Sales Training
Just for sales people?
Sales training is just for sales people, right?
Wrong.
This basic misconception is where I feel many businesses
go wrong: they provide sales staff with sales training, but
not their employees in other departments. This may be a rather
controversial opinion, but let me explain myself further.
Sales training is of obvious benefit for sales staff. Training
incorporates such issues as persuasion, overcoming objections,
closing the sale, considering competitors and identifying
target markets. All aspects have a crucial importance in the
world of sales, in order to allow sales people to get an edge
on their nearest rivals, and better them in what they themselves
do. A sales course can greatly enhance the sales technique
and capabilities of a sales person, but it is not this that
I am trying to convince you of.
Instead, I argue that it is not just sales people that can
benefit from sales training. Why? Firstly, knowing your brand,
your competitors and the objections to your product are as
essential to other company workers as much as it is to those
engaged in direct sales. Brand knowledge is an inescapable
advantage for any person, be they involved in H.R., Administration
or Finance. Even though they might not use it in an everyday
capacity as a counterpart in the sales department does, but
they will still use it in their working lives.
For instance, assume a Finance Director is attending a networking
event on behalf of their company. It does not look good for
their company if their knowledge is limited purely to their
own field of work. In promoting the company, they are also
promoting the company’s products; hence where the sales
pitch comes in. Whilst they are not conducting a sales pitch
as such, the ability to talk comfortably, knowledgeably and
confidently about the company’s products speaks volumes.
Brand knowledge also contributes to the overall company vision.
After all, a company is only as good as its products or the
services it offers. Without proper knowledge of such things,
an employee could well struggle to appreciate this wider vision:
in knowing the sales pitch, benefits, weaknesses and so on
they can foster pride in what they work for. Treating each
division as a separate part of the company is not generally
fostering such a vision: after all, sales are the key to the
company’s success. Without any sales, the company would
amount to very little.
As well as brand knowledge, sales training can be of further
use to other employees. In their work, it is likely that they
will be employed to do some sort of sales, but not necessarily
in that guise. For instance, the Finance Director has to present
a tender to a prospective client. The tender is their product,
they must know their market in order to identify any possible
objections the client may make and prepare to respond should
they arise, and so on. Winning over the client is akin to
closing the sale. With sales training, their task could be
much better executed.
Whilst I am not maintaining that all employees should be
sent on sales courses, I am suggesting that the basic tenets
of sales training should be considered carefully within training
plans for staff. It is almost as important for non-sales staff
to have the ability to sell a product as for the sales staff,
as they never know when such knowledge could come in useful.
A good company can be indicated by its employees sharing in
the complete vision of the company, including product knowledge.
West End Training can tailor-make a sales course for non
front-line staff. The benefits could make an enormous difference
to the business’ exposure and the all important bottom
line.
'Written by a graduate placee employed by West End
Training. Thank you Sarah'
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