Looking at a typical company org structure, we generally see sales as just one of several functions across the organisation. When it comes to customer engagement and selling, the sales function is the team that has to do it. All of the other functions have their own jobs to do, and many don’t interact directly with the customer.
It is also very common for Sales Leaders and Managers to feel a sigh of relief when they have sales teams under them to go out and do the hard work of selling. Their role is often to steer the sales team from spreadsheets, department meetings and to occasionally go out as a talking figurehead. CEOs and senior leaders often fall into this trap also, preferring to deal with suppliers where they can wield power, rather than talking with customers. "It’s the salespeople that go and see customers, not me” is the common internal dialogue.
Excuses are often made – “I don't sell. I am not good at selling”. “I have done my time selling”. “I will come out to support my guys, but I don't sell any longer”.
And yet, the whole survival and ultimate success of the business is about customer relationships. Producing great outcomes for customers so the customer will want to buy again and again.
Yes, we need sales teams to be on the front line, breaking down barriers and finding opportunities.
And, we also need sales leaders to lead from the front, by example.
Leaders of other areas of the business need to also meet with and understand the customer, gain insights and ideas, to then give feedback to their teams to help provide a seamless customer experience.
The salespeople and sales leaders lead the charge, the rest of the business adds value and helps create the seamless customer experience. Customer engagement and selling in any business is the whole organisation's responsibility, not just the sales teams.
Is your business building a customer-first selling culture? Or is sales seen as a mere function?
To answer this ask yourself the following:
- How many people in the business have relationships with our customers? Is it many or just the sales team?
- Do our leaders talk with customers to gain insights and ideas or are they brilliant at coming up with solutions from the safety of their office?
- Do all of our teams have a direct line of sight to the customer with their roles or is there a disconnection between what they do and how this benefits the customer?
- Is asking the following question “Will this be good for the customer?” one of the first questions we ask as a team when looking at new initiatives, or is the dialogue mostly about how good it will be for our own interests?
If selling something is your primary commercial engine then having a true company wide, customer-first sales culture is a sound strategy.
PS - My new book 'The Art Of Relationship Selling' is near completion. The book details my life's work in selling, and how I overcame many of the obstacles I wish I knew the answer to sooner. You can learn more about the book, and put your name down for one of the first copies in this link here.
Andrew.