Selling With Your Own Point of View
Today I’m going to show you how showing up for a sales meeting without a point of view (POV) is silently killing your pipeline.
Most companies I see and work with in the IT staffing industry struggle to forecast sales revenues. In fact, many don’t even make an attempt at forecasting sales revenue. Customers tell me they would love to be able to forecast their sales but they just don’t know how to do it. In fact, many of the companies who try to forecast sales often refer to their sales forecast as “the crystal ball” or a “hope and prayer” indicating that they have no idea what deals are going to close and which are not.
Unfortunately, this problem has become an epidemic. But if you can’t figure out how to solve this problem, achieving scalable, sustainable growth becomes increasingly difficult.
In this blog post I'm going to share why you can't accurately forecast sales. I'm also going to share with you tips and best practices for how to improve your sales revenue forecast.
Why You Can't Accurately Forecast Sales Revenue
I’ve found that the root cause issue for why staffing companies can't produce an accurate sales revenue forecast is due to a lack of a sales process. Most staffing firms don’t have a sales process. Even for those who do have a sales process, chances are they've failed to align their sales process with how their buyer's buy.
Without a buyer aligned sales process salespeople and sales managers are forced to rely on making decisions off of gut feel and instinct. This is NOT how to forecast sales revenues.
Most staffing firms use an old and outdated sales process methodology that only accounts for the activities that the salesperson or recruiter has completed. Their view of the sales process is limited to only looking at where the seller and/or recruiter and their candidate is at in the recruitment and interview process. Their sales process fails to account for where the buyer is in their buying process. Instead, their CRM or ATS tells them the following:
Candidates submitted. Check
Candidates interviewed. Check
Candidates reference checks completed. Check
Candidate pre-closed. Check
Candidate background screen completed. Check.
Typically when a candidate has gotten this far in the interview process sales managers and salespeople tend to think the deal is 80% or 90% closed. Confidence is real high which is why it’s at this point in the sales cycle where salespeople including sales and recruiting managers set themselves up to be disappointed. How?
Salespeople and recruiters make the following assumptions:
How do you prepare your sales forecast? What do you find most challenging when assessing your sales pipeline and putting your sales forecast together? Please share your thoughts and experiences below and we can share our ideas and best practices with you.
If you want to improve sales performance, download the free eBook titled "The Definitive Guide to Building a Buyer Aligned Sales Process."
Today I’m going to show you how showing up for a sales meeting without a point of view (POV) is silently killing your pipeline.
What I’m about to share with you isn’t pretty. It’s going to make you uncomfortable.
5 min read
Since forever, staffing sales professionals have been trained to seek out job orders.
Most call hiring managers and ask: