To manage enablement across 180 markets, Lenovo avoids a purely centralized or decentralized model. Instead, they focus on "harmonizing" foundational elements like customer data centrally. This creates a unified, reliable data layer that then empowers local teams to execute culturally relevant enablement programs effectively.
To scale a testing program effectively, empower distributed marketing teams to run their own experiments. Providing easy-to-use tools within a familiar platform (like Sitecore XM Cloud) democratizes the process, leveraging local and industry-specific knowledge while avoiding the bottleneck of a central CRO team.
When different departments push their own projects onto the sales team, reps get overloaded. To solve this, enablement leaders must shift the focus of every initiative away from departmental priorities and toward a shared customer outcome. This unified goal minimizes internal friction and clarifies what's truly important.
An effective AI strategy pairs a central task force for enablement—handling approvals, compliance, and awareness—with empowerment of frontline staff. The best, most elegant applications of AI will be identified by those doing the day-to-day work.
Nestle avoids a rigid top-down approach by fostering a "hive mind" mentality. While a global strategy exists, local markets like Brazil and Mexico have autonomy to adapt to their unique cultures. The key is constant cross-market communication, where teams share successes and failures to ensure everyone evolves together.
Large tech firms often struggle with global ABM because strategies are dictated by a central, US-centric corporate team. This leads to a disconnect with regional field marketing teams who understand local nuances, cultural differences, and specific account needs, crippling campaign effectiveness.
A system called AISOS was built to scale a small enablement team. It provides on-demand sales coaching, delivers just-in-time training content, and conducts pipeline analysis. This multi-function approach allows a small team to support a wide array of sales roles from BDRs to enterprise AEs.
Forcing innovations to "scale" via top-down mandates often fails by robbing local teams of ownership. A better approach is to let good ideas "spread." If a solution is truly valuable, other teams will naturally adopt it. This pull-based model ensures change sticks and evolves.
To bridge cultural and departmental divides, the product team initiated a process of constantly sharing and, crucially, explaining granular user data. This moved conversations away from opinions and localized goals toward a shared, data-informed understanding of the core problems, making it easier to agree on solutions.
Spreading excellence should not be like applying a thin coat of peanut butter across the whole organization. Instead, create a deep "pocket" of excellence in one team or region, perfecting it there first. That expert group then leads the charge to replicate their success in the next pocket, creating a cascading and more robust rollout.
When product, marketing, and sales all compete for seller attention, enablement becomes highly political. The solution isn't to mediate these conflicts directly. Instead, build an objective system with clear governance and processes. This system becomes the arbiter of priority, sidelining political influence and focusing on customer-centric outcomes.