A career in sales has long been viewed as an individualistic endeavor. Switch to any classic sales movie, and you will find the salesperson overcoming all odds through self-reliance. Traditionally, we have defined success in sales as an individual's hustle to perform, personal Rolodex, and ability to close deals while keeping his cards close to his chest.
As a product manager at BuyerAssist, I have always been intrigued by how B2B selling works and how modern buying preferences are shaping the future of sales. Building a product that can help the modern seller deliver an engaging digital buyer experience is a by-product of this journey. Here are some modern sales trends that I have observed:
Trend 1: Selling is a team sport. But the reality of actual execution is that B2B sales is still about 'go it alone'. This proves counterproductive as today's buying committees have grown more expansive, and sales strategies have evolved to be more collaborative, with several pre-sales and post-sales functions proving to be the centerpiece of a successful sales cycle. Data collected by Salesforce research helps illustrate the importance of internal collaboration.
60% of sales professionals say that collaborative selling has increased productivity by more than 25%
Across all performance levels, 62% of sales teams say collaborative selling is critical to their overall sales process.
Trend 2: Sales collaboration plays a key role in the "land and expand" strategy. Accelerating value realization is critical to expanding with an existing customer. Functions such as implementation, delivery, customer success need to deliver a connected experience ensuring nothing gets lost throughout the buyer's journey. In fact, research by Accenture says that 62% of customers' decision to renew is based on the installation experience. This calls for an even stronger internal collaboration between pre-sales and post-sales.
The power of internal collaboration
What are some ways to maximize sales revenue with a strong culture of internal collaboration?
Shared Success Definition:Internal collaboration is fundamental to your ability to deliver a superior customer experience. Despite well-defined sales and customer success playbooks, today's customers face a broken experience due to suboptimal handoff processes. Modern sales teams have closed this gap by working through a connected GTM playbook built around the customer journey (Think sales, customer success playbooks, etc., baked into one integrated framework). This needs companies to shift their thinking of customer success from a team to a mindset by placing the customer experience at the center of the playbook for sales and post-sales teams.
One place for all: Traditionally, we only look at the data layer as one place for all, so naturally, we used siloed tools for collaboration as long as data flowed into the CRM. But the modern customer demands a connected experience, which means we also need to prioritize one collaboration system for the entire customer journey.
Cross-functional Collaboration: Sales teams demand success management whereas Customer Success teams demand deep project management capabilities; on the other side, leadership teams need approval workflows and data flows baked into it; a shared collaboration system will also adapt to the unique user preferences in each of these functions.
We have a good idea of how effective collaboration can be the revenue driver. Let's look at the nature of collaboration owing to various stages in a deal.
If you believe a strong culture of internal collaboration plays a pivotal role in revenue acceleration, check out how BuyerAssist helps revenue teams achieve this by driving effective and efficient internal collaboration. With BuyerAssist.io, sales teams get the upper hand to collaborate more effectively on a single and easy-to-use platform.
Single source of truth: As per research by Gartner, selling teams tend to lose 30% of their selling time collaborating with cross-functional teams. How your sales teams talk to CRM, Customer Success teams, etc., will play a critical role in product adoption. BuyerAssist provides a single collaborative platform bringing together stakeholders from all the internal teams to Organize, automate & manage customer onboarding from handoff to Go-live and beyond.
MEDDIC: Internal collaboration systems are also critical for sales playbook adoption. For example, many of our customers have automated MEDDIC adoption in every deal using the Mutual success plans in the sales cycle. They also use the same system to systematize and automate customer onboarding processes and collaboration. BuyerAssist transforms Meddic from an internal checklist to a collaborative tool by ensuring seamless stakeholder onboarding, systematic and efficient project management, and timely warnings to prevent deal slips.
Faster movement of information: Handoff documents are the most overrated documents in B2B sales; asking someone to summarize what they have seen in weeks/months into a 1-2 page Q&A document is too old school. A strong culture of internal collaboration means systems take care of information flow, and users focus on context and experience.
If streamlining collaboration to deliver a better buyer experience is top of mind, you can contact us here.
Please fill in your email Id to download this table now!
CONTENTS
Join the community
Get the latest updates straight to your inbox.
More Blogs
February 23, 2023
Why Use Relationship Maps in Your Enterprise Deals
February 1, 2023
How relationship maps help you close more deals?
January 23, 2023
Five Things to Do to Win Deals in the Current Market Conditions
January 11, 2023
7 Key Components of a Successful Sale
December 27, 2022
Everything you need to know about the Challenger Sales Methodology
December 5, 2022
5 steps to Implementing a Sales Playbook
November 28, 2022
Know your Buyers: How Relationship Maps set your Sellers up for Enterprise Sales Success?
November 21, 2022
Top 7 Sales Practices for 2023 and Beyond
November 11, 2022
How to Drive an Effective Sales Process to win Buyer Trust?
July 18, 2022
Uplift your Sales Enablement with Close Plans
July 5, 2022
Mutual Success Plans are not for Customer Success, but for the Success of the Customers
June 13, 2022
Market dynamics today and Mutual Success Plans
June 6, 2022
Modern Buyer Preferences: Using Mutual Action Plans to drive customer-centricity
May 30, 2022
Mastering Value-based Selling
May 25, 2022
BuyerAssist Gets Enterprise Ready
May 9, 2022
How to build a Customer-Centric CS tech stack in 2022?
April 4, 2022
How to Adapt Your Sales Playbook to Cater to Modern Buyer Preferences?
March 21, 2022
Brandintellé Success Story
March 10, 2022
Your customers hate digital sales rooms
March 9, 2022
Use Mutual Success Plans to maximize Up-Sells, Cross-Sells, and Renewals
March 2, 2022
Get company-wide customer success by using Mutual Success Plans
February 24, 2022
BuyerAssist is now SOC 2 certified
January 24, 2022
Your new world with digitized buyer journey engagement platform
January 24, 2022
Sales Leader's Guide to Buyer Engagement Platform
December 28, 2021
Future of B2B Customer Experience: Unify sales and post-sales
December 9, 2021
Transform MEDDIC with Mutual Success Plans
December 7, 2021
Building your sales team identity
December 1, 2021
Meddic: A sales methodology that wins more deals
November 11, 2021
Can tech solve all the Mutual Action Plans challenges?
October 11, 2021
Being obsessively buyer-centric: 3 ways to use buyer enablement to win buyer's trust
September 27, 2021
How to introduce Mutual Success Plans to get buyer engagement?
September 20, 2021
Know your Buyers: Buyer Role Mapping
August 16, 2021
Elevating buying experience for the modern B2B Buyer
August 2, 2021
How to use Mutual Success Plans to win buyer trust
July 27, 2021
Buyers Sellers co-create
June 8, 2021
Announcing our seed funding and launching BuyerAssist.io beta product
June 8, 2021
6 trends in B2B buying that you should care about
May 31, 2021
Why Mutual Success Plans are core to winning customers
May 24, 2021
Why every sales leader needs to care about what's changing in the world of B2B buying