What growth strategy is your sales organization pursuing as the economy begins to show signs of recovery?

As the business climate improves, so do the opportunities for shifting from survival mode to growth mode. Frozen budgets are beginning to thaw, and companies are considering to fund projects that were deferred during the height of the recession.

If your organization has been in survival mode over the past year, you may have been focused primarily on protecting your customer base. Now the question is how best to take the first steps toward jump-starting increased sales. Should you invest in higher levels of prospecting activity to expand your customer base? Or is it more productive to seek out hidden opportunities in your current accounts?

It may seem that the quickest path to substantial new business is via new customers. Expanding the base, however, is always expensive, and, at present, it may be more so.

Caution is still the prevailing mood across most industries, and few firms are ready to risk starting out with new suppliers. It makes sense to look for opportunities in your own backyard—the accounts in which you already have an established relationship.

The Challenge: Familiarity Breeds Entrapment

The good news about working with your current customers is that you are already in the "magic circle" of trusted suppliers. The bad news is that the same familiarity that brings repeat business can also become a straitjacket.

Salespeople become comfortable with a small number of contacts in a particular area, such as IT in the case of a technology offering. Although they may have been exhorted to call higher and wider in their accounts, salespeople can find it risky to break out into other areas, and especially to call on executives who have little obvious reason to talk to salespeople.

Yet without such conversations, opportunities that are invisible from inside the confines of one area and level will be missed. Decisions about priorities and funding are made within an organization's higher levels.

Many lower-echelon and midlevel managers have less budget authority than they had even a year ago, as spending continues to be tightly controlled. Customers are being especially cautious allocating still-scarce resources and are highly focused on a few strategic goals. It is in those targeted areas that the real opportunities will be found.

Executing a Calling Strategy for Expanded Business

To uncover those top few strategic priorities, salespeople need to overcome their reticence about developing relationships with executives outside their usual circle of contacts.

What is required is an enterprisewide calling strategy to meet with the right people at the right levels to confirm the top business priorities. Based on that information, salespeople can prioritize opportunities and determine which solutions can provide the greatest benefit to the customer.

To be successful, however, it's essential to know how to (1) identify whom to call on; (2) prepare for the call to ensure credibility; and (3) lead the conversation as a business resource, not as a salesperson.

Identifying the Right People: Whom Are You Going to Call?

The "right people" question is the first one to be answered, and the calling strategy should identify which functional areas of the company to target and which people to contact. Decisions about where to call should focus on finding information about issues such as the following:

  • Competitive challenges
  • Research and development goals
  • Financial metrics
  • Go-to-market strategy
  • External changes, such as new regulations or the emergence of new technologies or competitors
  • Internal changes, such as acquisitions, mergers, restructuring, etc.

Once the right areas have been determined, identify functional leaders who can discuss specific departmental goals and accountabilities, as well as the executives who have both a business-unit and corporate perspective.

Preparing: Critical Success Factors as the Context for Credibility

For many salespeople, the biggest barrier to calling higher in an organization is the lack of a clear answer to an obvious question: "Why do I want to take time to meet with you?"

To answer with confidence requires a transition from a sales mindset to a business mindset, and the ability to talk about something that is of interest to all executives: their most-pressing business concerns.

Although only a more-detailed conversation can verify what those specific concerns are, a salesperson can establish credibility from the first contact by demonstrating broad knowledge of key issues affecting the customer's industry.

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Sales: Strategic Calling to Find Hidden Opportunities in Your Current Accounts

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ken Valla is regional vice-president (Americas) of Wilson Learning Corporation (wilsonlearning-americas.com) and is responsible for driving Wilson's sales strategies in North America. Ken specializes in the complex sale that encompasses multiple buyers at various levels. Contact Wilson Learning at 1-800-328-7937.