Vistage Live podcast

5 ways to build a high-performing sales team for your small business

Subscribe to Vistage Insights

In the world of small business, sales teams are the lifeblood of growth and success. A high-performing sales team can drive revenue, create loyal customers, and propel your business to new heights. But not if you’re currently the business owner and the lead driver of sales for your organisation.

Building such a team can be challenging, especially for small business owners with limited resources. In this blog post, we’ll explore five effective ways to build a high-performing sales team that will take your small business to the next level.

1. Address the underlying mindset

A positive and supportive team culture is essential for sales success. Encourage open communication, collaboration, and mutual support among your sales team members. When team members feel valued and supported, they’re more likely to perform at their best.

Consider these strategies for fostering a strong team mindset:

  • Regular Team Meetings: Schedule regular team meetings to discuss progress, share success stories and address challenges.
  • Feedback and Recognition: Provide constructive feedback and recognise individual and team accomplishments. Acknowledging hard work and achievements can boost morale and motivation.
  • Encourage Knowledge Sharing: Encourage your sales team to share best practices, strategies, and insights with one another.

2. Learn how to identify, recruit, interview, and hire salespeople

Building a high-performing sales team begins with hiring the right individuals. In a small business, every team member plays a crucial role, so it’s essential to select candidates with a track record of success in selling regardless of industry.

To identify the right candidates:

  • Define Your Ideal Salesperson: Create a clear job description outlining the skills, experience, and personality traits you’re looking for in a salesperson.
  • Leverage Your Network: Tap into your professional network, industry connections, and referrals to find potential candidates who may not be actively job searching.
  • Conduct Thorough Interviews: During the interview process, ask situational and behavioural questions to gauge a candidate’s problem-solving abilities, communication skills, and sales acumen.

Remember that hiring the right people is just the beginning. Ongoing training and development are crucial to ensure your sales team continues to perform at their best.

3. Create a sales playbook 

Sales playbooks are invaluable assets for small businesses. Statistics highlight their effectiveness: businesses with well-structured playbooks experience 33% faster sales cycle times (Aberdeen Group).

Moreover, sales reps equipped with playbooks achieve 14% higher win rates (Harvard Business Review). In the competitive landscape, this translates to a 32% boost in revenue growth (Salesforce).

Furthermore, playbooks facilitate consistency, ensuring that 65% of sales reps adhere to best practices (CSO Insights). Small businesses cannot afford to miss these benefits; playbooks empower sales teams with a strategic framework, driving efficiency and revenue growth while maintaining a unified approach in an ever-evolving market.

Creating an effective sales playbook is crucial for providing guidance to your sales team and ensuring consistent performance. Here are two key strategies for writing a sales playbook:

Understand your audience

To craft a successful sales playbook, it’s essential to understand your target audience, which is your sales team. Consider their skill levels, experience, and familiarity with your products or services.

  • Segmentation: If your sales team consists of both newcomers and seasoned professionals, create different sections or versions of the playbook to cater to their specific needs.
  • User-Friendly Format: Present information in a clear, concise, and easily digestible format. Use visual aids, charts, and step-by-step guides to enhance understanding. Avoid overly technical jargon unless it’s necessary for your audience.
  • Feedback Loop: Continually gather feedback from your sales team as they use the playbook. This will help you identify gaps in information or areas where improvements are needed. A sales playbook should be a living document that evolves based on real-world experiences and challenges.

Align with your customer’s journey

A successful sales playbook should align with the customer’s journey and address their pain points and needs at each stage.

  • Stage-Based Content: Organise the playbook into sections that correspond to different stages of the customer’s journey, such as prospecting, lead qualification, solution presentation, negotiation, and closing. Tailor the content and strategies for each stage to ensure a seamless transition.
  • Buyer Personas: Incorporate buyer personas into your playbook. Provide insights on the typical challenges, goals, objections, and motivations of different customer types. This will help your sales team tailor their approach and messaging effectively.
  • Objection Handling: Include a comprehensive section on objection handling. Anticipate common objections and provide proven responses and strategies to overcome them. This empowers your sales team to navigate objections confidently.
  • Customer-Centric Approach: Emphasise the importance of a customer-centric approach throughout the playbook. Encourage your sales team to actively listen to customers, ask probing questions, and customise solutions based on individual needs.

By understanding your audience and focusing on the customer’s journey, your sales playbook will become a valuable resource that equips your team to engage effectively with prospects, close deals, and ultimately drive business growth.

4. Provide comprehensive training on your sales playbook

Investing in your sales team’s training and development is a surefire way to boost their performance. Begin with an intensive onboarding process to equip new hires with the necessary knowledge and tools. This should include product or service training, market insights, and sales techniques; ideally, all included in a sales playbook.

Continual learning is equally important. Consider:

  • Regular Workshops and Seminars: Keep your sales team up-to-date with the latest industry trends and sales strategies by providing access to relevant workshops and seminars.
  • Role-Playing Exercises: Conduct regular role-playing exercises to practice objection handling, closing deals, and effective communication.

5. Set clear quotas

Without clear quotas and KPIs, your sales team will struggle to perform optimally. Establish specific, measurable, and achievable sales targets for each team member. These goals should align with your business’s overall growth strategy and be regularly reviewed and adjusted as necessary.

Here’s how to set effective goals:

  • SMART Goals: Use the SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound) framework to create objectives that are both clear and realistic.
  • Individual and Team Goals: Set individual targets for each salesperson, but also emphasise team collaboration by setting collective goals that encourage cooperation.
  • Reward Achievement: Incentivise success by offering rewards or bonuses for meeting or exceeding sales targets. This can boost motivation and productivity.

Building a high-performing sales team for your small business is a journey that requires strategy. Often, business owners are so stuck in their role of selling that they don’t have time to start thinking about how to scale their sales department strategically.

Start by hiring the right people, create a sales playbook, invest in training and development of the sales playbook, foster a supportive team culture, and set clear quotas.

With these five strategies in place, your small business can build a sales team that drives revenue, exceeds targets, and propels your business to greater heights of success.

Remember, a high-performing sales team is not just an asset; it’s a competitive advantage that can set your business apart in today’s dynamic marketplace.

This story first featured on the Vistage Research Centre.


Share via social media