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ATD Blog

How to Hold a Kick-Butt Sales Training Meeting

Wednesday, March 13, 2013
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Often, the mere mention of sales training elicits groans from even the most enthusiastic of salespeople. All too often, they signify work and personal time wasted; wilted hotel food; metal pitchers sweating and clinking with ice water; dark, cold conference rooms laid out with overly starched tablecloths; and the clicking of one PowerPoint slide after another morning until night. 

You know these meetings. The typical agenda looks like this:

  • opening session
  •  product sessions (slide presentations)
  •  sales methodology training (with or without hands-on role play)
  •  motivational speaker
  •  dinner
  •  team building activity
  • closing session. 

Everyone bunkered in for the day – or several days – bombarded with presenter after presenter talking through slide after slide of the latest and greatest product enhancements or pipeline strategies. And you, their fearless sales leader, hoping that they’re absorbing all of this information and will be able to translate it into unprecedented sales in the coming months. 

Painful reality 

Not only is the process painful for everyone involved, but also, it doesn’t work. 

Some studies show that people retain less than 20 percent of what is presented to them. The “first three slides and last three slides” retention rule is in full effect. And these presentations are typically limitless, in that there’s almost no limit to the number of slides or amount of information crammed onto each individual slide. Slide-based training is about knowledge transfer, not equipping the salesperson with the information in a way that can be used to facilitate customer conversations. 

And, except for the possible Q&A session at the end of presentations, these sessions are not normally interactive, so attendees are easily distracted by their PDAs, coffee in the back of the room, or anything else that they find more interesting than what’s being presented. It’s no wonder salespeople hit the bar and wolf down the apps at the end of the day.

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A better way 

There is hope. 

Just as you shouldn’t subject your prospects to droning PowerPoint-based sales presentations delivered in the dark, neither should you force your salespeople—whom you’re trying to teach and inspire!—to sit through one (or more), either. 

Instead of telling them what they’re selling and how to sell it, use the session to practice and perfect the whiteboard approach to selling. Start with a “why whiteboard” keynote (PowerPoint doesn’t work, information isn’t retained, sales execs want a conversation, not a presentation, and so forth) and then have a subject matter expert or sales leader present a “gold standard” whiteboard presentation.  

After the stage is set, assemble small teams to work together and leverage a role-play-based, repetitive, simulated sales call approach to present the whiteboard to one another other using a flip chart and markers. You could even end the day with a competition of top performers in front of the entire group.

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But you’re not done there. Developing a whiteboard is a great first step, but stopping there really misses the whole point of the endeavor, which is equipping sales with a set of tools, skills, and ultimately, that critical element of knowledge ownership to “raise their game” when engaging with customers and prospects with confidence.  

You want to give sales mastery of the whiteboard content, structure, and flow; key questions to ask; and objection handling. You also want to equip them with basic whiteboarding skills and best practices so they can confidently present a visual story to a customer or prospect and interactively exchange information. 

It works 

There are several studies that show participants retain 70 to 90 percent of material when learning in a hands-on, visual fashion. In other words, with pen in hand. It’s not just about memorizing new product information—a whiteboard-based training is designed to be an interactive learning mechanism to transfer solution knowledge quickly and effectively to field personnel who may not possess the “situational flu­ency” and deep domain expertise of tenured and proven salespeople. 

When surveyed, participants in whiteboard-based sales training identified a few key factors that contributed to their overwhelming satisfaction with these sessions: 

  1. The sessions were interactive, with participants able to ask questions, add things to the whiteboard, and share their opinions while learning from others.
  2. The training was 100% hands-on, facilitating “active learning.” 
  3. The activities encouraged team members to come out of their comfort zone to learn new skills and present in ways they did not think possible.

So gather your team, turn on the lights, arm them with a pen and an easel and set them to work. They’re bound to not only stay awake, but be much more effective in the year to come.

For more tips and ideas, visit the Corporate Visions Blog.

About the Author

Corey Sommers has more than 20 years experience in sales and channel enablement, account manager certification and training, and competitive intelligence. He is passionate about bridging the gap between marketing and sales within large organizations. Corey co-founded WhiteboardSelling, a successful sales enablement tools company that trained over 50,000 sales professionals globally in visual storytelling before being acquired by Corporate Visions in 2012.

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