Sales enablement is by no means a new concept. In fact, it’s now common practice among more agile, progressive organisations. Despite this, it can seem overwhelming for businesses that have yet to adopt it, but its revenue potential is immense—especially for sales-led businesses that have traditionally depended on sales for growth.
Sales enablement is about providing relevant content, ongoing training, and sophisticated tools to help sales teams focus on the most appropriate leads and be in a better position to close deals reliably. It sounds simple, but implementing an effective sales enablement practice takes a concerted, coordinated effort and an ingrained sense of customer orientation.
“Sales enablement is a strategic, ongoing process that equips all client-facing employees with the ability to consistently and systematically have a valuable conversation with the right set of customer stakeholders at each stage of the customer’s problem-solving life cycle.” - Forrester
While technology, psychology, and integrations continue pushing the boundaries of what effective sales enablement looks like, there are five simple best practices that will help you implement a sales enablement strategy that will keep teams ahead of the curve and in a position to provide ongoing value to your clients.
Sales enablement involves a joined-up partnership between various departments focused entirely around the customer. Each department (research, marketing, sales and customer service) can bring unique insights and valuable intelligence to support the creation of assets and messages designed to delight the customer.
Departments need to think and act holistically and regularly consider what they know/observe that would help the sales team understand, engage and close a sale, or up-grade or cross-sell an existing account reliably.
Ways to foster a culture of cross-functional collaboration include:
79% of sales professionals consider sales content crucial for closing deals, making it essential that relevant content that supports sales initiatives is readily available right when sales need it.
A good sales enablement strategy ensures that all required content is centrally stored in a repository that users can easily access, download, or create links from. This repository is an integrated, easy-to-use Content Management System (CMS).
With a good CMS, branding, messaging, and themes can be consistently carried through proposals, bid documents, fact sheets, white papers, case studies, videos, and more from any member of any team.
Integrating all this with your CRM system also creates efficiencies and saves time. In this way, a sales or customer service representative can instantly access all sales support, meetings, notes, and content performance analytics they need to deliver the right messages to the right potential customer at the right time.
HubSpot's Content Marketing Software, for example, allows you to do this seamlessly.
When launching a strategic sales campaign, it's best practice to break up deployment into three simple phases with manageable steps.
Setting clear and realistic sales enablement goals is crucial for aligning your efforts with tangible business outcomes. Without well-defined objectives, sales enablement initiatives can quickly lose focus, leading to wasted resources and missed opportunities. By linking your sales enablement programmes directly to measurable sales results, you justify the investment and ensure that your efforts are strategically targeted and budgeted appropriately.
By being honest and precise about your sales enablement goals, you can identify where your efforts are making the most impact and where adjustments are needed. Even a small improvement in sales funnel conversion rates can lead to significant gains in revenue and profitability. This optimises resources and builds confidence within the organisation that the sales enablement strategy is yielding results.
To maximise the impact of your sales enablement programme, attention should be focused on several key areas:
As you implement and refine your sales enablement goals, look for these sales performance indicators that could suggest you are on the right track:
A sale isn’t made until a conversation happens. So, make it easier for customers and prospects to converse with you when, where, and how they choose. Chatbots and ‘live chat’ are now commonplace. You’ve probably seen pop-ups on websites. They’re all about being helpful, non-invasive and contextually relevant.
Chatbots and live chat are relatively easy to set up, control, and manage and encourage users to engage with your brand, essentially turning conversations into leads. One source suggests that chatbots lead to as much as a 67% increase in sales.
Whilst they will never replace real people talking, they are great at fostering genuine conversations and engagement and can also be personalised for added relevance and impact.
Sales enablement is set to become increasingly common practice in growth-orientated organisations, but implementing it doesn't need to be overwhelming. By fostering a culture of cross-functional collaboration amongst teams, using the right tools, keeping processes simple, and setting realistic, achievable goals, you can accelerate your sales strategy and yield greater sales success.
Our Sales Enablement eBook can help you understand why sales enablement is now widely used, how to recognise where your organisation sits in levels of sales process maturity, seven top trigger events that create company demand for sales enablement, key questions and answers, benefits for marketing teams, benefits for sales team leaders, top twenty sales enablement tools…and more.
What are you waiting for?
Download the ebook or book a call-back to begin a conversation about how sales enablement can be made to work for your organisation.