The disconnect between sales managers and reps in 2025 is wild. Manager: "Just pick up the phone!" Rep: *sends 47 emails, 12 texts, 3 LinkedIn messages, and a carrier pigeon* Sound familiar? 😅 After 20+ years in sales, I've watched this communication gap grow wider every year. But here's what both sides are missing: It's not about choosing ONE channel. It's about understanding WHICH channel works WHEN. The most successful reps I've seen? They've cracked the code: **First 24 hours:** • Email → Sets professional tone • LinkedIn → Shows you've done homework • Text → Only if they've given permission **Days 2-5:** • Phone call → NOW it's time (they know who you are) • Voice note → Personal touch that stands out • Video message → Shows real effort **The truth?** Your manager's right - calls DO convert better. You're also right - cold calling blind is dead. The magic happens when you warm them up FIRST. Think of it like dating: You wouldn't propose on the first date. So why are we calling strangers without context? **My top 3 strategies that actually work:** 1. The "Permission Play" End every email with: "Would a quick call tomorrow at 2pm work to discuss?" (They expect it now = higher answer rate) 2. The "Multi-Touch Warm-Up" Email → LinkedIn view → Call within 48 hours (They recognize your name = 3x more likely to answer) 3. The "Context Creator" Reference their LinkedIn post before calling "Saw your post about X, had a thought..." (You're not a stranger = conversation not pitch) Here's the brutal truth: Managers: Your reps aren't lazy. They're adapting to how buyers ACTUALLY buy in 2025. Reps: Your manager isn't wrong. The phone still closes more deals than any other channel. Bridge the gap. Use both. Win more. What's your take - Team Phone or Team Omnichannel? P.S I'm running a FREE 6-week LinkedIn Social Selling Bootcamp starting Monday 15th Sept, grab a free spot here https://lnkd.in/eVmxsMbM
Sales Process Optimization
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My client fired their entire SDR team on Tuesday By Friday, their pipeline had grown by 60% This sounds impossible It's not After auditing 50 B2B sales organizations over 10 years, I've uncovered the most expensive myth in modern selling: → The belief that MORE activity at the TOP of your funnel will fix conversion problems at the BOTTOM Let me share what actually happened: This mid-market software company was spending $350,000 annually on their 4-person SDR team - 100+ cold calls per rep daily - 17 meetings booked weekly - "Incredible metrics" according to leadership - But their close rate? A devastating 1.2% The VP of Sales was convinced they needed MORE outreach, MORE automation, MORE top-of-funnel I suggested something different: pause all prospecting for 7 days Instead, we had their account executives do something radical - engage with the 215 prospects already in their pipeline who'd gone cold after initial meetings Using a framework we developed: - 65 prospects responded within 24 hours - 41 booked follow-up meetings - 23 re-entered active buying cycles - 6 closed within 14 days (total value: $212K) The shocking revelation? - Their pipeline wasn't empty - It was overflowing with neglected opportunity. This company didn't have a lead generation problem. They had a lead nurturing catastrophe. By reallocating resources from mindless prospecting to strategic engagement, they've now: - Reduced CAC by 60% - Shortened sales cycles by 30% - 2x their close rate The counterintuitive truth: Sometimes the fastest path to growth is to stop chasing new opportunities and start converting the ones you've already earned. What percentage of your marketing and sales budget is focused on prospects who've already shown interest vs those who haven't? That ratio reveals everything about your future growth trajectory P.S. If you need help with your sales, send me a message
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For my first 16 years in tech sales, I averaged 240K/year W2 income. In my last 4 years, I averaged 720K/year. In order to triple my income, I had to change my sales approach entirely. Here's what I changed: I started using a new approach that I now call Yo-yo selling: 🪀 Yo-yo selling emphasizes starting at the executive level, conducting thorough discovery within the organization, and then returning to the executive with a tailored business case. Like holding a yo-yo, you are constantly in communication with the Executive Sponsor and updating them as you collect information and conduct deep discovery lower down in their organization. You are literally going up and down the organization, but always taking everything back to the Executive Sponsor to surface your findings along the way. Here's a breakdown of the framework: 🎯 𝐈𝐚𝐧 𝐊𝐨𝐧𝐢𝐚𝐤’𝐬 “𝐘𝐨-𝐘𝐨 𝐒𝐞𝐥𝐥𝐢𝐧𝐠” 𝐅𝐫𝐚𝐦𝐞𝐰𝐨𝐫𝐤 This strategy involves a three-step process: 1. Start at the Top (Executive Engagement) Initiate contact with a senior executive to understand their most pressing challenges, the reasons behind the need for change, and the consequences of inaction. If your solution aligns with their needs, secure their sponsorship for further discovery within their organization. To secure the Executive Meetings, it's essential to create a tailored POV (point of view) on where you think you may be able to help them based on your initial research of their highest level goals and priorities. Chat GPT has made this research a LOT faster now. 2. Conduct In-Depth Discovery (Middle Management) Engage with department heads and key stakeholders to uncover the day-to-day challenges they face. Focus on understanding their processes, pain points, and the implications of current inefficiencies. Gather direct quotes and insights to build a comprehensive view of the organization's needs. 3. Return to the Executive (Present Findings) Compile the insights gathered into an executive summary and business case. Present this to the executive sponsor, highlighting how your solution addresses the identified challenges. Tailor your demonstration to focus solely on relevant aspects that solve their specific problems. 🚀 Why It Works 1. Accelerates Sales Cycles: Engaging executives early ensures alignment and expedites decision-making. 2. Builds Credibility: Demonstrates a deep understanding of the organization's challenges and showcases a tailored solution. 3. Facilitates Internal Buy-In: By involving various stakeholders, you ensure that the solution meets the needs of all parties, increasing the likelihood of adoption. I'm pleased to share that that Yo-yo selling was recently awarded as a Top 15 Sales Tactic of All Time by 30 Minutes to President's Club, and I received a cool plaque for entering the 30MPC Hall of Fame. Since I have no chance of entering the Hall of Fame for my baseball or golf game, this is a nice consolation prize 😁
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Cold Calling Is Dying. Here’s What’s Replacing It. The numbers don’t lie: • Cold call success rates have dropped to 2.3% in 2025, down from 4.8% last year (Cognism). • 72% of sales calls never reach a person, and it takes 8+ dials to connect with just one prospect. • Only 28% of reps still view cold calling as effective. Meanwhile, high-performing teams are doing something different. Research-Driven, Insight-Led Outreach Wins: • Reps who thoroughly research their prospects are 3x more likely to succeed (Clevenio). • Prospect-specific research can lift conversions by ~30%. • Insight-led outreach builds trust before a call is ever placed. Email and Social Are Outpacing Phone-First Approaches: • Personalized cold emails outperform generic ones by 32%; average reply rates are 8–9%. • 78% of social sellers outsell peers, and social-enabled teams hit quota 66% more often. Takeaway: 1. The call is no longer the first touchpoint. It’s the third or maybe the fourth; it’s only viable once you have demonstrable engagement via other channels. 2. Buyers start with research—so should you. Start with research. Deliver value. Leverage email and social. Then—and only then—call with context. You’re no longer the teacher like when you were knocking on doors. 3. This is how modern sales works. And this is how trust is built at scale. Welcome to the future, my friends. 🙌🏾 #NervousSystemsStrategist #SalesLeadership #ModernSelling #ColdCalling #SalesDevelopment #InsightSelling #SalesStrategy #SalesEnablement
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If your CEO asks for deal updates in Slack, don’t expect reps to update Salesforce. You can throw all the tech, training, and sales ops resources you want at CRM adoption - but if leadership isn’t leading by example, none of it will stick. Here's the tl;dr: Reps don’t hate updating Salesforce because they’re lazy. They hate it because they know no one actually uses it. When leaders bypass the CRM - asking for updates in Slack, emails, or meetings - they send a clear message: “This system doesn’t matter. Your notes don’t matter. Just tell me directly.” And that’s how $100k+ Salesforce investments turn into glorified Rolodexes. So, how do you fix it? 1. Top-down adoption Start with the CEO. If they want deal updates, they need to ask for them in Salesforce. Chatter, Slack integrations, whatever it takes...but it has to flow through the system. 2. Make sales managers accountable Reps won’t change unless their managers enforce it. Run pipeline reviews directly from Salesforce dashboards. No exceptions. If it’s not in Salesforce, it doesn’t exist. 3. Quantify the pain Show reps how missing data costs them deals. Lost follow ups, misaligned hand offs, deals slipping through the cracks...all because the CRM isn’t up to date. 4. Reward the right behaviors Sales culture loves to celebrate closers. But what about the reps who close and keep a clean pipeline? Make data hygiene part of what gets recognized (and compensated). The reality is that CRM adoption isn’t a sales ops problem - it’s a leadership problem. If the top isn’t setting the example, the bottom won’t follow. And until that changes, you’ll keep throwing money at Salesforce while your reps keep their real pipeline in a Google Doc.
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I just watched an AE lose a $1.2M deal after running a "successful" product trial that the prospect LOVED. After 8 weeks of work, the CFO killed it with five words: "Let's try our current vendor." This happens because most reps treat trials as product demos instead of what they actually are: RISK ELIMINATION EXERCISES. After analyzing 200+ enterprise sales cycles at companies like Salesforce, HubSpot, Thomson Reuters, and Workday, I've identified the exact framework that separates 80%+ trial conversion rates from the industry average of 30%. Here's what most reps get wrong: They skip qualification and jump straight into the trial. Big mistake. Before any trial, ask these 3 questions: → "What happens if you don't solve this problem in the next 90 days?" → "How have you tried solving this before?" → "Who else is affected by this problem?" These eliminate 68% of unqualified trials before they start. Next, define success upfront: → Technical requirements that must work → Business metrics they expect to see → Timeline for implementation → User adoption patterns needed Get confirmation: "Just to confirm, if we demonstrate these criteria, you'd be ready to move forward with purchase by [date]. Correct?" Map every stakeholder: → Technical buyers (include every trial user) → Economic buyers (CFO/budget holder) → Political influencers (who can kill deals) → Current solution advocates (who benefits from status quo) For each person, document their personal win/loss scenarios. Have legal review agreements BEFORE starting trials. "We typically have legal review the agreement structure ahead of time so there are no surprises later. Would you be open to having them review a blank agreement while the trial is running?" Finally, handle the current vendor objection upfront: → "Have you discussed these challenges with your current vendor?" → "What was their response?" → "What specific capabilities do they lack?" Document these answers to build your business case. Results from this approach: ✅ Trial conversion: 32% to 83% in 60 days ✅ Deal size increased 40% ✅ Sales cycle shortened 37% ✅ Forecast accuracy improved 92% ✅ 43% less time on unsuccessful trials Stop running trials. Start running risk elimination exercises. — Sales Leaders! Your reps don’t need another training. They need a Revenue OS™. Check this out: https://lnkd.in/ghh8VCaf
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In 27 months, we grew Retention.com from $1M-$13M ARR with only 1 salesperson (me) doing 1,000's of sales calls. Here are my 10 biggest pieces of advice for any startup who wants to book and close more sales calls: 1. Ask for 15 mins, but book 30 When booking a meeting outbound, you have a better shot at getting a meeting by asking for 15 mins than 30. You may have piqued their interest but with a busy schedule, they are going to weigh learning about your business vs their time. Ask for 15 but send a meeting invite for 30. If they can’t do the full 30, they will let you know, but from my experience, this rarely happens. 2. Tell your story People remember a story more than a product Figure out your short story that you can tell prior to getting into the product pitch. How does your story connect to your business / product? 3. 5X5 Pitch Keep your product deck for your initial call to 5 slides / 5 minutes and make sure you answer any of the common questions you get from prospects. You can always book a follow up call to share more detail once you hook their interest. 4. Always Be Pitching Take control of the call and the sales cycle. You will only learn what does and doesn’t work by actually pitching. 5. Tell a customer story Again, people remember stories more than they do stats. Tell a story of a customer before implementing your product and the business outcome after implementing it. Don’t just talk numbers. Talk about how people felt, what they said, etc. 6. Create Urgency Attach an incentive if the deal is done by the end of the week or month. (Example: 20% more credits or a 15% discount) This also sets you up well for follow up as it now makes them feel like you are on their team to try and help them get the deal in for their benefit. 7. Land and expand We all want to close the big ACV deals, but the truth is most buyers don’t want to make a big commitment without seeing how your product works. Find a way to get them on for a small $ amount, with the plan to expand if the product meets their expectations. 8. Opt-Out Period Reduce buyer friction by offering a 90 day opt out period if you are trying to close 12 month agreements. It shows confidence that your product will drive the results you say it will. 9. Deck Recap Create a 1-2 pager highlighting the most important parts of your sales deck that you can send via email after every call (even if they don’t ask for it). The prospect won’t remember all details from the call, so this gives them something to look back on and will help sell internally if other stakeholders are involved. 10. Video for FAQs Create short form talking head video answering all FAQs. This will add value in your follow up, show you listened to the questions they had and that you care about making sure they understand the answers. It also helps internally as others will likely have the same questions as the person on the phone. Have questions about how to book/close more calls? AMA anything 👇
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₹800 Crore Beverage Playbook: How an Auto Driver Built a Cola Empire Without Ads India doesn’t have a beverage problem; it's a distribution problem. 1. Old model: Celebrity endorsements, massive ad budgets, urban-first strategy, and premium pricing. 2. New model: Kirana-first distribution, zero ad dependency, local taste engineering and aggressive pricing. This shift is powered by Sathya Shankar through SG Corporation. ✅ THE NUMBERS 1. Revenue: ₹800 Cr 2. Retail reach: 100,000+ outlets 3. Manufacturing: 4+ plants 4. Pricing: 30–40% lower than MNCs 5. Retailer margins: 15–20% higher than competitors Low price for consumers. High margin for retailers. ✅ The Real Insight: Distribution Beats Branding Global giants sell aspiration. Shankar sold availability. Always in stock. Always chilled. Always visible. - Because in India, if it’s not in the fridge, it doesn’t exist. This is shelf-share economics, not mindshare. ✅ Where the Real Money Is Made 1. Product doesn’t build beverage brands. Distribution does. Focus on Tier 2 & Tier 3 markets. Deep kirana penetration. Strong retailer incentives & retailer chooses what sells fastest. And what earns them more 2. Result: Front-row fridge placement. Every time. That’s the moat. ✅ Hyper-Local Advantage 1. While MNCs globalize taste, SG localises it. Jeera soda for Indian palate Strong, spicy flavour profiles are designed for heat & mass consumption. This is not adaptation. This is native product design. 2. Because Indian consumers don’t want subtle. They want impact. ✅ Origin Advantage The early years weren’t a struggle. They're training. 1. Auto driving → understanding demand patterns 2. Distribution work → learning last-mile logistics 3. Saving capital → building ground-up knowledge ✅ Hidden Moat: Retail Economics - Why do kirana stores push this brand? Simple: They earn more. Higher margins vs global brands. Faster inventory turnover. Local supply reliability - In FMCG, the retailer is the real gatekeeper. Win the retailer → win the market. - Luxury purchases like Rolls-Royce or Bentley aren’t just indulgences. They are signals. Builds supplier trust, unlocks credit lines and creates a perception of scale. In business, perception is leverage, and leverage drives growth. - SG Corporation is now upgrading AI-led logistics tracking, real-time bottle return systems & lower glass logistics cost. - Plus: Entry into packaged snacks. - Target: ₹1,500 Crore scale This is moving from beverage brand → FMCG platform. ✅ Let me share the #Rajspectives 1. Distribution is the real moat in FMCG. 2. Retailers decide winners, not ads. 3. Local taste beats global branding. 4. Margins drive placement. Placement drives sales. 5. Solve for the mass market, and scale follows. Sathya Shankar didn’t try to beat Coca-Cola or Pepsi at branding. He beat them at availability. Because in India, the brand that reaches the smallest shop. Controls the biggest market. #india #fmcg #business #startups #distribution #strategy
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Why Your Sales Team Isn't Hitting Targets and HOW TO FIX IT 📊Today many businesses struggle with declining sales performance, and one of my clients - a mid-sized tech firm, faced this very issue. Despite having a talented team, they consistently missed their sales targets, leading to frustration and dwindling morale. They started sales coaching with me, and here's how we started and turned things around. Conducting Diagnosis: Understanding the Core Issues through a sales audit, and after an initial assessment, it became evident that several factors contributed to the poor performance. These are listed broadly as follows: 🚫Lack of Clear Goals: The sales team didn’t have well-defined, achievable targets. They were chasing numbers without a strategic plan. 🌀Inadequate Training: Despite their talent, the team lacked training in the latest sales techniques and tools. There was also an inefficient sales process at play. 🗯Poor Communication: There was a significant disconnect between the sales team and other departments, leading to missed opportunities and misunderstandings. 📌Low Motivation: Constant failure to meet targets had demoralized the team, impacting their productivity and drive. To address these issues, we implemented a comprehensive coaching and facilitation program focusing on well executed strategies: 🎯 Setting SMART Goals - to give the team clear direction and purpose. Fine tuning the sales process also contributed to efficiency. 💪Enhanced Training - on advanced sales techniques, product knowledge, and customer engagement strategies. 🧲Optimizing the Sales Process - by identify the bottlenecks and making necessary adjustments, we ensure that the process is customer-focused and aligns with their buying journey. 🎎Improving Communication - by establishing regular cross-departmental meetings and open communication channels to ensure everyone was on the same page. 👊Motivation and Incentives - by introducing a reward system to recognize and celebrate achievements, boosting morale and encouraging a healthy competitive spirit. Within three months, there was a complete transformation - the team had a high morale and camaraderie. Soon, they not only met but also exceeded their sales targets, achieving a 30% increase in sales. The clear goals, enhanced skills, and improved communication fostered a collaborative and motivated environment. The client’s sales performance skyrocketed, and the once-struggling team became a powerhouse of productivity and success. ✨✨ Need help identifying and fixing the issues in your sales team? Contact me for expert guidance and tailored solutions! 📌https://lnkd.in/dGGM5vCK #sonniasingh #sonniasinghleadershipcoach #salescoaching #salesoptimization #businessresults #SalesPerformance #SalesTargets #TeamMotivation #SalesTraining #SalesProcess #SalesLeadership
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This is what happens when sales talks first and engineering talks later. If you want fewer broken promises and more closed deals that actually stick follow this exact flow: 📌 Step 1: Turn every customer request into a clear use-case Instead of asking engineering: “Can we build this feature?” Ask: “The customer wants to automate X to save Y hours - what’s realistically possible today?” Engineers think in systems, not sales language. 📌 Step 2: Get a fast feasibility check (15–30 minutes max) Before any pitch: Share with engineering: * Customer goal * Expected outcome * Deadline Ask for: ✅ Can do now ⚠️ Can do with work ❌ Not possible Document it. 📌 Step 3: Pitch only what got a green or yellow light Green → sell confidently Yellow → sell with conditions Red → don’t sell If it’s yellow, say: “We can reach this result in phases, not instantly.” This keeps excitement without lying. 📌 Step 4: Lock scope in writing after the call Send a quick recap: “Here’s what we agreed is possible in phase one…” This protects: * Sales credibility * Engineering bandwidth * Customer trust 📌 Step 5: Create a weekly sales-engineering sync (30 mins) Agenda: * New deals in pipeline * Risky promises * Technical blockers This one meeting prevents 80% of post-sale chaos. 📌 Step 6: Track one metric 👉 % of deals delivered without scope change If it’s low → sales is overselling If it’s high → alignment is working That's it!
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