In the 'good old days', when I was selling instead of consulting, we did a lot of account planning. You know… that thing where you and your account team get in a room, usually in Q1, and talk about the sales opportunities you’ll pursue at specific customers during the upcoming fiscal year?I learned my craft at SAP, and to be sure, our process was disciplined – except for one episode involving dry erase markers that smelled like their colors (one finds amusement where one can at a German company).
Our account plans were things of beauty, right down to the color-coded Harvey balls we used to visually denote the health of our selling relationships with decision makers.
The first iteration (building a new plan from scratch) took an agonizingly long time, as much as a full week of running down information for a complex customer:
When we were done, we’d wrap our plan in pretty paper, tie it with a bow, and deliver it to our Sales VP in a formal presentation. It solemnly conveyed the highly disciplined client strategy we intended to execute because of the entire process.
Then we went back to our day jobs.
It was an annual ritual as old as selling itself. We would check the box on planning, then thank our relative deities that no one would be uttering the “P” word for another 12 months. Time to get back to work – someone might buy something today!
Looking back... Why didn't we ever make the connection between planning, client strategy development, execution, and winning?
What Planning Can Teach You About Your Sales Team
It is somewhat impossible to consult on an actual deal unless the client has an account plan.
Planning, therefore, has been one of our staple client activities for years. Also – and this is true – you learn a tremendous amount when you observe a sales team in a planning session. Namely:
Except, There’s a Conundrum
Everyone agrees planning is essential to good selling – the bedrock foundation for setting disciplined client strategy, the difference between winning and losing, and the one thing you absolutely cannot do without.
But many sellers thoroughly loathe it.
It involves research, sitting for long stretches of time, actively listening, and thinking. It involves activities like reading through 6 months of client notes to refresh your memory on history, reckoning with your competitor’s capabilities, and an uncomfortable review of lost deals.
Once that’s done, you still must develop a client strategy and execute it, which almost certainly requires managing a team of subject matter experts that are matrixed, geographically dispersed, and open to better options for using their time.
Let’s be honest… It would be much easier to just hide your account plan in a recessed corner of your CRM system where it can lay undisturbed, collecting digital dust until the next fiscal year.
New Tools Can Largely Automate Planning
Sellers typically don't enjoy being pulled from the field for an entire day. Their leaders aren't too fond of it either.
But we’ve found a winning combination that drives the benefits of account planning into the field. They mostly have to do with advances in technology:
Tried and True Approach
Nothing, however, beats getting a sales team to experience winning by working the process: planning to strategy through execution. Outside of automation, what else can you do to ensure that your team's account plans are actionable?
If you can combine the above with the ease of mobile CRM technology to drive one sales team to a win, they will advocate for the planning process with the rest of the field, starting a virtuous cycle. We’ve seen it and it works.
Contact us for additional ways to take your account planning and management process to the next level.