Working with our client sales teams, the topic of selling “style” is typically something we encounter. “That’s my style,” “what I am comfortable with,” or “I am just that kind of person”….is usually part of the description.
Influence style
“Selling style,” or Influence Style, is critical to successful sales outcomes. It is that mix of influence ingredients and how they are used to achieve a desired result. If the influence style is ineffective, ingredients and how they are used are usually mismatched. Just like baking a cake, if you don’t get the “what” and the “how” right, the outcome is not want you intended.
In an exciting study on influence tactics and their associated influence styles, sales performance researchers Christopher R. Plouffe, Willy Bolander, and Joseph A. Cote studied influence styles and their effectiveness. In their study, “Which influence tactics lead to sales performance? It is a matter of style,” they conducted a study involving over 300 salespeople and sales leaders across two industries (real estate and high-end personal fitness equipment manufacturer).
How and when is everything
They discovered that “simply employing a tactic – in and of itself – does not appear to guarantee an increase in performance. Rather, it appears knowing exactly how and when to use a specific tactic may be the more important determinant of performance given the sales role.” They point out that “if influence effectiveness is truly dependent upon the salesperson and the selling context, then organizations should also be seriously questioning the ‘one size fits all’ hiring approaches and training programs that seem to abound in the field.”
The results of their study indicated that an effective influence style was essential to top performance, but getting to that “most effective influence style” was not a simple undertaking. A salesperson’s “influence style will allow them to effectively use a tactic that, when used by a salesperson with a different style, reduces sales performance.” However, they caution against trying to train salespeople on adequately using a particular sales tactic – “great care should be exercised.”
The study grouped all the salespeople in the survey into influence style clusters. They found every set of salespeople seemed to be attempting to use at least one tactic that ultimately hurt performance. The takeaway is that “what salespeople think works may not actually work at all.” Sales leaders should continually monitor the influence tactics used by their salespeople. They should use “coaching and training to point out that specific influence tactics, while comfortable and/or logical for the rep in question, are actually detrimental in terms of performance given that rep’s overall influence style and profile.”
No more off-the-shelf
When aligned with the selling situation and salesperson, selling styles and tactics enable high performance. However, it can only be achieved through thoughtful, hands-on, engaged coaching and mentoring. Off-the-shelf, one-size-fits-all, Economy 1.0 sales tactics, strategies, training, and hiring practices no longer work. The world has changed.
When you think about sales effectiveness at your organization, does it seem like you are close but just missing those unique elements that give you that competitive edge? Looking for a way to understand how your buyer thinks, decides, and reveals information? At The Nova Consulting Group, we believe that professional selling is a craft. With the Advanced Sales Conversation©, you have those missing elements that move your salespeople from competency to mastery. With our deep understanding of what makes and sustains high-performance organizations, we provide integrated solutions that do not replace your sales methodology and yet advance a progressive selling mindset. Be bolder, more insightful, and get results. To learn more about how to master the craft of sales and encourage sustainable high performance, call (617) 933-7249 or email info@novaconsultinggrp.com.
How Does Your Buyer Remember You?
Buyer, will you remember me? It is a curious thing. Most B2B buyers do not perceive sellers as different from one another. Given how much work goes into the development of products and services, [...]
Mid-Year Sales Review: Simplify and Stop Pushing
Mid-year is such a turning point for a sales team. You can notice trends, problems, and opportunities. However, those problems can be magnified when the sales team is behind in its mid-year goal. On [...]
Listening to Understand: Sales Conversations That Matter in the Digital Age
Even in the Before Time (remember those years before COVID?), buyers were moving away from salespeople and changing when and how sales conversations happened. In our first white paper, Window Into the Buyer’s Mind, [...]
Leading Resiliency: Developing Your Sales Team for 2024’s Challenges
The sales landscape is undergoing a monumental shift, creating turbulence for sales teams. High-performing sales teams show greater resiliency when ongoing development is part of the employee experience. That resiliency supports how salespeople cope, [...]
CROs, Is This Sales Conversation Myth Derailing Your Forecast?
There is this weird perspective in sales that could very well derail your forecast. There is this belief that any sales conversation is better than no conversation. This means that someone on your team [...]
10 Ways the Advanced Sales Conversation© Supports Non-Traditional Sellers
Are you a lawyer, consultant, C-level executive, architect, project manager, engineer, or freelancer? Regardless of your profession, you are likely responsible for maintaining clients and attracting new business. However, selling and persuading others may [...]