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Enable Your Sales Blog

News, discussions and Opinions about Sales Enablement and Sales 2.0 as well as all updates on our Sales Enablement Solution Suite



Press Photo High Resolution Jochen MollHaving been on the job for six weeks now, it is a good time to review and reflect. In the first weeks as CEO of SVA-BizShere AG, I had the opportunity to take in a lot of internal information and I got a lot of valuable feedback from customers, partners, analysts and investors. The collected impressions can be summarized as follows:

The Sales Enablement market exists and is growing

More and more decision makers in companies realize that ‘information overload’ – especially in times of the social web – means that many (Sales and Marketing) employees can not be as effective any more. There are no intelligent tools to manage this amount of information and at the same time ensure quality, relevance and up-to-dateness. The classical approaches of information management can not provide crucial information in the right format, at the right time and in the right place for all undertakings. The BizSphere Sales Enablement solution and our expertise is exactly the right approach for this problem!

Our innovative strength is outstanding and our focus on the ‘user experience’ is recognized in the industry

I’m very impressed by the innovative force that I feel at BizSphere. Our applications and the consistent logic behind them are compelling and brilliant! In very short iteration loops, we come up with new ideas and approaches to enhance our application suite and expand its areas of use – especially our focus on the ‘user experience’ analysts see as a strength. More than ever, will the ease-of-use of an application decide its success or cause a lack of adoption.

This ability is a very important asset, which we as a company have as an advantage.

I’m looking forward to meeting more of our customers and stakeholders in the sales enablement space.

Best regards,

Jochen Moll
CEO
SVA-BizSphere AG


Please excuse the fact that the following press release is in German only. It has mainly staff related updates. (Google Translate made this of it.)

SVA-BizSphere setzt jetzt auf Innovation und erweitert Marketingbereich

August 9, 2010 - Stuttgart (ots): SVA-BizSphere, internationales Startup-Unternehmen, das auf innovative Software-Lösungen für den Vertrieb spezialisiert ist, verstärkt seinen Fokus auf Innovation. Matthias Roebel übernimmt als “Chief Innovation Officer” neben seiner Verantwortung für Produktmanagement und -strategie zusätzliche Aufgaben im Bereich Business Development bei SVA-BizSphere. Das Startup möchte so noch gezielter auf die immer schneller wechselnden Anforderungen des Marktes eingehen und seine Rolle als Innovationsführer für Sales Enablement-Lösungen weiter ausbauen. Gleichzeitig stellt sich das Unternehmen im Bereich Marketing neu auf. Zum 1. August verstärkt Tamara Vierling als Marketing & Communications Managerin das Team. Die 35-jährige verantwortet die externe und interne Kommunikation bei SVA-Bizsphere.

Matthias Roebel hat die Produktentwicklung bei SVA-BizSphere in den vergangenen Jahren stark geprägt. Davor war der 33-jährige in internationalen Positionen im Bereich Marketing und Business Development bei Nortel und IBM beschäftigt. Tamara Vierling verfügt über langjährige Erfahrung im Bereich Kommunikation in internationalen Unternehmen und Agenturen. Die studierte Germanistin war unter anderem für EMC, IBM und Kia Motors tätig.

“Mit der Neuausrichtung im Marketing und dem Fokus auf Innovation möchten wir mittelfristig unsere Präsenz auf dem Markt verstärken”, sagt Jochen Moll, Vorsitzender des Vorstands von SVA-Bizsphere. “Wir bieten unseren Kunden nicht nur eine Informationsmanagement-Software an, sondern innovative Lösungen für ihre Herausforderungen. Das können wir nur, wenn wir uns auch selbst von Innovation leiten lassen”, so Moll.

SVA-BizSphere AG

Die SVA-BizSphere AG wurde bis zur Gründung als Geschäftsbereich “BizSphere” innerhalb der SVA GmbH, einer der größten Systemintegratoren in Deutschland, geführt. In 2007 wurde dieser Bereich zu einer eigenständigen Rechtsform, der SVA-BizSphere AG. Das Unternehmen ist in Stuttgart ansässig und weltweit mit Mitarbeitern in Wiesbaden, Hamburg, München, Shanghai, Chicago und Toronto vertreten.

Mit BizSphere Sales Enablement hat SVA-BizSphere eine innovative Software-Lösung und Beratungsmethode entwickelt, die Unternehmen eine effiziente und kundenspezifische Vertriebs- und Marketingkommunikation ermöglicht. BizSphere Sales Enablement unterstützt Unternehmen darin, die bereits bestehende Informationsvielfalt inhaltlich zu strukturieren und sinnvoll zu verwalten. Dem Vertrieb stehen Informationen so flexibel und nach Bedarf abrufbar zur Verfügung. Dadurch sind Unternehmen trotz kontinuierlicher Veränderungsprozesse in der Lage, auf die Bedürfnisse ihrer Kunden schnell und gezielt einzugehen. Die Lösung vereint dabei Know-how aus den Bereichen soziales und semantisches Internet (Web 2.0/3.0) mit innovativem Benutzeroberflächen-Design.

Weitere Informationen:
www.BizSphere.com
http://twitter.com/BizSphere
http://slideshare.net/BizSphere
http://YouTube.com/BizSphere

Pressekontakt:

SVA-BizSphere AG
Marketing & Communications Manager
Tamara Vierling
Borsigstr. 14
65202 Wiesbaden
Mobil: +49(0)172-3967686
Festnetz: +49(0)711-49039-744
Fax: +49(0)6122-536319
E-Mail: tamara.vierling@bizsphere.com


Press Photo High Resolution Jochen Moll

Jochen Moll appointed as CEO of SVA-BizSphere AG

Former IBM and EMC Corporation Executive will drive the company’s growth strategy

Stuttgart, Jul 19, 2010: SVA-BizSphere AG, one of Germany’s most innovative business software start-ups, is pleased to announce Jochen Moll as their new CEO, effective July 1st 2010. Jochen has more than 20 years of experience in the IT Industry, serving in many different management and executive positions at companies including IBM and EMC. At IBM, Jochen was Vice President (VP) Business Partner Organization Central Region as well as VP of IBM’s software business in the Central Region in Europe (Germany, Austria Switzerland). At EMC Corporation he served as the Managing Director for Germany and until recently helped to jump-start the business as VP of Strategic Alliances for Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

Jochen’s appointment is a significant milestone for the company’s business and growth strategy. His experience in the software business as well as proven skills to build a powerful partner network, will help the company to drive continuous growth. “The Sales Enablement market is currently growing quickly. We offer a highly innovative Sales Enablement solution,” says Jochen Moll. “We plan to build on that momentum and will continue to expand into international markets.”

Ralph-Peter Quetz, who previously was CEO, will serve BizSphere as COO, effective July 1st. He has successfully set up the company’s strong organizational and financial basis and will ensure day-to-day operations in those areas.

About Sales Enablement

IT Analysts at Forrester Research define Sales Enablement as a strategic, ongoing process that equips all client-facing employees with the ability to have a valuable conversation with the right set of clients. According to IDC, more than a third of possible client deals lost could have been won, if the seller had been better informed and had acted more client-oriented – this happens despite the fact that companies, according to Forrester Research, already invest on average US $135,000 in sales support per seller per year. Sales Enablement solutions aim to leverage these investments better or reduce them whilst increasing client satisfaction, sales success rates and the effectiveness of sales people.

About SVA-BizSphere AG

SVA-BizSphere AG has developed a software platform and consulting framework supporting companies in solving their Sales Enablement challenges. The company combines fundamental research in the areas of semantic & social web as well as user interface design with in-depth experience from Sales Enablement projects in large global enterprises and SMBs. This results in ongoing, customer needs oriented innovation, which new and existing clients benefit from. The BizSphere Sales Enablement solution is based on an open IT architecture for Knowledge Management, leverages Enterprise 2.0 technologies and integrates with Enterprise Content Management (ECM) systems as well as Unified Communications (UC) and Customer Relationship Management (CRM) platforms. SVA-BizSphere AG was founded in 2007. The company is globally present with staff in Stuttgart, Wiesbaden, Hamburg, Shanghai, Chicago and Toronto.

Links

www.bizsphere.com
www.enableyoursales.com/blog
http://twitter.com/bizsphere
http://youtube.com/bizsphere
http://slideshare.net/bizsphere
Facebook BizSphere


We are all still shocked about the tragic news we received Monday morning. Nicholas Kruse, long friend and co-founder of BizSphere died on Saturday, 3rd of July, 2010 during the “Gobi March 2010″ in Northwest China. He was only 31 years old.

Nick was with us since the early beginning. Some of us knew him years before and developed a deep friendship with him. As the creative director, he played a crucial part in the development of our company’s vision along with the concepts behind the user interface of BizSphere applications. He was a key contributor to the solution breakthrough in our first customer projects. With his company ReignDesign in Shanghai, he also brought in the first front end development team for our company that has remained a close development partner to this day.

In his work we valued his artistic talent, his sharp mind and also out-of-the-box ways. As a friend, we benefited from his insights, his ears to us, his care, his hospitality, his ability to party, his loyalty and his smile. We also all looked up to him for his incredible knowledge about China. He spoke Chinese fluently and had a deep understanding of Chinese history and culture. That made him one of our key anchors of our presence in the People’s Republic.

His spirit was always free, not bound to conventions, preconceived ideas or norms. Until his last moments, Nick was a free man.

The entire team is feeling terribly saddened about the unbelievable loss of our great friend and colleague. We will miss him as we go forward and it will not be the same without him. His spirit, his vision and his ideas will live on in us.

Our hearts and prayers go out to his family, his girlfriend and friends. We cannot even fathom the pain and frustration they have to go through. We would like to thank Andrew Kruse (his brother) and Fei Lin (his girlfriend) who were in Urumqi right after Nick was brought to the hospital and stayed with him the entire three days until he passed away. Thank you Andrew and Fei!

We will keep Nick in our minds forever.

Nick, may you rest in peace our friend!

The entire BizSphere team

PS: Please see below a couple of further links


SVA-BizSphere AG in Shanghai (China) is looking for an intern to join the UX Design team. You will work closely with visual designers, user researchers, business leads and application developers to design and develop wireframes, interaction designs, use cases, flow charts and navigation models. As an Interaction Designer you will strive to understand complex systems and processes; Bring passion and excitement around usability, creating products that solve users’ pain points; and provide an experience that users love. You’ll be working in a highly collaborative environment, where iterating and prototyping through ideas amongst small, nimble teams will lead to better solutions.

Responsibilities:

  • Define user model and user interfaces for new and existing products and features.
  • Develop high level and/ or detailed storyboards, mockups, prototypes, wireframes, and product specifications to effectively communicate interaction and design ideas.
  • Gauge the usability of new and existing products, and make constructive suggestions for change.
  • Assist the agile development process by providing timely, meaningful feedback during all phases of the development cycle.
  • Connect with the user interface development community to track latest trends and emerging technologies.
  • Champion user needs and continually strive to improve the usability of our products while understanding business and technical constraints. Understand the balance of user experience, business case, and time-to-release in order to make appropriate strategic decisions.
  • You will work collaboratively with fellow members of the User Experience team to conceptualize, design and mock-up ideas; then inspire members of Product Management, Engineering and Quality Engineering to develop great products.
  • Represent the “User Experience”, translate customer requirements into defined specifications and inspire the Engineering team to develop the right product.
  • Usability testing and QA

Required competencies:

  • We’re looking for candidates which are close to their bachelor with 3+ years hands-on experience in interface design
  • Strong understanding of UI/ UX principles and best practices
  • Uncanny drive to design the best user experience.
  • Proven track record and a passion for designing compelling, great user interfaces.
  • Experience working with various departments within a product team

Desired Skills:

  • Fluent in English
  • Strong Photoshop, Illustrator and Fireworks skills
  • Adobe Flash skills (Action Script 3)
  • HTML skills
  • Familiarity with Adobe Flex
  • Familiarity with other programming languages and advanced programming concepts
  • Familiarity with Agile Software development method

Location:

  • Shanghai, China

Time:

  • 6 months
  • Beginning September 2010

Salary:

  • 1000 USD/ month

About us:

Over the last years, SVA-BizSphere Entwicklungs- und Vertriebs-AG has developed consulting methods and web-based software components to leverage sustainable knowledge and communication management. Both software and consulting are based on three core competencies: sustainable knowledge management, functional and intuitive user interfaces and the integration of communication and information management.

Besides several customized Rich Internet Applications (RIA), the company has created the BizSphere Sales Enablement Solution Suite, addressing the constantly growing problem of information overload specifically in the area of sales and marketing. The solution significantly enhances the information quality and relevance by optimizing content creation as well as search patterns.

SVA-BizSphere AG is a spin-off of SVA GmbH based in Wiesbaden, Germany. SVA GmbH is one of Germany’s leading system integrators in the field of datacenter infrastructure with an annual revenue of 120 million Euros with its more than 120 employees.

SVA-BizSphere AG is a team of more than 30 highly qualified and internationally experienced consultants, IT architects, developers and web designers. At several offices in Germany and Shanghai the team concentrates on the agile and client-oriented execution of software development and implementation

Please submit your application including resume to: kaye.huang@bizsphere.com.

For more information about us visit: www.bizsphere.com

Candidates only! It is NOT OK for recruiters or others to solicit SVA-BizSphere AG.


information overload

In the February 2010 issue of CRM magazine Christopher Musico looked at ‘Sales Enablement Tools’. The article is great to begin the Sales Enablement conversation:

Sales Enablement Tools – Make the Selling Simpler: Organizations want sales reps to have access to the right information at the most critical moments

Sales professionals should have the world at their fingertips, thanks to netbooks, laptops, smartphones, and the ubiquity of cloud-based data. And yet pundits and executives alike say the same basic challenge endures: the lack of personalized, targeted information.

[...] Michael Gerard, vice president of the sales advisory practice at IDC. “It’s the most basic things. Reps are having a difficult time having a fluent conversation with the customer, and that gets into knowing who [she] is, about [her] company, what products [her] company may or may not have already purchased.”

This is the sweet spot for sales enablement—defined by IDC as “the delivery of the right information in the right format to the right person at the right time and in the right place to assist in moving a specific sales opportunity forward.”

Whilst we couldn’t agree more with this definition of Sales Enablement we like to see “…in the right format…” added into that definition above. One of our YouTube videos explains what we mean by that.

“Scott Santucci, senior analyst at Forrester Research, says he’s seen an explosion of interest in this area over the past year. As with any technology, however, those rushing to buy the hot newness without first establishing a clear strategy are doomed to fail. It’s not that there’s a lack of information—far from it. Instead, it’s hard to wade through the sheer tonnage of information and determine what’s up-to-date, relevant, and in a form amenable to the particular sales conversation. “It’s a very simple, yet really complicated problem,” Santucci says.

IDC’s Gerard says the first step is to figure out who owns sales enablement in your organization. While the prevailing view has the niche bridging both sales and marketing, no one seems able to agree on exactly who owns which pieces of the pie. [...]”

These are nuanced problems, and Santucci says each of the relevant vendors—including BizSphere, iCentera, Kadient, and Savo Group—cater to slightly different problems. [...]

Santucci says that BizSphere is a relative newcomer to this space, but tackles a more-ambitious problem. “Imagine a large company that can sell different combinations of products and services, and organize things in a variety of different hierarchies,” he says. “If we were calling on a c-level person about [her] particular business problem, it could span across multiple product lines. If you talk to a manager-level person, you may only talk about one particular product. How do we build a taxonomy that allows us to cascade and work within that complex an infrastructure? That’s what BizSphere does. [...]”

SVA-BizSphere AG agrees with Scott Santucci that different companies need different Sales Enablement solutions and we like to think of ourselves as the Sales Enablement solution for the large global B2B enterprise with our experience at Fortune 500 companies like IBM and Nortel, since the year 2006.

“These vendors offer on-premises and software-as-a-service (SaaS) models—and CSO Insights Managing Principal Jim Dickie says the SaaS option is growing in popularity, in part because those prices range between $40 and $100 per sales professional per month. That model, he adds, is an easy way for sales executives to test if sales enablement can fix a particular problem. If it does, expect sales folks to take more ownership—literally. “You’ll see people start off with SaaS, but if they decide to use it long-term, they’ll convert over to perpetual license,” Dickie says. [...]

SVA-BizSphere AG’s Sales Enablement solution is available as on-premises or SaaS.

BY THE NUMBERS

  • $135,262 is spent, on average, in support costs per year for each salesperson.
  • 7 hours per week is what the average salesperson spends looking for relevant information to prepare for sales calls.
  • 50 percent of the information is pushed through email.
  • 10 percent is “made available in a useful format.”

Source: Forrester Research & IDC Sales Advisory Service
[...]“

On 2/4/2010, Tamara Schenk @tamaraschenk (T-Systems International GmbH, Portfolio & Offering Management, Head of Special ICT Innovation Projects) posted a great comment on the article mentioned above:

Christopher, thanks for this great summary – spot on!

The discussion on “who owns sales enablement” is really interesting – from my point of view this question brings as back to the “functional silos”. Didn’t we want to overcome the functional silos by implementing sales enablement? We had a similar discussion when we started our sales enablement project. Now we have a cross-functional team which is lead by portfolio & offering management, in our approach the “backbone” of sales enablement.

You hit the nail on the head with your characteristics of the here listed vendors (there are a few more with interesting, solutions for special needs…). If an organization has a complex offering portfolio with different kinds of relationships within the portfolio you will need a lot of taxonomy features – but make sure that your first step is the consolidation of your portfolio and the second step is implementing sales enablement, including working on content quality, governance, processes, change management etc. The better you design the portfolio structure the easier you can analyze the content quality later on. From our experience that’s one of the critical success factors – and the other one is change management – how do I motivate sales reps to use the sales enablement platform and to use the collaboration features? Communicate, communicate, communicate… and you could give the sales user groups the responsibility for a successful change!

The objectives of sales enablement initiative could be different, e.g. one collaboration platform instead of ten different portals, get consistent messages, optimize go-to-market, deliver right information to the right person at the right time and in the right place, break functional silos, reduce applications, reduce ramp-up time for new hires, improve sales efficiency etc. All objectives should be aligned to one common understanding: “Sales is the customer”!


Today, I had a look at the usage metrics and statistics report gathered at a large enterprise that recently launched our Sales Enablement application to replace more than 35 intranet portals. What I love about the report is that it not only tracks which content sales people view, download, rate (with up to 5 stars) or comment on (We actually also display all of the above in the frontend to show sales people where the good stuff is.), but it also tracks what they were not able to find. An anonymous list of all search queries that were punched in comes with the number of actual results that were displayed. That way the owners of the Sales Enablement application at our customers can take a look at all search queries that led to zero results and specifically address what must be a huge frustration for sales people who are trying to prepare a customer meeting.

Constant loop of quantitative and qualitative feedback lets you improve the experience

Knowing which way people search, what they are looking for, and to analyze whether the content does actually exist or still needs to be created is very insightful. Not only does it direct the content planning process (to invest marketing dollars only for content that will actually be used), but it also helps to focus on the important topics when optimizing your texts and their tags for the indexing by the search. What I mean by this is that a search term that led to zero results can be added – visible or invisible - to the content that would had been the perfect match. An example from one of our early customers – Nortel – would be frequent searches for “CS1k” with the expectation to find content for the product “CS1000″. It is just fair enough that people search the way they speak and analyzing the metrics and statistics helps you to improve their search experience.

Enterprise 2.0 style collaboration

Besides the quantitative things to look at, you also have the qualitative feedback in form of comments under each piece of content. When people start to…

  • comment on a white paper why it did not resonate with customers in a specific industry vertical,
  • add competitive insight from the field on an internal presentation,
  • applaud or criticize the authors
  • and help each other with lots of comments etc…

…then each piece of content has its own blog.

A word, that is not an official term but keeps on showing up in these comments or in the log files mentioned above, can be added as an alias of a product/service/solution, region/country or resource/document type.

The real Enterprise 2.0 style collaboration starts to happen when your Sales Enablement application allows your employees or even your channel partners to share their own documents or links which they found helpful. When everything can be accessed from one place and is marked as ‘peer contribution’ or as ‘content approved by marketing’, then there might be a chance to ensure that everyone is always using the latest version and does not waste time emailing people for it.

The report – this ‘one place’ should show in real-time – tells you who contributed the content that gets a lot of love and the collaboration around it might reveal insights of the kind only employees touching the customer accounts gather and the marketing department usually finds out about late.

Enterprise 2.0 with BizSphere


Alan Willis of Solutions for Sales (www.SolutionsForSales.com @salesready) wrote a detailed and insightful post entiteld ‘Sales Enablement Platforms – needs and benefits’. Solution for Sales is one of our trusted partners in the UK and one of the pioneers of the term ‘Sales Enablement‘. While at SVA-BizSphere AG, we provide technology and methodology to clients so that their sales force is able to access the most relevant information to their current sales situation, Solution for Sales creates this information for its clients. Their interactive sales kits have become an industry standard. Especially through this synergy, we are looking forward to a mutually productive partnership with Solution for Sales.

Thanks to Solution for Sales for allowing us to re-post their article on our blog. It describes the sales enablement theme from a business perspective and greatly compliments the articles on our page:

“Salespeople volunteer for a tough job. The complexity of what they sell and the sophistication of the people they sell to increase year by year. In this environment every sales interaction and conversation is important, which is why the best salespeople spend so much time preparing for their conversations with customers and creating the materials they will use.

But salespeople are often not well served by the resources they are given to prepare for these conversations. The problem resides at two levels: the quality of sales materials is often poor and it is hard to find the right resources, even if they do exist. The concept of the sales enablement platform – a knowledge management tool for sales – has arisen as a solution to the second of these problems. This article outlines the requirements for an effective sales enablement platform and analyses the benefits.

What customers want

Customers have grown out of having products sold to them; they have even tired of solutions selling. Now they want to buy on the basis of business outcomes. The communications company doesn’t want an improved customer loyalty system; it wants customers that stay longer and spend more. The manufacturer no longer wants an improved supply chain solution; it wants lower supply costs and on time delivery. And they want to look at all the options for achieving their desired outcome.

One consequence is that customers expect salespeople to explain how they can deliver outcomes. They are looking for salespeople to share a point of view, not just ask questions.

Customers want to work with salespeople who bring business knowledge from a wide range of different situations; salespeople who can contribute new business ideas.

What salespeople need

The sales cycle can be viewed as a series of interactions or conversations with the customer. Each sales interaction has a specific set of objectives: it must change a viewpoint, unearth information, resolve a concern, solve a problem or provide needed information. Knowing this, and understanding the customer’s expectations, it is apparent that the salesperson, when preparing for a sales conversation, needs to be able to marshal a wide range of information and structure it according to the context and objectives of each different situation. Salespeople need better information systems to help them do this, and the sales enablement platform has evolved to address this need.

What’s the problem?

Typically, current tools do not meet the information needs of salespeople – see below “What salespeople say they need”. These shortfalls are damaging because salespeople rely on sales resources to fuel the engine of sales conversations – no fuel, no progress.

What salespeople say they need

  • One source – I don’t want to have to search through multiple, unconnected information silos, arranged arbitrarily e.g. according to product set, department, country
  • The big picture – I need the high level view so I can spot related offerings and cross and up sell opportunities
  • Concise and complete – I want just the resources that are relevant now, not loads of extraneous stuff. But it must be all the resources, from all departments
  • Arranged for me – I don’t want to have to be an expert on the portfolio to get to the resources I need
  • In my language – it must respond to the words I use
  • Responding to the sales context – e.g. the stage of sale, technical vs business
  • Linking me to people who can help – I want to connect to salespeople who have been here before me, and to the expert behind the resource
  • Listening to me – I’d like the opportunity to comment and share information. I’d like to be updated on topics that I choose

The impact – sales efficiency

Much has been written about the impact of these problems on salesforce productivity. For example, IDC research says that on average each week a salesperson spends:

  • 6.4 hours creating presentations
  • 5.8 hours searching for client-related information
  • 2.3 hours searching for marketing collateral

Clearly, if these processes could be speeded up sales would be more efficient. For example, for a salesforce of 500, saving one hour each week is worth over €500k each year in simple efficiency savings. That means getting more sales out of the same size salesforce or accommodating salesperson wastage without loss of sales.

Significant as this is, Solutions for Sales believes that it is the potential improvement in sales effectiveness delivered by the sales enablement platform that offers the most significant gains.

The impact – sales effectiveness

We have argued that customers expect a higher quality of interaction with their sales contacts. They want business advice; they want a balanced view; they want to focus on their desired business outcome not the salesperson’s desired sales outcome. To meet these customer expectations salespeople need to tap into a wide range of resources and quickly find all that is available to make the next sales interaction successful.

This is something salespeople are not doing well according to statistics from IDC, which show that:

  • 33% of all unsuccessful deals could have been won if the seller had been better informed and had acted more client-oriented
  • 57% of customers feel that salespeople are poorly prepared or not prepared at all at initial meetings
  • More than 50% of customers expect salespeople to be better informed about client-specific requirements and goals

If accessing sales resources is difficult or laborious, it is our experience that the salesperson’s patience runs out long before all relevant resources have been discovered. The result is sales meetings that fall into the 57% that customers judge to be poorly prepared and sales opportunities that end up in the 33% that would have been won if the salesperson had been better informed.

The most significant benefit of a good sales enablement platform is that it improves the quality of the sales conversation, which results in more wins. When it comes to quantifying this benefit there are so many other factors at play that it is hard to provide objective figures. Readers must judge for themselves, but if it is accepted that salespeople who are better prepared for sales meetings can achieve a 1% higher win rate, then for a company with sales of €250 million the result would be an extra €1.5 – €2.5 million of sales each year. And there’s another important benefit: the salesperson that demonstrates the ability to talk outcomes with their customer gains visibility of more sales opportunities.

Marketing has needs too

Sales enablement platforms are not just for sales. Marketing has a whole range of requirements in this area. See below:

What CMOs say they need

  • Drive Sales – I need to have better ways of steering Sales in the direction the company wants to go
  • Satisfy Sales – I want to provide the sales resources that salespeople need. I am sick of hearing them say that Marketing is no help
  • Economise on Marketing resource – I would like to know which resources are valued by sales so I can save money by stopping doing what’s not wanted
  • Improve visibility – I want to see who’s using what, which resources are getting old, and what the coverage is of sales resources across the portfolio
  • Develop a broader view – I’d like people to have a better understanding of the breadth of our capability and the positive synergies across our portfolio
  • Exploit all our resources – I want everyone to be able to contribute to selling, including organisations like professional services and delivery
  • Encourage interaction – I need to get salespeople sharing their experience and marketing people contributing their knowledge directly to sales
  • Structured, uniform and global – I’m worried that the ad-hoc social networking and web tools that are springing up will just create confusion. Worse, if they aren’t maintained they will mislead

Producing the best sales resources

People all round the company have information that can help sales. Of course the main producers are Products, Marketing and Sales themselves, but there are others. In some companies Professional Services and Consulting divisions have information on the services they offer, their expertise and their processes, methods and tools. They may produce opinion pieces and white papers. This is valuable material in a complex sales process. Delivery and Operations can provide performance statistics and quality measures that are useful sales ammunition, and customers want to know about the design, implementation and support services available to them.

Products, Marketing, Sales, Professional Services, Consulting, Delivery and Operations will all have their own ways of producing and storing information – this is what created the silos in the first place. The good news is that these don’t have to change. The sales enablement platform spans all these sources, presenting sales materials from all departments as an integrated whole. As well as giving 360° visibility, the sales enablement platform helps producers by providing:

  • Structure: defining the types of resource salespeople need; formats; desired content
  • User feedback: comments from salespeople on how resources can be improved and what new resources are needed
  • User rating: rating and usage statistics allow producers to judge how well they are doing and allow managers to identify the best producers and the most popular types of resource
  • Inventory control: to highlight when resources need updating or are approaching end-of-life, and show where more resources are needed

The result is a continuous improvement cycle that leads towards better quality sales resources which are more useful to salespeople.

Sales enablement in context

The selling process can be viewed as a series of conversations between salesperson and customer, so the job of sales enablement is to make those conversations more interesting and ultimately more rewarding for both parties.

When preparing for a sales call, the salesperson needs sales resources that are appropriate to the specific conversation being planned. Successful companies make sure that high quality sales resources exist, and they make it easy for salespeople to find the right resources for the job at hand. The sales enablement platform solves the second of these problems. It gives sellers access to the right sales resources and information – the fuel that powers the engine of sales. Moreover, it helps improve the quality of sales resources by creating channels for feedback and engagement so that content producers get a better understanding of what’s needed.

Conclusions

The sales enablement platform is a strategic tool that CMOs can use to define the portfolio structure, drive sales behaviour and optimise product marketing resource. It cuts through organisational silos and allows every department to play its part in supporting sales. It fosters business networking amongst salespeople and with other departments that have a major impact on sales, such as Marketing, Operations and Professional Services. It improves the quality of sales resources by facilitating feedback and engagement between users and producers. For all these activities it provides a structure that is uniform, maintainable and scalable.

For the Sales VP, the sales enablement platform facilitates better execution in the everyday work of the salesforce, leading to lower sales costs and a higher win rate. The result is a solid business case for investment, which explains why the sales enablement platform is taking its place alongside CRM and marketing automation as a must-have business tool.

This article was written by Alan Willis of Solutions for Sales. For more information email or call +44 (0)1702 586742.”


semantic web 3.0 BizSphere Knowledge Management methods
On March 23, 2010, the German speaking site http://carta.info published an interview with Prof. Peter Kruse about complexity and the net.

The following quote (my own translation) supports BizSphere’s knowledge management methods and user interface ideas, which aim to reduce the firehose of information (that marketing departments in B2B companies provide for sales people and channel partners plus what web 2.0 / enterprise 2.0 add) to what is relevant for a specific sales situation:

“…on the web, people use language way too undisciplined. Without a guiding context you can never be sure how a word used as a tag was meant. What’s the tag ‘drama’ worth, when one person tags pages from divorce lawyers because he is currently experiencing drama in his marriage and another person tags certain theatre productions in his city?”

In the BizSphere Sales Enablement solution we do allow ‘free tagging’ but in addition we force content, contacts, comments, etc. to be tagged in a defined enterprise language – the context. For example,  the intersection points of the following taxonomies – or tagging dimensions – create a clearly defined space for all relevant sales information to “live in”:

  • products, services and solutions
  • information types
  • regions and countries

Thanks to the tagging dimensions being defined specifically for each enterprise, they can be used as a common enterprise language – even across different mother tongues. The benefits for the seller are simple yet effective: Searching for information supported by a commonly agreed semantic enterprise language delivers the results which are making sense in a certain sales context. This is something a classical search approach can’t deliver.

Enterprise 2.0 with BizSphere

Best regards,
Paul Krajewski


‘IDC Forecasts Tech Sales & Marketing Expenses to Grow Faster Than Revenue in 2010′, press release from March 30, 2010:

“The International Data Corporation (IDC) Executive Advisory Group forecasts that global sales and marketing expenses will to grow at 4.7% and 3.5% respectively in 2010, outpacing the projected 3.2% growth in worldwide IT spending. These expense gains will lead tech executives to accelerate their initiatives to improve the productivity and cost efficiency of sales and marketing.

In addition, executives may continue to seek greater sales and marketing alignment through dramatic organization and reporting changes, as a way to solve the costly misalignments that have continually undermined sales and marketing integration and efficiency. [...]“

We have been addressing sales and marketing misalignments for large b2b enterprises since 2006 and it is great to see that IDC shares our point of view that sales enablement, content audits and improved campaigns are the way to go:

“Within the typical tech marketing organization, IDC sees that executives have numerous opportunities for savings and efficiency. “Sales enablement, content audits, and campaign vs. product go-to-market programs are all great ways to save money, and to make customers happier at the same time,” noted Rich Vancil, vice president of IDC’s Executive Advisory Group.”

For our approach to content audits please see our recent blog post on Content Intelligence. In one of our upcoming blog posts we will show you how easy it is to run campaigns with our Sales Enablement solution. Contact us anytime for a presentation that details how we have saved Fortune 500 companies money, they used to spend on content creation.


 

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BizSphere: RT @tpisello: Recent rise of sales enablement investments driven by #Frugalnomics? - http://ow.ly/2zj8B #b2b 2.0 #b2bsales 2010-09-03T22:58:52+00:00


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