Sale                                            How soon will it improve
                                                                   your
          s 2.0
                                                                     business?




       By Pelin Wood Thorogood
                                       and Gerhard Gschwandtner

       Over the past decade, we’ve witnessed three major trends that
       have profoundly transformed the way sales organizations
       engage with prospects throughout the sales cycle.
          • Customer relationship management (CRM) has emerged as
       a powerful business trend, enabling the tracking of massive
       amounts of transactional data on prospect and customer activ-
       ity for sales and account management. For many organizations
       however, CRM hasn’t delivered on its promise of significant sales
       productivity gains. The realization that it is primarily a sales man-
       agement tool and not a sales tool has led to limited adoption and
       inconsistent usage by salespeople.
          • Internet technology has evolved to enable a new way of interacting,
       collaborating, and information sharing, aka Web 2.0. With the Internet as
       the new business platform, now all stakeholders – prospects, customers,
       salespeople, and marketers – can connect, learn, plan, analyze, engage, collab-
       orate, and conduct business in ways that were not even imaginable a few years ago.
          • Rich data explosion on the Internet – from traditional information sources, social
       networks, and other user-generated content – offers salespeople and prospects the oppor-
       tunity to gain unprecedented insights vital to buying and selling. The Internet accelerates and
       deepens access to companies, people, and products.
          The merging of these trends and technologies has transformed selling from a personal art into an
       interactive science. It has forever changed the process of how people buy and the way companies sell.



58   NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2008 SELLING POWER                                                                      GET TY IMAGES
2.0
What is Sales 2.0?
During the last few months, Selling Power has interviewed dozens of
industry experts in an effort to create a universal definition of what
Sales 2.0 means and what it doesn’t. After extensive debates, the
experts agreed on the following: “Sales 2.0 brings together cus-
tomer-focused methodologies and productivity-enhancing tech-
nologies that transform selling from an art to a science. Sales 2.0
relies on a repeatable, collaborative, and customer-enabled process
that runs through the sales and marketing organization, resulting in
improved productivity, predictable ROI, and superior performance.”
   Sales 2.0 is transforming how companies sell, market, and run
their sales organizations. It arms salespeople with better tools
and improved processes so they can connect with the best
prospects, pursue richer opportunities, collaborate more effi-
ciently with customers and members of their team, and close
more sales faster. Sales 2.0 helps sales managers run a far more
productive and predictive sales organization that achieves supe-
rior results based on optimized resources that create a highly
motivated and highly professional sales team.
   Sales 2.0 empowers sales and marketing to work synergistical-
ly, like a beehive. The sole purpose of the worker bees and the
drones is to continually execute a set of compatible processes
that have only one purpose: to keep the queen bee happy. If the
queen is not happy, the future of the hive is in jeopardy. Likewise,
if the processes and technologies of a sales and marketing orga-
nization are not optimized and synchronized in a way that keeps
the customers happy, then the company is in trouble.

How is Sales 2.0 different from CRM?
CRM was created based on the idea of collecting and harvesting
data to create a 360-degree view of the customer, but many CRM
initiatives fail because of low user adoption, significant amounts of
inaccurate data, and a poor match between processes and tech-
nology. In essence, CRM is a top-down tool that works for man-
agers who can get their salespeople to play the role of a data entry
clerk in addition to selling and managing customer relationships.
Sales 2.0 is about equality, empowerment, collaboration, and speed.
   Sales 2.0 creates an ecosystem that sustains all stakeholders,
the customer, the company, the salesperson, the sales manager,
and the marketing manager. All members of the ecosystem are
equal and interconnected partners. Sales 2.0 levels the playing
field by turning sales into a science, salespeople into profession-
als, and managers into more rational and more motivated lead-
ers. What’s best is that Sales 2.0 dramatically lowers the cost,
reduces the risk of failure, and increases the chances of suc-            nology to respond to the constant shifts in the marketplace with
cessful deployment with positive short-term and long-term ROI.            agility, precision, and lightening speed.
Many of the end users of Sales 2.0 solutions also note that Sales            Examples: ConnectAndSell empowers salespeople to speak with
2.0 brings more fun back to selling.                                      7 to 10 prospects per hour instead of 10 prospects per day. Inside-
                                                                          View gives salespeople clear insights into their prospect’s busi-
The five basic tenets of Sales 2.0                                        ness, as well as access to relevant social information about the
As we watch the world of selling organize itself around the customer,     prospect. Jigsaw allows salespeople to quickly target prospect com-
and as we monitor the evolution of well over 1,000 technology             panies, bypass gatekeepers, and go straight to the decision makers.
solutions in that space, we’ve noted five distinct characteristics that
come up consistently in conversations around Sales 2.0:                   2. Sales 2.0 is about collaboration.
                                                                          Selling is changing from collecting data to connecting ideas.
1. Sales 2.0 is about acceleration.                                       While CRM tends to reduce salespeople to data collectors, Sales
Selling is moving from human speed to Internet speed. Salespeo-           2.0 turns salespeople into idea connectors. The Internet has
ple spend less time on every phase of the sales call, from finding        opened an infinite number of ways for people to collaborate,
prospects to closing the sale. Since every phase of the sales funnel      share ideas, and cocreate a better world. Such innovations as
is optimized, salespeople will pursue better opportunities, waste         Wikipedia, online conferencing, i-reports, user ratings, blogs,
less time chasing unprofitable business, accelerate the creation of       Twitter, and social networking have elevated the potential for
better solutions for their customers, and move deals faster from the      human collaboration to a higher level. Sales 2.0 technologies help
discovery phase to the close. Sales managers can rely on better tech-     salespeople collaborate more and travel less. And sales managers

60   NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2008 SELLING POWER                                                                                          GET TY IMAGES
3. Sales 2.0 is about professionalization.
                                                                     In a Sales 2.0 world, every lead gets linked to its source, every
                                                                     marketing campaign turns into a quest for improved ROI, every
                                                                     step of the sales process is measured, every sales initiative is
                                                                     analyzed, and every method is tested. Selling is no longer the
                                                                     place for amateurs who are afraid of analytics and skeptical of Six
                                                                     Sigma quality initiatives. While amateurs may score an occa-
                                                                     sional win, professionals deliver predictable results. With the
                                                                     help of Sales 2.0 tools, they are able to replicate their best prac-
                                                                     tices and share them across the organization. Sales 2.0 creates a
                                                                     new breed of professionals that deliver predictability.
                                                                        Examples: A Santcorp.com solution, called ProposalMaster,
                                                                     helps salespeople create proposals and RFPs in far less time
                                                                     while dramatically increasing win rates. Landslide.com helps
                                                                     sales organizations build a world-class sales process that is adopt-
                                                                     ed uniformly by all members of the sales team.

                                                                     4. Sales 2.0 is about accountability.
                                                                     Selling is shifting from a freewheeling organization to a culture of
                                                                     accountability. Whether it is the optimization of sales pipelines, the
                                                                     resizing of a territory, or performance monitoring to reward the
                                                                     right sales behavior at the right time, Sales 2.0 solutions increase
                                                                     accountability for all stakeholders while reducing costs. Armed
                                                                     with precise data, marketing managers can track the effectiveness
                                                                     of each campaign; sales managers will no longer act on hunches,
                                                                     but manage by metrics and hold their salespeople’s feet to the fire.
                                                                        Examples: Lucidera.com helps sales managers quickly analyze
                                                                     the effectiveness of their sales organization. Easy-to-use analytics
                                                                     helps them understand what they need to do to improve their
                                                                     sales performance without increasing sales costs. Xactly-
                                                                     Corp.com has created an on-demand sales compensation solu-
                                                                     tion that includes an online incentive program. The moment
                                                                     salespeople reach a certain performance level, they can instant-
                                                                     ly choose from an exciting selection of motivating rewards.

                                                                     5. Sales 2.0 is about alignment.
                                                                     Selling and marketing are joining their separate silos into a
                                                                     seamless and completely aligned organization. The core charac-
                                                                     ter of the Sales 2.0 world is that it relies on sales and marketing
                                                                     alignment, with shared goals and new responsibilities through-
                                                                     out the sales cycle, from lead generation and qualification all
                                                                     the way to closed deals. In some companies, marketing is held
                                                                     accountable (and rewarded) for transactional business and sales
                                                                     for consultative business. New sales technologies allow sales-
Now all stakeholders – prospects,                                    people to launch their own marketing campaigns, read a
                                                                     prospect’s “digital body language,” and instantly see which
customers, salespeople and marketers                                 prospect opened their emails. New customer engagement tech-
                                                                     nologies help customers recognize and define their own prob-
– can connect, learn, plan, analyze,                                 lems and discover how to remove the barriers to the sale.
                                                                        Example: Genius.com allows marketing to send out personal-
engage, collaborate, and conduct                                     ized emails on behalf of sales and instantly alerts reps of prospect
                                                                     activity. Sales can “TiVO” the entire experience and contact those
business in ways that were not even                                  who have visited a Web page.
                                                                        The world of Sales 2.0 is a rapidly expanding universe that
imaginable a few years ago.                                          institutionalizes a collaborative and repeatable sales and mar-
                                                                     keting process, enabling the adoption of best practices across the
can harness the collective intelligence of the sales organization.   entire company. The result: dramatic improvements in perfor-
  Examples: GoToMeeting allows salespeople to share their desk-      mance. Today’s smarter and far better informed prospects
top over the Internet, deliver remote presentations, and collabo-    demand more of our companies. Sales 2.0 is a game-changing
rate with remote experts in real time. SAVO allows the entire        approach that will result in higher-volume sales, higher-value
sales organization to share its best practices online. Salespeople   sales, and higher-velocity sales with significant improvements in
can quickly download presentation material, rank its effective-      overall profitability. The big question is not why should I move up
ness, and get instant access to expert advice.                       to Sales 2.0, but why not now? •

                                                                                          SELLING POWER NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2008         61

More Related Content

PDF
Social Media Drives Sales - Customer 2.0
PPT
How to help your Sales with social media to engage with your customers? – Lau...
PDF
InsideView Open Event Presentation
PPTX
Getting a Competitive Advantage through Social Selling | #scon11 @sugarcon
PPTX
Smart Sales Intelligence: Turning Insights into Action
PPT
5 Must-Haves For Boosting Sales With Social Media
PPTX
AA-ISP: Decdicated to Winning the Sales Game? (Will Spendlove - VP Product Ma...
PPTX
5 Steps to Better Lead Management - Webinar 4/17/14
Social Media Drives Sales - Customer 2.0
How to help your Sales with social media to engage with your customers? – Lau...
InsideView Open Event Presentation
Getting a Competitive Advantage through Social Selling | #scon11 @sugarcon
Smart Sales Intelligence: Turning Insights into Action
5 Must-Haves For Boosting Sales With Social Media
AA-ISP: Decdicated to Winning the Sales Game? (Will Spendlove - VP Product Ma...
5 Steps to Better Lead Management - Webinar 4/17/14

What's hot (20)

PDF
The Future Of Sales
PDF
How to target right prospects on linkedin
PDF
Data-driven Marketing and Sales 2016 Predictions - Lattice Engines
PDF
Data-Driven Marketing And Sales Predictions 2015 - Lattice Engines
PDF
Sales Intelligence - Bringing your CRM Data to Life
PDF
You Have a Predictive Lead Score. Now What? | Best Practices from Lattice
PDF
Content based conversation sales for life article
PPTX
Dreamforce 14 - Social Selling - InsideView
PDF
7 trends that will disrupt your business in 2017
PDF
Marketing Automation Best Practices Guide
PDF
Sprinklr grows their customer base with LinkedIn Sales Navigator
PDF
Breakthroughs In Increasing Retention And LTV By Engaging Customers At 7 Crit...
PDF
Big Data for Sales
PDF
Accelerating social-selling-adoption
PDF
Voice of the Prospect: The Future of Sales
PPTX
Marketo Summit: Will the real lead please stand up - tips & tricks to an amaz...
PPTX
23 Expert Tips to Transform Your Marketing
PPTX
#DF11 Social Sales Revolution: 7 Steps @Salesforce @bsupakrunk
PDF
19 Stress Points of Marketing Automation
PDF
Sales Trends in 2015 - Predictions by 14 Industry Experts
The Future Of Sales
How to target right prospects on linkedin
Data-driven Marketing and Sales 2016 Predictions - Lattice Engines
Data-Driven Marketing And Sales Predictions 2015 - Lattice Engines
Sales Intelligence - Bringing your CRM Data to Life
You Have a Predictive Lead Score. Now What? | Best Practices from Lattice
Content based conversation sales for life article
Dreamforce 14 - Social Selling - InsideView
7 trends that will disrupt your business in 2017
Marketing Automation Best Practices Guide
Sprinklr grows their customer base with LinkedIn Sales Navigator
Breakthroughs In Increasing Retention And LTV By Engaging Customers At 7 Crit...
Big Data for Sales
Accelerating social-selling-adoption
Voice of the Prospect: The Future of Sales
Marketo Summit: Will the real lead please stand up - tips & tricks to an amaz...
23 Expert Tips to Transform Your Marketing
#DF11 Social Sales Revolution: 7 Steps @Salesforce @bsupakrunk
19 Stress Points of Marketing Automation
Sales Trends in 2015 - Predictions by 14 Industry Experts

Viewers also liked (6)

PDF
Sales 2.0 For The Real World
PDF
Putting sales 2.0 to work
PDF
Information Leveraging & Sales 2.0
PDF
Sales 2.0 & Social Selling
PDF
Using Web 2.0 in Sales & Marketing
PPT
Web 3.0 explained with a stamp (pt II: techniques)
Sales 2.0 For The Real World
Putting sales 2.0 to work
Information Leveraging & Sales 2.0
Sales 2.0 & Social Selling
Using Web 2.0 in Sales & Marketing
Web 3.0 explained with a stamp (pt II: techniques)

Similar to Sales 2.0 features (20)

PDF
Actionable Strategies for Driving Sales and Increasing ROI
PPTX
What is Sales 2.0?
PPTX
Sales 2.0 Management Guide
PDF
The Importance and Use of Technology in Business
PDF
E Book Complex Sale 2 0
PDF
Social media new trends
PDF
Roi calculation
PDF
Seven Sales Force Development Trends
PDF
5 Major Changes: The Road to Change
PDF
Microsoft-Dynamics-CRM-Transform-Sell
PDF
Adoption of todays technology
PDF
Buying 2.0: Accelerating Sales By Making It Easier To Buy
PDF
AGC Sales Technology Report JUL2016
PDF
SaaS Direct Sales Model
PPTX
Transforming Cold Calls into Warm Introductions
PDF
Sales Cloud™ datasheet
PDF
Beyond Sales
PPT
Sales 2.0
PPT
Sales 2 0 Conference Sf March 8 2010
PDF
Whitepaper: Always be Closing
Actionable Strategies for Driving Sales and Increasing ROI
What is Sales 2.0?
Sales 2.0 Management Guide
The Importance and Use of Technology in Business
E Book Complex Sale 2 0
Social media new trends
Roi calculation
Seven Sales Force Development Trends
5 Major Changes: The Road to Change
Microsoft-Dynamics-CRM-Transform-Sell
Adoption of todays technology
Buying 2.0: Accelerating Sales By Making It Easier To Buy
AGC Sales Technology Report JUL2016
SaaS Direct Sales Model
Transforming Cold Calls into Warm Introductions
Sales Cloud™ datasheet
Beyond Sales
Sales 2.0
Sales 2 0 Conference Sf March 8 2010
Whitepaper: Always be Closing

More from InsideView (20)

PDF
Go-to-market maturity model
PDF
7 Methods to Get your Sales and Marketing Teams Aligned Infographic
PPTX
Beyond the Basics of ABM: Using Account-Based Strategies to Unite Sales & Mar...
PDF
Align Sales & Marketing with Sales Enablement [SiriusDecisions Summit 2017]
PDF
Improving CX with AI: Microsoft Case Study [SiriusDecisions Summit 2017]
PDF
Beyond the Basics of ABM: Using Account-Based Strategies to Unite Sales & Mar...
PPTX
Aligned to Achieve: How to Unite Your Teams into a Single Force for Growth
PDF
How to Align Sales & Marketing - CEB October 2016
PDF
Indian Sales & Marketing Mindset Under the Lens
PPTX
Sponsor Lightning Round - Microsoft
PPTX
Sponsor Lightning Round - Riva
PPTX
Sponsor Lightning Round - Engagio
PPTX
Sponsor Lightning Round - Highspot
PPTX
Sponsor Lightning Round - Marketo
PPTX
InsideView Market Insights in action - InsideView Drive
PPTX
InsideView Sales and Marketing Alignment - InsideView Drive
PDF
InsideView Target
PDF
Top 3 Reasons Sales and Marketing Alignment is Off!
PDF
World Cup Infographic
PDF
Sales and Marketing have moved in Together
Go-to-market maturity model
7 Methods to Get your Sales and Marketing Teams Aligned Infographic
Beyond the Basics of ABM: Using Account-Based Strategies to Unite Sales & Mar...
Align Sales & Marketing with Sales Enablement [SiriusDecisions Summit 2017]
Improving CX with AI: Microsoft Case Study [SiriusDecisions Summit 2017]
Beyond the Basics of ABM: Using Account-Based Strategies to Unite Sales & Mar...
Aligned to Achieve: How to Unite Your Teams into a Single Force for Growth
How to Align Sales & Marketing - CEB October 2016
Indian Sales & Marketing Mindset Under the Lens
Sponsor Lightning Round - Microsoft
Sponsor Lightning Round - Riva
Sponsor Lightning Round - Engagio
Sponsor Lightning Round - Highspot
Sponsor Lightning Round - Marketo
InsideView Market Insights in action - InsideView Drive
InsideView Sales and Marketing Alignment - InsideView Drive
InsideView Target
Top 3 Reasons Sales and Marketing Alignment is Off!
World Cup Infographic
Sales and Marketing have moved in Together

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Impact of Social Media Marketing on Buying Behaviors of Superstore Customers ...
PPTX
international business Chapter 013 global sourcing
PDF
12_anand.DvvdDSbvDScseliihfhoaiwh ego[iudhbhroanronbo
PDF
Shriram Finance, one of India's leading financial services companies, which o...
PDF
The Evolution of Legal Communication through History (www.kiu.ac.ug)
PDF
Globalization and Cultural Homogenization (www.kiu.ac.ug)
PDF
BeMetals_Presentation_September_2025.pdf
PPTX
1. Ancient Civilization presentations .pptx
PDF
Management Theories and Digitalization at Emirates Airline
PDF
Implementing Steam Education: Challenges and Solutions (www.kiu.ac.ug)
PDF
Unit 2 Electronic-Commerce Business Models.pptx
PDF
Integrating Porter-Lawler Theory of Motivation and Hofstede's Dimensions of N...
PDF
audit case scenario .pdf by icai ca inter
PDF
Top 10 Arab General Managers Revolutionizing the Hospitality Industry.pdf
PDF
Trust Building in Family business: Issues and Challenges in Family Business a...
PDF
COVID-19 Primer for business case prep.pdf
PDF
Website Analysis_https___growth-onomics.com_ .docx.pdf
PPTX
Capital Investment in IS Infrastracture and Innovation (SDG9)
PDF
Не GPT єдиним: можливості AI в бізнес-аналізі | Вебінар з Тетяною Перловською
 
PDF
Who says elephants can't dance? - Business Analysis 30 Aug 2025
Impact of Social Media Marketing on Buying Behaviors of Superstore Customers ...
international business Chapter 013 global sourcing
12_anand.DvvdDSbvDScseliihfhoaiwh ego[iudhbhroanronbo
Shriram Finance, one of India's leading financial services companies, which o...
The Evolution of Legal Communication through History (www.kiu.ac.ug)
Globalization and Cultural Homogenization (www.kiu.ac.ug)
BeMetals_Presentation_September_2025.pdf
1. Ancient Civilization presentations .pptx
Management Theories and Digitalization at Emirates Airline
Implementing Steam Education: Challenges and Solutions (www.kiu.ac.ug)
Unit 2 Electronic-Commerce Business Models.pptx
Integrating Porter-Lawler Theory of Motivation and Hofstede's Dimensions of N...
audit case scenario .pdf by icai ca inter
Top 10 Arab General Managers Revolutionizing the Hospitality Industry.pdf
Trust Building in Family business: Issues and Challenges in Family Business a...
COVID-19 Primer for business case prep.pdf
Website Analysis_https___growth-onomics.com_ .docx.pdf
Capital Investment in IS Infrastracture and Innovation (SDG9)
Не GPT єдиним: можливості AI в бізнес-аналізі | Вебінар з Тетяною Перловською
 
Who says elephants can't dance? - Business Analysis 30 Aug 2025

Sales 2.0 features

  • 1. Sale How soon will it improve your s 2.0 business? By Pelin Wood Thorogood and Gerhard Gschwandtner Over the past decade, we’ve witnessed three major trends that have profoundly transformed the way sales organizations engage with prospects throughout the sales cycle. • Customer relationship management (CRM) has emerged as a powerful business trend, enabling the tracking of massive amounts of transactional data on prospect and customer activ- ity for sales and account management. For many organizations however, CRM hasn’t delivered on its promise of significant sales productivity gains. The realization that it is primarily a sales man- agement tool and not a sales tool has led to limited adoption and inconsistent usage by salespeople. • Internet technology has evolved to enable a new way of interacting, collaborating, and information sharing, aka Web 2.0. With the Internet as the new business platform, now all stakeholders – prospects, customers, salespeople, and marketers – can connect, learn, plan, analyze, engage, collab- orate, and conduct business in ways that were not even imaginable a few years ago. • Rich data explosion on the Internet – from traditional information sources, social networks, and other user-generated content – offers salespeople and prospects the oppor- tunity to gain unprecedented insights vital to buying and selling. The Internet accelerates and deepens access to companies, people, and products. The merging of these trends and technologies has transformed selling from a personal art into an interactive science. It has forever changed the process of how people buy and the way companies sell. 58 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2008 SELLING POWER GET TY IMAGES
  • 2. 2.0
  • 3. What is Sales 2.0? During the last few months, Selling Power has interviewed dozens of industry experts in an effort to create a universal definition of what Sales 2.0 means and what it doesn’t. After extensive debates, the experts agreed on the following: “Sales 2.0 brings together cus- tomer-focused methodologies and productivity-enhancing tech- nologies that transform selling from an art to a science. Sales 2.0 relies on a repeatable, collaborative, and customer-enabled process that runs through the sales and marketing organization, resulting in improved productivity, predictable ROI, and superior performance.” Sales 2.0 is transforming how companies sell, market, and run their sales organizations. It arms salespeople with better tools and improved processes so they can connect with the best prospects, pursue richer opportunities, collaborate more effi- ciently with customers and members of their team, and close more sales faster. Sales 2.0 helps sales managers run a far more productive and predictive sales organization that achieves supe- rior results based on optimized resources that create a highly motivated and highly professional sales team. Sales 2.0 empowers sales and marketing to work synergistical- ly, like a beehive. The sole purpose of the worker bees and the drones is to continually execute a set of compatible processes that have only one purpose: to keep the queen bee happy. If the queen is not happy, the future of the hive is in jeopardy. Likewise, if the processes and technologies of a sales and marketing orga- nization are not optimized and synchronized in a way that keeps the customers happy, then the company is in trouble. How is Sales 2.0 different from CRM? CRM was created based on the idea of collecting and harvesting data to create a 360-degree view of the customer, but many CRM initiatives fail because of low user adoption, significant amounts of inaccurate data, and a poor match between processes and tech- nology. In essence, CRM is a top-down tool that works for man- agers who can get their salespeople to play the role of a data entry clerk in addition to selling and managing customer relationships. Sales 2.0 is about equality, empowerment, collaboration, and speed. Sales 2.0 creates an ecosystem that sustains all stakeholders, the customer, the company, the salesperson, the sales manager, and the marketing manager. All members of the ecosystem are equal and interconnected partners. Sales 2.0 levels the playing field by turning sales into a science, salespeople into profession- als, and managers into more rational and more motivated lead- ers. What’s best is that Sales 2.0 dramatically lowers the cost, reduces the risk of failure, and increases the chances of suc- nology to respond to the constant shifts in the marketplace with cessful deployment with positive short-term and long-term ROI. agility, precision, and lightening speed. Many of the end users of Sales 2.0 solutions also note that Sales Examples: ConnectAndSell empowers salespeople to speak with 2.0 brings more fun back to selling. 7 to 10 prospects per hour instead of 10 prospects per day. Inside- View gives salespeople clear insights into their prospect’s busi- The five basic tenets of Sales 2.0 ness, as well as access to relevant social information about the As we watch the world of selling organize itself around the customer, prospect. Jigsaw allows salespeople to quickly target prospect com- and as we monitor the evolution of well over 1,000 technology panies, bypass gatekeepers, and go straight to the decision makers. solutions in that space, we’ve noted five distinct characteristics that come up consistently in conversations around Sales 2.0: 2. Sales 2.0 is about collaboration. Selling is changing from collecting data to connecting ideas. 1. Sales 2.0 is about acceleration. While CRM tends to reduce salespeople to data collectors, Sales Selling is moving from human speed to Internet speed. Salespeo- 2.0 turns salespeople into idea connectors. The Internet has ple spend less time on every phase of the sales call, from finding opened an infinite number of ways for people to collaborate, prospects to closing the sale. Since every phase of the sales funnel share ideas, and cocreate a better world. Such innovations as is optimized, salespeople will pursue better opportunities, waste Wikipedia, online conferencing, i-reports, user ratings, blogs, less time chasing unprofitable business, accelerate the creation of Twitter, and social networking have elevated the potential for better solutions for their customers, and move deals faster from the human collaboration to a higher level. Sales 2.0 technologies help discovery phase to the close. Sales managers can rely on better tech- salespeople collaborate more and travel less. And sales managers 60 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2008 SELLING POWER GET TY IMAGES
  • 4. 3. Sales 2.0 is about professionalization. In a Sales 2.0 world, every lead gets linked to its source, every marketing campaign turns into a quest for improved ROI, every step of the sales process is measured, every sales initiative is analyzed, and every method is tested. Selling is no longer the place for amateurs who are afraid of analytics and skeptical of Six Sigma quality initiatives. While amateurs may score an occa- sional win, professionals deliver predictable results. With the help of Sales 2.0 tools, they are able to replicate their best prac- tices and share them across the organization. Sales 2.0 creates a new breed of professionals that deliver predictability. Examples: A Santcorp.com solution, called ProposalMaster, helps salespeople create proposals and RFPs in far less time while dramatically increasing win rates. Landslide.com helps sales organizations build a world-class sales process that is adopt- ed uniformly by all members of the sales team. 4. Sales 2.0 is about accountability. Selling is shifting from a freewheeling organization to a culture of accountability. Whether it is the optimization of sales pipelines, the resizing of a territory, or performance monitoring to reward the right sales behavior at the right time, Sales 2.0 solutions increase accountability for all stakeholders while reducing costs. Armed with precise data, marketing managers can track the effectiveness of each campaign; sales managers will no longer act on hunches, but manage by metrics and hold their salespeople’s feet to the fire. Examples: Lucidera.com helps sales managers quickly analyze the effectiveness of their sales organization. Easy-to-use analytics helps them understand what they need to do to improve their sales performance without increasing sales costs. Xactly- Corp.com has created an on-demand sales compensation solu- tion that includes an online incentive program. The moment salespeople reach a certain performance level, they can instant- ly choose from an exciting selection of motivating rewards. 5. Sales 2.0 is about alignment. Selling and marketing are joining their separate silos into a seamless and completely aligned organization. The core charac- ter of the Sales 2.0 world is that it relies on sales and marketing alignment, with shared goals and new responsibilities through- out the sales cycle, from lead generation and qualification all the way to closed deals. In some companies, marketing is held accountable (and rewarded) for transactional business and sales for consultative business. New sales technologies allow sales- Now all stakeholders – prospects, people to launch their own marketing campaigns, read a prospect’s “digital body language,” and instantly see which customers, salespeople and marketers prospect opened their emails. New customer engagement tech- nologies help customers recognize and define their own prob- – can connect, learn, plan, analyze, lems and discover how to remove the barriers to the sale. Example: Genius.com allows marketing to send out personal- engage, collaborate, and conduct ized emails on behalf of sales and instantly alerts reps of prospect activity. Sales can “TiVO” the entire experience and contact those business in ways that were not even who have visited a Web page. The world of Sales 2.0 is a rapidly expanding universe that imaginable a few years ago. institutionalizes a collaborative and repeatable sales and mar- keting process, enabling the adoption of best practices across the can harness the collective intelligence of the sales organization. entire company. The result: dramatic improvements in perfor- Examples: GoToMeeting allows salespeople to share their desk- mance. Today’s smarter and far better informed prospects top over the Internet, deliver remote presentations, and collabo- demand more of our companies. Sales 2.0 is a game-changing rate with remote experts in real time. SAVO allows the entire approach that will result in higher-volume sales, higher-value sales organization to share its best practices online. Salespeople sales, and higher-velocity sales with significant improvements in can quickly download presentation material, rank its effective- overall profitability. The big question is not why should I move up ness, and get instant access to expert advice. to Sales 2.0, but why not now? • SELLING POWER NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2008 61