- Technology Crossing the Chasm
- How to Identify Growth Opportunities
- How to Price SAAS Product
- Strategy for Startups
- The Shift in the Future of B2B Pricing
AI's CapEx Driven Endgame - A Shareholder Crash, Not an Economic Crisis Ian Harnett (Chief Investment Advisor of Absolute Strategy Rese...
We are all capable of believing things which we know to be untrue, and then, when we are finally proved wrong, impudently twisting the facts so as to show that we were right. Intellectually, it is possible to carry on this process for an indefinite time: the only check on it is that sooner or later a false belief bumps up against solid reality, usually on a battlefield. ~ George Orwell
A great nation is like a great man:When he makes a mistake, he realizes it.Having realized it, he admits it. Having admired it, he corrects it.He considers those who point out his faults as his most benevolent teachers. ~ Lao Tzu
In my previous posts on the Impact of 2 Speed IT on Innovation Culture and Sourcing IT Delivery I have discussed how each aspect requires a different approach to be managed for better success and outcome. In the continuing series, today I would like to reflect upon how the sales process has been disrupted.
Technology has evolved over the years and with each evolution, it becomes a disruptive force in the marketplace. In the current environment, it is not just the technology that is rapidly disrupting the business model across the industries. What is intriguing is that it is the Customer who is disrupting the industry at a rapid pace.
In my view, customers are far more disruptive today than technology-driven disruption, because they are far more sophisticated and demanding, and understand what is happening in the technology space. In the past, they used to rely on advisory firms, vendors, and salespeople to educate them and share necessary information to make a decision. Today, buyers have confidence in their own research, information, and trusted networks. They are not averse to risk or lowering switching costs. Cloud-driven consumption model has made buyers more dynamic, fluid and customer-driven
Traditionally technology or IT sales have been relationship, business and provider-driven, with face-to-face interaction and primarily inside out. From a sales organisation perspective, when interaction with the buyer is initiated from an internal marketing team or sales team, it becomes inside out.
As technology has evolved, the sales engagement process has evolved with it, from face to face, phone-driven, e-commerce chat, to the social platform. Today, sales have become outside in, which demands a different engagement model. Hence, the existing sales model and process are struggling in facilitating the desired outcome. From a sales organisation perspective, when interaction with the sales organisation is initiated by a buyer and dictates the sales process, then it becomes outside in.
Buyers are adopting an outside-in approach for engaging with the sales organisation because the consumption model for technology has enormously changed. Cloud is one of the prime drivers for this change in the consumption model.
Buyers are not engaging linearly with sales anymore. They are simultaneously moving and jumping across exploration, evaluation, engagement, and experience. For example, they go from the exploration to evaluation stage, and if they are not sure after evaluation, they go back to exploration and then jump to engage and experience and finally make a purchase. Because of this dynamic engagement, sales pipeline predictability has been reduced.
Customer-driven sales model with a reduction in pipeline visibility and predictability has put enormous strain on vendors and service providers. It is affecting their quarterly targets and win-loss conversion ratio. The productivity of the salesforce has suffered, in some cases driving a higher attrition rate of the sales force.
So what does it mean for vendor and service providers sales force under this new disruption and consumption model:
Every technology and every buyer is different. The salesforce needs to come out of its comfort zone, take some risks, and dream big to succeed. Albert Einstein said:
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them
first published on linkedin.
Telecoms Cost Out Opportunity - Reference View
“No CEO in history has created as much total shareholder value as Mr Cook. When he took over the company had a market value of $349bn. Today it is worth $2.5trn, more than any other listed firm ever. Under his aegis annual sales surged from $108bn in 2011 to $274bn last year. Net profit more than doubled to $57bn, overtaking Saudi Aramco’s oil-fuelled earnings and turning Apple into the world’s most profitable company. Less widely noticed, during his tenure the “Apple economy”—its annual revenue plus everything other companies make on one of its platforms—has grown sevenfold to more than $1trn.