In sales coaching, sales leaders mentor and guide their teams with questions and advice to improve understanding, autonomy and performance. Often supported by conversation intelligence platforms, the process should identify areas for improvement including the number of questions asked to prospects, adherence to frameworks, the speed at which reps talked and their talk/listen ratio.
Both new and experienced sales professionals can benefit from coaching, just like the world's most elite athletes have coaches. While leaders can and do play an important role, coaching can take a variety of formats.
Sales coaching is known to result in business and individual benefits.
Organizations that implement regular sales coaching often see improved win rates and reduced sales cycles, as reps' skills and performance improve progressively over time. Coaching that focuses in on key sales skills like discovery, relationship building or objection handling leads to increased rep confidence, heightened market understanding and improved sales metrics.
But there are also indirect revenue and performance metrics that will see a boost from sales coaching. Regular coaching has been seen to improve employee motivation, autonomy and job satisfaction which reduces employee turnover and absenteeism.
The results have been seen in businesses across industries, geographies and markets.
There are three main formats of sales performance coaching; self-coaching, peer coaching and manager-led coaching. Conversation intelligence (CI) has an important role to play in all three types, as it provides a platform that transcribes and analyzes sales calls, highlighting data on what has gone well and what hasn’t at specific points in sales calls. This helps pinpoint areas that need coaching, where you can leave comments and qualitative remarks to learn from.
Self-coaching involves a team member listening back to their own call recordings, identifying and reflecting on their areas for improvement and creating an improvement plan for themselves.
The key to self-coaching is to approach it objectively, with an open mind and balance. Individual sales reps who spend just 3-4 hours per month listening back to sales calls tend to improve their win rate by 5.5%, so self-coaching alone is a great coaching technique to start with.
Step 1: Record and review
Use sales call recording tools like Jiminny to capture your sales interactions, including phone and video calls, in-person meetings, and emails.
Step 2: Objective analysis
Listen to your recorded sales interactions with an objective mindset. Pay attention to your tone, language, rapport-building techniques, and adherence to sales frameworks.
Step 3: Identify areas for improvement
Reflect on your performance and pinpoint specific areas where you can enhance your skills or strategies. If you can use a framework to benchmark against, that will give you the perfect objective measure, or your conversation intelligence platform can do this for you. This could include things like refining objection handling techniques, improving active listening skills, or mastering product knowledge.
Step 4: Set SMART goals:
Based on your analysis, set Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound (SMART) goals for improvement. For example, aim to increase your conversion rate by 10% within the next quarter.
Step 5: Practice and implement:
Actively practice new techniques or approaches identified during your self-coaching sessions. Incorporate feedback from previous interactions into your sales strategy to continuously refine your approach.
Step 6: Regular review
Schedule regular self-coaching sessions to track your progress towards your goals using your conversation intelligence tool. Celebrate successes and adjust your strategies as needed to stay on track towards sales excellence.
This technique involves coming together within a team to discuss sales calls and highlight areas for improvement. It’s a collaborative effort, all done in the spirit of helping each other.
There are many ways to go about this. Some teams will share call recordings with each other for review, while in others, individual reps will share specific points in a call and ask peers for feedback.
Step 1: Establish trust and respect
Create a supportive environment where team members feel comfortable providing and receiving feedback. Emphasize the value of constructive criticism and mutual growth.
Step 2: Share call recordings
Exchange call recordings with peers for review and feedback - and don't just pick your best calls! Encourage open dialogue and constructive critique to identify areas for improvement.
Step 3: Provide specific feedback
Conversation intelligence tools often have features where you can leave coaching feedback directly in a call recording at a specific time, which will help make your feedback as relevant as possible. When providing feedback to peers, be specific and actionable. Focus on strengths and areas for growth, offering concrete suggestions for improvement.
Step 4: Practice active listening
Actively listen to feedback from peers with an open mind, seeking to understand their perspectives and insights. Embrace opportunities to learn from each other's experiences and expertise.
Step 5: Collaborate on solutions
Work together to brainstorm creative solutions to common sales challenges or obstacles. Leverage the collective knowledge and expertise of the team to enhance individual and group performance.
Step 6: Foster accountability
Hold each other accountable for implementing feedback and executing action plans. Encourage regular check-ins and support each other in achieving shared goals for sales success.
Manager-led coaching is often a one-to-one or small group session between a leader and their team members.
The coaching is interactive, with both the leader and individuals reviewing what went well and what needs improvement and should focus on a limited number of topics or criteria.
Step 1: Establish clear expectations
Clearly communicate performance expectations and goals to your team members, outlining key metrics and benchmarks for success.
Step 2: Schedule regular coaching sessions
Schedule one-on-one or small group coaching sessions with each team member to review performance metrics, discuss challenges, and set development goals.
Step 3: Provide constructive feedback
Offer timely and specific feedback on both strengths and areas for improvement, focusing on actionable steps for growth. Use data-driven insights and real-life examples to illustrate key points.
Step 4: Tailor coaching approaches
Recognize that each team member may have unique strengths, weaknesses, and learning styles. Adapt your coaching approach to meet the individual needs and preferences of each sales professional.
Step 5: Empower through development
Provide opportunities for skill development and training, whether through formal workshops, peer mentorship, or self-directed learning initiatives. Encourage continuous growth and learning within your team.
Step 6: Track progress and celebrate wins
Regularly monitor the progress of your team members towards their goals, celebrating achievements and milestones along the way. Recognize and reward exceptional performance to reinforce positive behaviors and outcomes.
Sales coaching encompasses a wide range of topics and skills designed to enhance sales effectiveness and performance. Consider coaching sessions focused on the following key areas:
Let's take it up a notch. Check out our Fundamental Guide to being a great sales coach here.
Shelley Lavery is the COO and Co-Founder of Jiminny, the leading conversation intelligence and sales coaching platform that helps companies maximize their revenue. With over a decade of experience in coaching B2B sales teams, Shelley was previously Group SVP of Sales at Reward Gateway now leading the conversation intelligence discussion with expertise and insight.