Recently, I watched some Business Development Leaders attempt to ‘coach’ sales discovery calls live on a webinar. The problem is, how they ‘coached’ the salesperson was exactly how I used to ineffectively coach sellers on their calls:
“You went off track here, what you should have done is….”
“A better thing to do here is…”
“You didn’t ask the prospect X here, here’s what I would have done instead…”
It was a classic case of ‘telling’ versus coaching. When all you do is ‘tell’, here’s what happens:
Here’s a better way of running a GREAT coaching session that your sellers will love, and will drive far better and quicker results:
"On this call because I’m interested in coaching"
"Looking at ways to make our team more efficient"
"We have some manual processes right now"
"Keen to see how we could become more productive"
"Exploring avenues for generating more leads"
All of these are indicators of surface level pain. Most sellers don’t explore these areas deep enough and simply get in the habit of asking the next question on their list.
Once the seller has selected what they would explore next, ask the salesperson:
"let's imagine you were back in the call, what would you ask the prospect to explore that area?"
Listen to how the salesperson asks the question.
Do they sound like they are curious, and looking to understand and learn more? Or do they sound like a robot? If they sound like the latter, role-play with the seller. Get them to ask the question once or twice more until it sounds better, more natural, and more curious. Role-playing key parts of calls back is a critical element of helping sellers improve.
As you continue to play the call, stop the tape when you hear something the sales person does really well. The best way to get salespeople to consistently do the right things, is to praise them when you observe them doing the right things.
"Stopping the call here because I really love what you did just now. You pushed back on the prospect and got a very different response from them. What was the reason you did that?"
Notice here that I am still exploring WHY the seller did something, even if they did it really well. I want the salesperson to know why they got a positive outcome versus just doing something randomly. When they can demonstrate their understanding of why they got a positive outcome, then they are more likely to want to repeat that same action again moving forwards.
As you continue to play the call, stop the tape when you hear something the salesperson missed or perhaps did which took the call off track. Again, before telling the salesperson WHAT they did wrong or WHAT they missed. Ask them questions like:
“Curious, what was your thinking asking that question there”
“Listening back, is there anything you heard the second time round that you missed the first time round?”
“If you were going to ask that question again, how would you ask it differently?”
“Did you get the response you were looking for there? What do you still not know that you may want to try and learn moving forward?”
Great sales discovery call coaching can actually give the salesperson an action plan and things to figure out to enable them to move a deal forward.
Finally, at the end of the coaching session, ALWAYS end by asking the sales person:
“What were your top two or three biggest takeaways from today’s session?”
It’s crucial to hear what the sales person learned or what they found to be the most empowering thing from the coaching session. If they struggle to give you a response, then it’s likely they didn’t find the coaching useful.
The best signal that they enjoyed the session? They’ll be asking when they can do it all again.