insight was to focus sales efforts on prospects that had experienced a prior claim. They already understand the value of having expert claims support; they do not have to be sold on it. They are also prime candidates for cross-selling, adding coverage, and providing referrals.
Identifying those prospects was easy and did not require a CRM system implementation to produce an immediate improvement in conversion rates.
It is just a start, but by stepping back to evaluate its purpose in the marketplace, the agency was able to improve sales productivity by focusing on prospects that placed a high value on its core service, not just the price of a policy.