According to The State of High Performing Sales Teams, 64% of salespeople agree that “competitive salary and benefits” is a top motivator. This isn’t surprising. But to focus solely on compensation when looking to improve motivation on your sales team is a huge mistake.
When you open your eyes to the bigger picture, it’s clear that motivating a sales team goes far beyond compensation. While our research found salary was a top motivator, we also found it was closely followed by fulfilling/challenging work and a good manager.
Recently, our head of CS and Sales, Jocelyn Brown, sat down with sales leaders Chris Bondarenko from Docebo and Michelle Pietsch from Dooly to talk about how to motivate a sales team…outside of compensation.
In this article, we’ll share some key insights from their conversation and our recent report on what makes a high performing sales team, including:
58% of salespeople agree seeing how their work impacts the big picture plays a big role in their productivity levels.
Why? Reps want to know what the vision is. They want to understand what they’re working towards.
When people understand their goals and revenue targets, they get a sense of how they fit into the organization at large. It provides people with a stronger vision and unification across the team.
Beyond providing context for your sales team, failure to be transparent can create a toxic work environment. Michelle explains:
“If you’re not transparent, people are going to make up stories in their head. Next thing you know, it’s toxic and runs through the organization. It’s better to get ahead of that or you’re impacting the entire organization’s morale.”
– Michelle Pietsch, VP of revenue, Dooly
“Clear expectations and goals” is the single biggest factor impacting the productivity of a sales team. And it goes hand in hand with transparency.
Clear goals for sales teams include sales targets and also include bigger picture expectations and vision. For example, what are you trying to achieve at an organizational level? What are individual team members directly responsible for? Goals at every level of the organization should ladder up to one another.
While creating clarity around expectations depends on your organizational structure, there are a number of things you can do to improve how you set and communicate goals and expectations.
Chris talks about how he and his team use the V2MOM approach, developed by Marc Benioff, the CEO of Salesforce. The approach allows you to be highly transparent and very goals/metric oriented by defining:
A couple of other things you want to keep in mind for clear goals and expectations to motivate a sales team:
Providing employees with challenging work and opportunities to grow is incredibly important when it comes to motivation levels.
While competitive compensation was cited as the number one motivator for salespeople, employees are 1.8X more likely to leave due to a lack of growth opportunities than non-competitive salary.
It’s important for people to see the road ahead of them. But, there are a lot of challenges when it comes to supporting career growth — whether it be because the person’s not actually ready for a promotion, the business isn’t ready for it, or maybe as a manager, you don’t have direct control over your reports’ growth at the company.
“Hypergrowth companies rely on their ability to attract top talent, develop top talent and retain that top talent. Laying out opportunities for career growth and the development of skills and competencies is key to all three of those. You need to develop your team so when the business is ready, they’re also ready. ”
– Chris Bondarenko, VP of sales, north america, Docebo
Chris tells us about how he approaches career growth at Docebo. For every 4 positions open on his team, he tries to fill one through internal candidates. To do so, he looks at two factors:
Supporting career growth isn’t only a defence against turnover, it also benefits the health of your business. So when the business needs to grow, your employees have already been trained to support that growth and grow with it.
“One of the things I’ve often used when there’s not a promotion right on the horizon is a conversation around what kind of work gives your direct report energy and what takes it away. Have people reflect on how they can get a balance where they’re working on more things that give them energy. For first time people leaders, that’s an important thing to learn. Because a promotion to people manager is actually a career change. Give people ways to think about if that’s something they’re ready for and want.”
– Jocelyn Brown, Head of CS and Sales, Hypercontext
41% of salespeople agree they need access to resources to be productive.
Without proper tools and resources, your team’s simply not being set up for success. While the specific tools used will look different for each team and organization, there are certain tools that are absolutely essential for salespeople to have access to — they’re table stakes.
In this competitive landscape, candidates want to go to a company where they have access to the resources they need to succeed. Otherwise, they won’t be empowered to hit their targets and the competitive compensation will be mute. After all, it doesn’t really matter what the compensation package is if you’re not being empowered to hit your OTE through the proper resources.
Here are a few tools and resources that are helpful for sales teams:
Keep in mind that too many tools can be distracting. Implement the tools you need to support more efficient selling and collaboration, but don’t overdo it. More tools don’t equal more deals.
None of the above ingredients can come together without a good manager. This is probably why it’s cited as the third most important factor to motivate a sales team.
Unfortunately, oftentimes, managers aren’t equipped with the supports they need to lead their teams. While many sales teams have invested in proper tooling for outreach or external processes, not as much is invested in management. And it’s a clear miss.
While managers are imperative to the success of an organization, only half of sales managers agree or strongly agree their company equips them with the tools and resources needed to be a good people manager.
It makes sense. When someone gets promoted to a manager position, it’s a job change disguised as a promotion. Oftentimes, managers aren’t prepared.
In other words, it’s time to step up for our managers — because they directly impact the motivation of the teams who report to them.
Managers: we see you. If you’re looking to improve your management skills to motivate your sales team, here are a few tips to help.
A competitive comp plan can be alluring. It can motivate salespeople to hit their targets and even to move jobs. But, the ability to meet OTE can be dragged down by a lot of other missing things.
The more we focus on the full picture of what motivates a sales team — from growth opportunities and good management to proper resources and clear goals — the more likely you are to build a high-performing sales team. It’s not as simple as salary.
Check out the full live session recording here:
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