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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



My last post on the question where Sales Enablement lives got a comment requesting further clarification of the following graphic:

matrixed organizations

The comment was asking where to find sales people in the graphic and what the role of Sales Playbooks is. I have to admit that it is difficult to read, but the sales people are actually represented within the green area as indicated by the words Sales Force. (This is not a reference to salesforceDOTcom.)

This speaks to the point that sales people and the legacy sales portals, that are supposed to enable them, sit in between a highly matrixed organization on the one side and just as complex an organization on the client’s side. These legacy sales portals are one-dimensional (they fail to show content & contacts in the context of the highly matrixed organization and in context to what pain point on the client side is addressed) and there are often several portals as there are so many silos of information.

Each Sales Playbook is a great tool for a small subset of the sales force (as shown in the graphic), but comes out of one of the silos, fed by only some of the Product/Portfolio Marketing teams or one regional team. When all content (e.g. customer references from different regions or specific value propositions per industry vertical…) lives in a multi-dimensional business context like it is made possible in BizSphere (which was designed to cut across all silos), a completely customized Sales Playbook for any given sales situation can be auto-generated.

In contrast to legacy sales portals, BizSphere takes at least three dimensions into account. These could be:

  • Where is the seller going to a meeting? (Sales regions, countries…)
  • What does the seller want to sell (Portfolio of products, services and solutions.)
  • What does the seller need in order to be successful in the meeting? (Content types like white paper, case study, ROI-Calculator, contact details of a subject matter expert, etc…)

You might also want to define a taxonomy of customer pain points and map your products against those or add other dimensions that your company thinks in. BizSphere then lets you filter down by media type, language of the content, and/or the sales step you are in with the opportunity you are working.

The dimensions of sales enablement
  • Imagine the 1st orange arrow in the graphic above to be a customer reference from a Canadian client for a specific security solution.
  • Imagine the 2nd orange arrow to be the contact details of the sales engineer in South Africa who is the expert for a given service.
  • The 3rd orange arrow could be an ROI-calculator for the same service but it is really specific to the mining industry and therefore relevant in Western Australia.
    Can you already see how here the regional teams can have as much of say in which content is relevant for specific sales situations as the product marketing team?

    Can you get lost in BizSphere? No way, because nothing is easier than answering: What do I want to sell, where do I want to sell it and what would help me to close the deal? Once you set your context in these three dimensions you will have filtered down from thousands of marketing assets / pieces of collateral to only the relevant ones.


    On May 26, 2010, Brian Lambert from Forrester Research wrote the blog post “What Changes are the Sales Team Facing – Right Now?”.

    I would like to thank Brian, for bringing up the “change” subject. From my experience, being able to manage and moderate change is crucial for the success of any sales enablement initiative.

    Let me give you one example from my time at Nortel. Back in 2006, the company had decided to become a services and solutions company – like many other tech firms before. Now, on the one hand we were facing the challenge of defining a solutions portfolio connected to the already existing products, on the other hand thousands of box selling sales people needed to educated to become solution sellers.

    One thing that helped us a lot was that we visualized the change for sellers. Executives often wonder, why people are not instantly getting how new structures are supposed to be working – what they forget is how long it actually took to agree on these new structures in the first place. So naturally, adapting to change needs time, but this can be supported, if the change of structures is not only communicated to but visualized for people leveraging inutive graphical navigation elements in the sales portal for example. During the Services and Solutions transformation this approach did help Nortel a great deal.

    So, a bucket you might want to add to the change discussion is the bucket of visualization of change. Making changing structures, changing selling context tangible makes change efforts like new solutions launches more likekly to be successful.

    Another interesting bucket might be the rapidly changing web and the impact on sellers and buyers – so called Sales 2.0. Only a few years back no seller would have thought that monitoring prospects on LinkedIn and Twitter for example will become key to sales success. Therefore, launching effective Social CRM tools for sellers aligned with the existing sales process will become an important change initiative for sales organizations.


    On September 7, 2010, Eric Nitschke (Launch International) asked the following questions on the LinkedIn Group Sales Enablement Content. Please see my response below.

    “Sales Enablement: Where does it live?
    Several clients have asked us for best practices in sales enablement – specifically who owns it?

    I’d support our marketing colleagues who are trying to align selling messages with product positioning and messaging documents. Others on the training side would say that their training materials are the baseline for sales enablement. Finally, the “sales enablement automation” crowd would claim ownership of the process and fulfillment of sales enablement materials on their web-based or internally-hosted portals.

    So I ask YOU – learned Sales Enablement Content Group members: Where does Sales Enablement live?”

    Coming from the point of view of someone providing web-based or internally-hosted portals for Sales Enablement, I would not claim ownership. All stakeholders like product marketing, training, CI/MI, the teams for pricing and ROI / business case calculations, the customer reference database, corporate branding, MarComs, etc… should be invited… invited to house their content and – just as important – their contact details in that one joint portal.

    A portal… not for the sake of the technology or to have yet another portal… but… a portal to let all these stakeholders see which of their content works and which doesn’t (also which content is missing and which gets insightful comments as a feedback loop from the field or the channel back to corporate).

    When there is this one interface that cuts across all team sites and the silos the many regional or functional groups might have built with SharePoint or LiveLink or any of these solutions, your sales people and channel partners can – for the first time – see what is available for the given sales situation they are in. None of the stakeholders “owns” this more than the others and the portal just helps to filter by sales step, region, industry vertical, content type, etc… to make visible whether the sale is being enabled or specific content and contacts are missing.

    matrixed organizations
    The single biggest complaint about Sales Enablement, I hear from sales people is missing content… content that is more specific than the generic pitch. A portal, that comes along with all stakeholders agreeing on content governance, a life-cycle duration for the content and responsibilities to respond to feedback & requests, will first of all make these gaps painfully visible and then guide the content planning to invest marketing’s dollars as effective as possible.
    To come back to your question, in some organizations it might be the CMO and in others the sales leader or portfolio manager – who is the executive sponsor, who aligns all the stakeholders to feed the new portal and shut down the old ones.

    Just a few days ago Joe Galvin from Sirius Decisions wrote about how important Social Media – as an approach for better internal collaboration – is as part of a Sales Enablement strategy. I think he is absolutely right. What used to be the informal coffee corner chat before nowadays is mimicked in Social Media platforms. Over time, people will learn that even within an enterprise the sharing of information is beneficial for everyone in the end. Yes, there may be a lot of sceptics around, especially in sales teams, but with the right programs and incentives offered, they will make the jump to the new social collaboration paradigm.

    However, the flip side of extensive social collaboration might be the appearance of new information silos as well as growing information overload. Without the social collaboration being moderated to a certain extend, it might lose some of its potential impact on the overall performance of the sales teams. Aaron Roe Fulkerson discussed this in a recent blog post: “The importance of context: why Enterprise 2.0 still fails to deliver value”.

    semantic web 3.0 BizSphere Knowledge Management methods

    A company might use a lot of different types of social collaboration platforms – the challenges is: How can they be orchestrated in a way, that actual knowledge exchange is taking place across existing team and functional structures? And how can the content generated be aligned to some generally agreed upon enterprise structures? What companies, that are serious about implementing a Social Media strategy for sales, should think about, is to create and maintain an enterprise context. Then collaboration can take place within this context and will add greater value to a broader audience. Ideally, the enterprise context should constantly evolve based on feedback gathered during the ongoing social collaboration (for example as shown below).

    Enterprise 2.0 with BizSphere

    Best regards,
    Matthias Roebel


    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. [...]”

    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. [...]

    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”!


     

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    BizSphere: Bizsphere AG heute in Köln auf der cologne IT summit_ http://t.co/EDfepARu 2011-11-14T10:42:19+00:00


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