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Instead of hiring generic sales trainers, identify your best salesperson, document their unique process—especially for discovery calls, demos, and proposals—and use that as the basis for your internal sales certification program. This creates a highly relevant and proven playbook tailored to your specific product and market.
Instead of promoting the best salesperson or hiring externally, identify potential leaders and put them in a 12-month development program. This builds a bench of prepared leaders, lets some self-select out, and avoids costly hiring mistakes. It requires long-term thinking.
Your best reps are often "unconsciously competent" and can't explain their own success. Before an SKO, leaders must help these individuals deconstruct their process and build a prescriptive presentation, translating their individual "art" into a replicable science for the entire sales team.
A company reliant on a single charismatic closer cannot scale. To build a repeatable process, identify one or two key, effective actions your top performer takes and build a systemized framework around them for the entire team to adopt.
SKOs often fail with high-level corporate presentations. A better approach is to put top-performing reps on stage to share specific, tactical "how-to's" for key sales activities like cold calling, email outreach, and champion building, fostering peer-to-peer learning.
Unlike consultants who only teach, Sales Gravy's trainers are full-time employees who must also sell. This "practice what you preach" model ensures their training is grounded in real-world, current experience, making it more credible and effective for clients.
A founder is often the best salesperson because they embody the company's stories. To replicate this success, hire an internal employee who has lived those stories and can share them authentically, rather than an external, classically-trained salesperson who only knows tactics.
Traditional sales training fails because reps quickly forget most information. The "teach-back" method flips the model by requiring reps to actively teach concepts to others. This active learning process dramatically increases retention to 90%, builds confidence, and fosters a coaching culture.
When one rep achieves a significant win in a new vertical, use the SKO to create industry-specific breakout sessions. Have that rep detail their exact process, sharing materials and insights to enable the rest of the team to replicate that success across similar accounts.
The founder, as the best salesperson, should always have a trainee shadowing them. This "double dips" on their time, turning every sales activity into a real-time training session. It's the most efficient way to transfer skills, duplicate the founder's success across a team, and build a scalable sales process based on modeling.
Create a defined process for every sales activity, from weekly planning to discovery calls, with clear exit criteria. This provides a repeatable playbook, removing guesswork about "what's next" and allowing the sales team to operate faster and more efficiently as it scales.