As your company grows, so do your sales goals. To keep up, you hire more sales reps and do your best to get them ramped as soon as possible so they can start closing deals and contributing to your bottom line.Â
Unfortunately, the reality is rather harsh: Your new reps will take an average of three months to be ready to interact with buyers, nine months to be competent to perform, and 15 months to become a top performer. Thatâs more than a year before new reps are hitting their numbers, and a fast-growing sales org doesnât have that kind of time.
The secrets to faster sales rep onboarding:Â
- Stop bombarding new hires with data and resources
- Create a process that helps them better retain vital informationÂ
- Make ongoing coaching a priority
For both new hire ramping and changes in territory management, teams should adopt a more process-oriented approach to improve sales onboarding.
Get the selling process in place and then hire the individuals to follow those best practices and processes. Clearly defined roles, benchmarks, and handoffs are necessary for todayâs sales orientation planning.Â
Use the following sales onboarding best practices to set your new reps up for success from day one.
Set goals for ramping up
First, you need to figure out how you expect sales reps to perform for the first few months. Sales thought leaders recommend three different ways that you can determine the ramp-up time for new sales reps:Â
- Sales cycle + 90 days: If the deals within your sales org usually take four months to close, you canât expect your rep to start closing within two. The standard has been a 90-day buffer for the employee onboarding and sales training process, but you should adjust according to your org.Â
- Sales cycle + sales training + experience: This ramp time considers the length of your sales cycle and accounts for training. However, you would also adjust the ramp period based on the repâs experience, with less time for more seasoned reps.Â
- Time to reach 100% quota: If your company doesnât have a standard sales cycle, you should average the amount of time it takes for new sales reps to reach 100% of their quota.Â
Continually gather data about your sales org because ramp time will depend entirely on your sales orgâs performance and hopefully become shorter over time. Find the right balance. Research from Gong.io shows significant ROI resulting from a decreased ramp timeâsales reps who were fully onboarded in five months made $80,000 more in their first year than sales reps with the same quota who were onboarded in seven months.Â
However, be honest about your expected ramp rate. Sales reps shouldnât feel overloaded, and an accurate timeline will also help you adjust your hiring plans to bring on additional staff who can fill the gaps until new sales reps perform at 100%.
Balance training with application
One of the biggest mistakes that sales orgs can make during the sales orientation process is the data dump.
A sales rep that starts at a new company is subjected to all-day training sessions for the first week or two, where they see slide after slide of sample call scripts, company messaging, and rules of engagement. While this strategy conveys a lot of useful information very quickly, many reps canât retain that much information. The human brain struggles with knowledge retention, which means reps can forget as much as 87% of their onboarding within the month if it isnât reinforced or reps arenât required to use it.
If you want onboarded reps to bring in customers faster, you need to require reps to apply the information theyâre learning, explain messaging beyond pitching the product or service, ask reps to practice their pitch with other reps, and review best practices for processing and qualifying leads. This allows your sales reps to process the information on various levels and even put it into practice while itâs fresh.
Speaking of practice, donât wait too long to give your reps the opportunity to put their skills to work. Simulated activities have their place, but a real-life sales situation can expose your rep to the questions, experiences, and stakes involved in an actual pitch.Â
Incorporate product training
While you should definitely spend time training on sales processes and best practices, donât forget about an often overlooked but essential aspect of the job: Your sales reps need to understand your product or service. Not only will they need to demo the product, but to provide an optimal buyer experience, they will need to know how to link your solution to pain points that the customer faces.Â
Coordinate with your product education team or even your engineering and product development teams to show reps how the product works, why it was designed this way, and what is coming up next for the product. You may want to consider using visuals, such as current and future state diagrams, so itâs clear to sales reps how the product will be implemented and what effect it can have on a customer.
Remember: Demonstrating value is different than being able to explain product features. New reps also need to know who is buying the product and how it provides value to these potential customersâor none of the product knowledge they have learned will matter. Coordinate with your marketing team to show your new reps buyer personas, case studies, testimonials, and potential use cases, then test reps on their knowledge.
Itâs all about balance. Practice selling skills that will improve repsâ performance and contribute to their personal development and growth, but donât leave out your company-specific product knowledge that will help reps build trust with customers.Â