Sales Training Topics to Drive Results

Sales Training Topics to Drive Results

Sales Training Topics to Drive Results
Written by Mary Flaherty
If you’re responsible for designing or implementing sales training for your organization, you know the effectiveness of training varies greatly.
It might not be implemented properly, land well with participants, relevant to sellers’ daily work, or it might be forgotten completely in the days and weeks following the training. Sales training fails more often than it succeeds.
But, for those who get it right, the payoffs are substantial.
Most sellers (84%) have participated in sales training workshops or programs, according to a global research study by RAIN Group’s Center for Sales Research. But there’s a marked difference between the training most sellers get compared to top performers:
Sales Training Effectiveness
Seventy-one percent of Top-Performing Sellers rate the sales training they’ve received as extremely or very effective, compared to only 45% for the rest.
Meanwhile, the same research also found the average win rate on proposed sales is 11 percentage points higher for those who receive extremely or very effective training compared to those whose training is less than effective.
Average Win Rate by Sales Training Effectiveness
Will your sales team be among those who receive the most effective training and achieve the highest win rates on proposed sales?
One of the critical parts of delivering the best sales training is identifying the appropriate sales training topics to cover. You may think your sellers are already skilled in these areas, but we've found massive gaps in the areas that most influence buyers’ purchase decisions and seller effectiveness .
Below we highlight 26 sales training topics that may be suitable for your team, depending on existing and desired capabilities.
26 Sales Training Topics to Consider for Your Next Training Initiative
Core Consultative Selling Topics
1. Building Rapport
Relationships are the key to selling and a core capability for all sellers. After all, people want to buy from those they know, like, and trust. Sellers can earn that status by building and maintaining relationships with prospects and buyers, and not focusing exclusively on closing deals.
Sellers can learn how to enhance your rapport-building skills by applying the 4 Principles of Rapport :
Empathy: The ability to understand and share another’s feelings.
Authenticity: Be genuine.
Similarity: People like people like them.
Shared Experience: Interact with people in the business process.
Just as important as knowing the actions and behaviors that help build rapport is knowing which will detract from their efforts—for example, interrupting someone who’s speaking, avoiding eye contact, being dismissive of a buyer’s questions, and so on.
Sales training that offers practical rapport-building tips, examples of what not to do, and practice for becoming more likable and connecting with people will help sellers develop this core capability.
2. Leading a Thorough Needs Discovery
Needs discovery is core to any consultative seller’s success, yet only 26% of buyers say sellers lead a thorough needs discovery .
Sellers uncover buyers’ needs so they can determine how they can help. The most successful sellers lead needs discoveries that are both broad and deep—it’s an area where Top Performers are 58% more likely to excel.
As sellers uncover buyer challenges, it’s important not to jump into sharing a solution too soon. Often, a challenge is a symptom of an underlying problem. It’s up to the seller to find out what the real problem is—the root cause.
Using the five whys process of asking questions can help your sellers uncover the root cause of a problem. For example, they might start with one of these:
Why did this happen?
Why will this solve the problem?
Why didn’t we reach our goal?
Why hasn’t X worked?
It may take several “why” questions, with each subsequent question building off the preceding one, to probe deeper and get to the underlying issue.
Sales training on the topic of conducting an effective needs discovery will help sellers craft solutions that are relevant, effective, and deliver true value to the buyer.
3. Communicating with Different Buyer Personas
Regardless of the business or emotional reasons for why people buy (uncovered during needs discovery), buyers will have personal preferences for how they like to buy. These personal styles occur around how buyers prefer to deal with problems, people, and protocol—these are the 6 buyer personas.
The best sellers tailor their selling based on these preferences. This means they’re able to:
Identify which personas their buyers resemble, and
Plan their actions to match their buyers’ personal buying styles and criteria.
The 6 buyer personas and styles are:
Decisive Danielle: Commanding
Analytical Al: Exacting
Innovator Irene: Easygoing
Sales training can help sellers learn to identify their buyers’ preferences, connect with each one, communicate more effectively, and close more deals.
Related: The 6 Buyer Personas (and How to Sell to Them)
4. Overcoming Objections
Objections can be hard to hear. The key is knowing how to listen to them and respond appropriately.
Essentially, there are four types of buyer objections:
Need: The buyer doesn’t yet perceive, or doesn’t yet admit, the need to solve a problem.
Urgency: The buyer doesn’t yet see why the issue is pressing.
Trust: The buyer feels uncertainty about the seller, their solution, their company, or their outcomes.
Money: The buyer communicates that money is going to be an issue.
We recommend sellers use a four-step process for responding to objections:
Listen fully to the objection
Understand the objection completely
Confirm you’ve satisfied the objection
This process works for any objection, but specific responses will vary depending on the objection.
The seller’s response is critical. Some sellers tend to give in right away if a buyer raises any objection. But consultative sales training can help sellers practice responding appropriately to the four types of objections, so they’re better prepared to overcome objections and move sales forward to successful conclusions.
5. Building Trust with Buyers
Buyers are often willing to accept the advice of sellers, but only to the extent that they trust those sellers. This is why it’s so important for sellers to build trust in their relationships with buyers.
There are four elements of trust in selling:
Capability: Buyers tend to be skeptical that sellers are actually capable of doing what they say they can do. This goes beyond just trusting in the product or service. Buyers need to trust in sellers and their capabilities if they’re going to accept ideas, advice, and solutions.
Dependability: Buyers need to know they can rely on sellers. This means sellers must build trust by consistently showing up and honoring their commitments.
Integrity: Buyers have likely been disappointed by other sellers in the past. It’s up to your sellers to demonstrate their integrity. Buyers won’t just assume it.
Intimacy: The best business relationships are close. This means building rapport and creating a history of shared experience with the buyer.
Sales training can equip sellers with strategies to help them build trust with key buyers during the selling process and beyond.
6. Crafting and Delivering a Value Proposition Positioning Statement
It's important for sellers to maximize the buyer’s understanding and perception of value for what they and your company offer. Crafting and delivering a powerful value proposition positioning statement is one way to communicate this to buyers.
Value Proposition Positioning Statement: A compelling, tangible statement of how a company or individual will benefit from buying something specific or buying from your sellers in general.
There are six core components of a value proposition positioning statement. Sellers should use the answers to the questions below to craft a powerful statement.
Target buyers: Who do you serve? Identify your ideal buyer in terms of industry, location, size, type, and so on. This allows your buyer to know if you work with companies and people like them. And knowing your target customer allows you to craft messages that will resonate with them. In addition, the more you can position your specialization for a particular set of buyers, the more you’ll resonate with buyers and differentiate yourself.
Need or business problem: What types of needs and business problems do you address? How do you help? What aspirations do you help achieve? Your answers to these questions help buyers understand how and when they should work with you.
Impact of solving the need: What are the rational and emotional benefits of solving the need? Getting this right is a major factor determining whether you resonate.
Offerings: What’s your product and service approach? How do you run your company, solve problems, and work with buyers? Notice that the company and its offerings are the fourth area on this list. Think buying first and selling second, and frame your offerings within the context of the needs you can help solve.
Proof of concept: How can you demonstrate that your approach has worked to solve similar problems for others? How do you substantiate your claims? How do buyers know that what you say will happen will actually happen? Having case studies and customer success stories at the ready will help you to answer these questions.
Distinction: Why is your offering preferable to other options for solving the need? Do you have something special that’s worthwhile to share? Is there some way to highlight how you’re distinct from others? These questions help the buyer answer why they should go with you and not someone else.
Related: Learn more with Foundations of Consultative Selling Training
7. Delivering Value in the Eyes of the Buyer
The value and value proposition your sellers deliver to buyers is often confused with the related concept of a value proposition positioning statement or elevator pitch.
Unlike a tangible positioning statement, the value proposition is a broader concept—it's composed of the collection of reasons why a buyer buys.
Value: The monetary worth of something; that is, whether and how much someone will pay for something.
Value Proposition: The collection of reasons why a buyer buys; in essence, factors that affect whether they purchase, and from whom.
Why one buyer buys is different than why another buyer might buy. It’s important that your sellers view their value proposition through the eyes of buyers—their specific situation, needs, and wants.
Then, communicate different components of that value in different ways for different situations.
The collection of reasons why people buy typically fall into three major buckets that, in sum, form the three rules of winning value propositions:
Resonate: Buyers have to want and need what your sellers are selling.
Differentiate: Your sellers and company must stand out from the other available options.
Substantiate: Buyers have to believe that your sellers and company can deliver on promises made.
Related: 3 Rules for Building a Strong Value Proposition
8. Qualifying the Sale
Sellers have limited time and resources and must make difficult decisions about which sales opportunities get their full attention and which do not.
Yet many sellers will wrap up a sales conversation by setting the next steps and closing the meeting without clarifying or determining what the buying process will be. They skip qualifying the buyer.
This step is crucial. Without it, how will a seller know which opportunities are worth their time?
Knowing the keys to qualifying a sale will help sellers define their pursuit intensity for various opportunities, know when and how to ask buyers about budget, and when not to ask at all.
We recommend sellers use the FAINT definition of a qualified buyer to help them make this determination:
Funds: Buyers who have the financial capacity or funds to buy from you. They may not have a budget set aside, but they have the financial wherewithal to buy.
Authority: Find the individuals who have the authority to make decisions on how to use funds.
Interest: Generate interest from the buyer to learn what’s possible and how to achieve a new and better reality.
Need: Uncover specific needs that your company can solve.
Timing: Establish purchase intent and a specific timeframe for doing so.
When all conditions of FAINT are met, your sellers have a qualified opportunity.
Related Video: How to Qualify Sales with FAINT
9. Analyzing Stakeholders and Decision Makers
Your sellers' understanding of the decision makers in their sales opportunities and what’s most important to them is essential for sales success.
Corporate buying teams typically include a group of people with influence on the final purchase decision. How they influence the sale depends on their decision roles.
 
 
Depending on the buying organization, one person or multiple people could play these roles.
With sales training, sellers can learn how to identify and sell to the five core decision roles of the buying team, complete a thorough stakeholder analysis, and develop strategies for strengthening relationships with buyers.
Related: 5 Decision Roles in Every Sale
10. Winning More by Telling Stories that Sell
When sellers tell stories that take buyers on an emotional journey, buyers are more compelled to act, to buy, and to buy from you.
Following The Convincing Story Framework helps sellers to communicate powerfully with buyers ( click here for PDF ).
Change Is Undeniable: Demonstrate an understanding of the buyer’s world. Change is going to happen. Will they be prepared?
Success vs. Failure: What are the stakes? Sellers need to establish the benefits of working with them and the consequences if they don’t.
Tantalizing Opportunity: Communicate results and create excitement around the new possibilities. Many sellers know how to tell a return on investment (ROI) story, but few do everything they should to communicate the full power of the impact.
Breakthrough: Sellers must show buyers the new and different path to success they’ll experience when they work with your company.
It’ll Work: Sellers must collaborate with buyers to build their involvement and set the next steps for action. Most sellers recommend a next step, but few build in collaboration. Collaboration builds trust, which is essential.
When sellers learn how to share stories in their sales conversations, they’re able to persuade buyers and bring ideas and solutions alive. This can be a more advanced sales training topic, and it's essential for sellers who are trying to change buyer thinking and selling a new product, service, or solution.
11. Winning Sales Opportunities
Sellers who can build and execute a strategy to win sales opportunities of all sizes—from the everyday to the most important—consistently win more sales.
In fact, the #1 skill compared to all other sales skills studied at Top Performing Sales Organizations is the ability to drive and win sales opportunities.
Taking a strategic approach and using a sales opportunity planner allows sellers to systematically build and implement a plan that focuses on buyers and leads to more wins.
Here are the 6 elements of a sales opportunity plan:
Opportunity Snapshot: Sellers must communicate the big-picture importance and status of the opportunity. This includes practical details such as the demand dynamic, revenue target, target win date, win confidence, and so.
People: Sellers must identify the people on both their team and the buyer’s. For your seller's team, they need to keep track of everyone who'll be involved, even beyond who's on their permanent selling team. Who could join meetings or be a part of a particular opportunity?
Needs: A common complaint sales leaders have is that their sellers don’t complete a thorough needs discovery. One of the merits of sales opportunity planning is that it prompts sellers to be thorough.
Opportunity Goal and Value Case: Which products and services comprise the overall solution? Sellers should list the relevant components of your company's offering. Then, link each component to the value it provides the buyer. These points will eventually form the seller's value messaging.
Competitors, Strengths, Weaknesses, and Vulnerabilities: Sellers should compare your solution with alternatives based on the buyer’s stated decision-making criteria. What does the buyer value that you offer, but your competitors don't?
Advancing the Sale: Next, create the action plan to move the sale forward. In addition to summarizing their overall current position (strengths and vulnerabilities), sellers should include a response strategy for possible objections and roadblocks, mapping the sales process to the buying process, critical comments and questions left to answer, insights and ideas to bring to the buyer, and a plan for next steps to win the sale.
Sales training around this topic, focuses on teaching sellers to use a repeatable process to generate the best ideas and strategies to win sales.
Advanced Consultative Selling Topics
12. Making a Powerful Impact and ROI Case
When a seller can quantify the impact of what they’re selling, they can make a stronger business case to buyers—and close more deals. This is an essential sales training topic and an area that almost all sales teams can improve upon.
After a thorough needs discovery, sellers need to communicate the impact their solution will have on the buyer. Many sellers think they know how to do this, but buyers often don’t agree. In fact, while two-thirds of B2B buyers say a clear ROI case influences their likelihood to buy, those same buyers say only 16% of sellers are effective at doing it .
Building a powerful impact and ROI case requires that sellers collaborate with buyers and possess a strong understanding of the impact of their solutions.
Here are five steps your sellers can use to build a strong impact case. Sellers should:
Map out the problems your company solves and how you solve them. What’s the impact of solving these problems?
Ask specific questions to help them identify what is most important to buyers. Ask financial questions to make the ROI calculation. Ask questions to uncover non-financial and emotional impacts of a solution. Ask what won’t happen if the problem is solved so you can uncover the buyer’s risks of not adopting your solution.
Collaborate with the buyer so they build an ROI case that’s plausible and believable to buyers.
Demonstrate impact visually so the impact is as clear as possible. Visualizing the ROI will help buyers see the difference between the status quo and a new reality.
Develop their case and build their credibility through the use of stories and case studies to encourage buyers not just to move ahead with the proposed solution, but to do so with your seller.
Sales training can help sellers learn to uncover the various factors that determine the impact of their offering. Training also allows sellers to practice building and delivering ROI cases that communicate this impact.
13. Inspiring Buyer Action and Change
The sales process is an exercise in making a case for change and driving action to make that change a reality.
If buyers think they already know everything about their current situation and what they need to do, they’ll simply look for a solution consistent with that view.
But the best sellers know that if they can reframe the buyer’s view of the situation, they’re more likely to change how the buyer approaches challenges . These sellers are more likely to inspire buyers to take action and more likely to win sales.
The best sellers will:
Establish a new reality benchmark
Ask broad, open-ended questions
Help buyers visualize the change
Translate the new reality into financial terms
Make the solution clear
Make the impact case for acting with urgency
Summarize the buyer’s goals
Share the new reality in the form of a story
With sales training on insight selling and advanced consultative selling skills , sellers can learn how to effectively communicate a strong case for change, inspire buyers to act, and differentiate their solutions from others with an exceptionally compelling value case.
Download now. >>
14. Delivering Compelling Proposal Presentations
Before they make a purchase decision, buyers need to know your sellers understand their needs and believe sellers offer a compelling solution. Unfortunately, the way many sellers present their solution is ineffective. In fact, 80% of buyers say sellers lack presentation skills .
The same Convincing Story Framework shared above provides an effective presentation structure and flow sellers can use to make a convincing case and close more deals.
Here’s how your sellers can use it in their presentations:
Change Is Undeniable: Open with a change that’s happened in the buyer’s world. Immediately make the buyer the hero of the story that's about to be told.
Success vs. Failure: Remind the buyer they have a choice. But staying with the status quo doesn’t mean results remain the same, they get worse.
Tantalizing Opportunity: Make a clear ROI case. Describe the impact of the purchase on the buyer in both emotional and rational terms.
Breakthrough: Share the approach that will bridge the gap between the buyer’s current state and their new reality.
It’ll Work: Share not only why this is the right approach, but why you're the right partner and company to help them succeed.
Training on these and other sales presentation skills can provide sellers with the tools and experience they need to deliver proposal presentations that wow buyers and lead to more sales won.
Related: Learn to Deliver Persuasive and Compelling Sales Presentations
15. Mastering the Art of Sales Collaboration
Collaboration is one of the keys to successful selling. Sellers must be equipped with tools and techniques that help them collaborate with buyers when they meet—both in-person and virtually.
Research shows that, on average, 7 out of 10 buyers are open to collaborating . It’s up to sellers to take advantage of this, yet only 34% of buyers say sellers collaborate effectively.
When sellers don’t collaborate—when their communication is heavily weighted one way—they diminish their opportunities to build relationships, discover and solve needs, and inspire buyers with new ideas.
The core of any collaborative discussion is problem-solving. Without strong structured problem-solving abilities, sellers are often at a loss for how, exactly, to lead the discussion.
By learning to apply the 4 Stages of Structured Problem Solving, however, sellers can lead collaborative discussions and help solve important problems with buyers.
 
4 Stages of Structured Problem Solving
Here are the four stages of leading an effective problem-solving discussion:
Download: Name the issue that's being tackled and summarize key points about the current status of the issue.
Exploration: Make sure all relevant assumptions are on the table.
Ideation: Explore ideas and possibilities for actions that could be taken.
Action: Decide what to do to solve the problem.
This simple framework is an important tool sellers can use to help them master collaborative buyer discussions that will deepen buyer engagement, increase perceived value, and win more sales.
16. Influencing and Persuading Buyers
The best sellers are influencers. They drive change and persuade buyers to take action. We’ve identified 11 keys to influence and persuasion that will help sellers resonate most powerfully, differentiate from the competition, build trust, and drive action.
11 Principles of Influence in Sales
Make the Case
To make the case, sellers must resonate with buyers, differentiate from the alternatives, and substantiate their claims.
Resonate:
Once sellers have made the case, it’s time to persuade buyers to take action.
Be indifferent (not desperate)
Employ stepping stones
Encourage a commitment
For sellers, the goal is to take buyers down a path of the seller's choosing and help buyers make a decision—one that favors both parties. Part of being an influencer is taking control of the buying process.
Related: The 11 Principles of Influence in Sales
17. Deepening and Strengthening Buyer Relationships
Developing strong relationships in new or existing accounts is critical to sales and account growth success. Top Performers know this— they're 63% more likely than The Rest to build strong, long-term relationships with buyers.
Using a tool like RAIN Group's Relationship Strength Meter  allows sellers to gauge how essential they are to buyers and identify how to make relationships stronger and more valuable to buyers.
Relationship Strength Meter
Of course, building relationships matters whether sellers are selling in-person or virtually. It’s just a bit different.
When meeting in-person, sellers and account leaders often have chance encounters and conversations that help deepen relationships with key stakeholders in their accounts. In a virtual environment, sellers can’t rely on chance.
However, whether virtual or in-person, sellers can take the lead to create encounters and opportunities, both structured and unstructured, that can lead to relationship development and sales wins.
We call this manufacturing serendipity—sellers put themselves in a position to have a conversation with buyers and referral sources that can develop into meaningful business opportunities.
Sales training can help sellers learn to build strong relationships with intention.
18. Outselling Your Competition
When the sales opportunity is significant, sellers need to go all in to win it.
For the most important opportunities, Big Plays are the strategies sellers can use to strengthen relationships, outsell the competition, and win. Big Plays can help:
Strengthen relationships
Increase value perception
Position against the competition
Big Play strategies are bold, outside the norm, and involve some risk. Think of them as a “partner investment” because buyers tend to view them as an investment in a long-term relationship.
Big Play: A bold, atypical action a seller can take to inspire buyer action and set themselves apart from the competition.
Examples include activities such as conducting an all-expenses-paid executive retreat, facilitating a value discovery or strategy session, developing a beta site for a new offering, and so on.
Sales training can help sellers practice brainstorming ideas for high return Big Plays, as well as learn how to evaluate strategies based on criteria including:
Effort: How much effort will it take to execute?
Cost: How much investment will it require?
Acceptance probability: What’s the probability the buyer will accept it?
Timing: How long will it take to execute?
Payoff amount: What’s the possible payoff in terms of revenue, margin, loyalty, or whatever the return-on-investment possibility might be?
Payoff likelihood: What are the chances it'll generate the desired result once implemented?
Opportunity cost: What are the chances that other Big Plays at this or another company are more attractive than this one?
Other Selling Capabilities: Account Management , Negotiating , Productivity, Prospecting , Sales Coaching , Virtual Selling
19. Growing Strategic and Key Accounts
To be successful with strategic and key account management success, sellers need a process that's systematic, action-oriented, and designed to produce specific outputs.
In our Top Performance in Strategic Account Management research , we found that Top Performers are 80% more likely to have a more mature process for strategic account management. They also have stronger processes to build account plans, discover untapped value, hold teams accountable, and deliver training in strategic account management skills. This results in more sales opportunities and revenue growth.
A flexible five-stage account management process covers the key areas and can be calibrated up or down depending on need.
Key Account Management Process
Strategy: Sellers must know what they're planning to do, with whom, and why
Research: Begin work on the account plan, form the core account team, and gather data to inform the strategy
Action Plan: With gathered information, develop a compelling case that will guide sellers to implementation
Execution: This is where opportunities are created, expanded, and captured; relationships are deepened; and competitors neutralized
Review: Analyze KPIs and make adjustments to the action plan
Training in strategic and key account management that covers this process, as well as other critical areas, will give your team the knowledge, skills, tools, and action plan they need to grow key accounts.
Related: What Is Key Account Management?
20. Managing the Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement
Being willing to walk away from a sales negotiation, and knowing when you should walk, gives you something very powerful in a negotiation: control.
It's imperative that your sellers have the skills to identify this point and the ability to walk away if needed.
Gaining a sense of control is critical for sellers’ ability to negotiate a favorable outcome. In fact, the best sales negotiators are 12.5x more likely to be very satisfied with the outcome of their negotiations and 3.1x more likely to achieve target pricing.
And research shows that being willing to walk is the #1 strategy separating Top-Performing Sales Negotiators from The Rest.
Sellers know when to walk away when they know their best alternative to a negotiated agreement (BATNA) .
The three-step process to figure out a BATNA is:
Identify alternatives. Brainstorm possible alternatives if the negotiation doesn't result in an agreement. The alternative for a seller might be pursuing a different opportunity, working on prospecting outreach, or expanding current accounts. They need to know what will help them reach their goals in the long-term.
Select the best alternative. After brainstorming, sellers should identify which alternative best meets their high-priority objectives.
Improve the BATNA, if possible. Sellers should research the alternative and see whether there’s anything they can do to strengthen it. For example, if they walk away from one sale and think they can close two other opportunities for a certain dollar amount, is it possible they could close three sales instead? Or increase the average size of the sale?
Sellers can't stop here, though: they must consider the buyer’s BATNA. They should make an educated guess as to what the buyer's alternative might be based on their knowledge of the situation. Viewing it from the buyer’s perspective can increase the seller's sense of control and confidence in the negotiation.
Next, sellers need to analyze their BATNA and the buyer’s. If the value of the agreement is greater than the value of no agreement for both parties, the seller will move forward. If the value of no agreement is greater for either party, they won’t.
When Should Sellers Walk?
Value of agreement > Value of no agreement to each party
Walk
Value of no agreement > Value of agreement for either party
Sales negotiation training can help sellers determine their best alternative to a negotiated agreement, as well as that of the other party, gain confidence in their negotiating skills, and get the best outcomes from their negotiations.
21. Leading the Sales Negotiation Process
Sellers should take the lead in negotiations, but most don't according to buyers. Our sales negotiation research found that 66% of sellers let buyers take control. Sellers are then left playing defense and catch up.
The best sales negotiators don’t fall into that trap: they’re 1.7x more likely to be prepared for the negotiation.
Sellers can use a process like the four steps below so they can set the agenda and guide their discussions to the best possible outcomes in sales negotiations.
Prepare: Nearly everything in a negotiation can be anticipated. Sellers should come to the table prepared with a full stable of ideas and possibilities. But they need to step into the shoes of their buyers and think buying first, selling second. 
Engage: This is where sellers take the lead. Unless there’s a reason for the other party to go first, sellers should kick off a negotiation meeting with the process and agenda. When sellers lead, they have control of the negotiation.
Facilitate: This is where sellers open the door as much as possible to collaborate with the buyer with actions that include:
Clarifying objectives
Learn More: Mastering Sales Negotiations Toolkit
22. Dealing with Common Buyer Negotiation Tactics
Even sellers with a win-win mindset and approach to negotiations need to know how to maneuver the situation when buyers throw curveballs. Sellers need the right negotiation skills to bolster their success.
This means knowing the common negotiation tactics buyers use to throw sellers off their game and understanding how to respond when they encounter any of these tactics.
Here are just six of the common sales negotiation tactics buyers use:
Going, Going, Gone: This is a form of pressure where the buyer mentions they’re considering your competition. Essentially, they're saying, "If you don't accept the agreement, somebody else will."
Red Herring: This is when the buyer tries to distract sellers by introducing an unimportant issue to negotiate. After they offer a concession on that item, they ask sellers for a concession on something they really care about, which is a big deal for sellers to change or give.
Pencil Sharpening: “You’re going to have to do better than this.” This is a common pushback strategy to intimidate sellers into dropping the price, or to corner sellers early in the process to agree to eventual price negotiations.
Good Cop, Bad Cop: Introducing a "bad cop" late in discussions is a buyer's way of trying to lower the price, change the agreement, or reopen closed issues.
Split the Difference: The seller offers a price. The buyer suggests a lower price, then says, "Okay, let’s meet in the middle." By suggesting the seller meets in the middle, buyers make it seem like it’s a win-win, even if meeting in the middle isn't fair to both parties.
One Last Thing: This happens when the buyer is trying to catch you at your most vulnerable—right before the deal is signed. They want to take advantage of your eagerness to close the deal to squeeze out final concessions.
Sales negotiation training can help sellers recognize and effectively respond to buyer objections—including the objections above and many others—in ways that allow sellers to reach the best deals possible for them and their buyers.
Related: 16 Negotiation Tactics Buyers Use (and How to Respond)
23. Maximizing Motivation and Productivity
Transforming behaviors and habits is key to maximizing sales motivation and productivity. The most successful sellers are motivated, proactive, focused, and goal-oriented.
Indeed, research shows Top Performers are significantly more likely to be highly rated across all nine major productivity areas. They get the most done and achieve the best results in less time.
Prioritizing work effectively leads to making the most of energy and time, and improves action and accountability. By ignoring distractions and keeping focus, sellers and sales managers can work effectively and efficiently.
Using the 9 Habits of Extreme Productivity, sellers and sales managers can adopt habits and hacks that allow them to get more done in the time they have and achieve exceptional increases in productivity and sales results.
Productivity training will help sellers and sales managers maximize motivation for themselves and their teams so they can achieve maximum results.
Download: Unlocking the Productivity Code
24. Building Pipeline with Sales Prospecting
The goal of sales prospecting is to create interest and then convert that interest into a sales meeting.
Most sellers know this is a critical first stage in the sales process, but too often they don’t know what steps to take or the best approach to build pipeline. Those that do— the best sales prospectors —set 2.7x more meetings, achieve their sales goals, and have higher win rates.
Here are four steps sellers can take to get started with sales prospecting:
Build a target list: Sellers should create a list of specific names and companies with which they want to generate meetings. Their list should include high-value targets, decision makers, existing buyers and accounts, past buyers, past opportunities, and their network.
Research prospects: This ensures leads are a good fit for your company's offerings. The information sellers gather during this step allows them to build rapport, as well as qualify leads.
Craft the offer: Sellers must personalize their approach and make the initial offer as valuable as possible for potential buyers. While the ultimate offer is the solution that will be delivered, the offers sellers make to prospects before they buy help generate conversations and meetings.
Create the prospecting campaign: Outreach isn’t a one-time action—it’s an attraction campaign of multiple touches over time that include valuable offers designed to generate meetings with potential buyers. A coordinated and customized sequence of outreach will get the best results.
Sales prospecting training equips sellers with the tools, techniques, and repeatable approaches that will help them consistently build strong pipelines.
Related: Sales Prospecting: Tips, Techniques, and Strategies
25. Becoming a Top-Performing Sales Coach
A key ingredient to building a top-performing sales team is having a strong sales coaching program and sales coaches.
In our research on Top-Performing Sales Organizations we found the sales organizations that get the best results prioritize and maximize the time managers spend on sales coaching, yet 66% of companies don’t believe their sales managers have the skills needed to manage and coach sellers .
Too often, organizations don’t provide the necessary support to ensure their managers are able to deliver effective sales coaching.
The Top-Performing Sales ManagerSM
In addition to their management-related roles, sales managers need to be skilled at playing five sales coaching-related roles:
Motivation: Getting maximum effort and proactivity from their team daily.
Focus and Action Planning: Helping sellers determine the right areas on which to spend their time and effort and help them avoid distractions.
Execution and Productivity: Helping sellers achieve maximum success and the best outcomes during the time they spend working.
Advising and Facilitating: Helping sellers fill their pipelines, win major sales, grow accounts, negotiate the best agreements, define and achieve their goals, and so on.
Development: Helping sellers, over the course of months and quarters, become better, more skilled, more capable sellers.
With sales coach training , managers can become highly effective sales coaches who help their teams build effective action plans, become highly focused, and execute at the highest level.
Download: How to Build a Sales Coaching Plan
26. Managing Virtual Sales Meetings
Virtual meetings have become commonplace, making it more important than ever for sellers to be able to manage virtual sales meetings effectively.
Still, sellers face numerous challenges when selling virtually. The #1 virtual selling challenge cited by 91% of sellers surveyed  is gaining a buyer’s attention and keeping the buyer engagement virtually. Other virtual selling challenges include:
Virtual Selling Challenges According to Sellers
Buyers, however, expect the sellers they’re meeting with virtually have already mastered the virtual meeting environment. Sellers who haven’t will find themselves at a major disadvantage, especially when their competitors are capable here.
In fact, Top-Performing Sellers are significantly more likely to excel in every virtual selling skill we studied in recent sales skills research. Top Performers are more likely than The Rest to excel at:
Selling with video (63% more likely)
Collaborating with buyers and encouraging discussion (49% more likely)
Presenting themselves professionally during virtual meetings (46% more likely)
Using technology effectively in virtual meetings (31% more likely)
Building rapport virtually (29% more likely)
Leading masterful virtual conversations and presentations (28% more likely)
Sellers who get virtual selling training to learn how to create buyer engagement, as well as to learn how to lead masterful, thorough, and effective virtual sales conversations, will be positioned to compete in today’s selling environment.
How to Deliver Sales Training Topics to Your Team
World-class sales organizations create successful sales training by delivering a training curriculum that engages sellers and drives skill development. Identifying the sales training topics that fit your team’s needs is just one piece of the process.
But the topics covered in this article are just the tip of the iceberg. RAIN Group partners with organizations globally to deliver in-person and virtual sales training that drives results and unleashes sales potential. Contact us to start building your custom sales training curriculum. >>
To learn more about how to deliver an effective sales training program in your organization, read these additional resources:

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