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Topic : All About IT Sales
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By : Abhayaman Singh, Lecturer, BIT
Industry : IT Services Functional Area : B2B Sales
Keywords :

It Sales

Myths

Ten

Activity:  26 comments  1613 views  last activity : 03 26 2011 12:47:13 +0000
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As the economy rolls on, IT sales myths still permeate technology and professional services sales forces trying to hit their forecasted sales quotas. Like urban myths, many of these business beliefs just continue to proliferate without identified authorship or business validity.

Here are the top ten IT sales myths that are currently in vogue:

Myth One
Selling to decision influencers will increase your sales.

Reality
IT decision influencers (usually with titles like manager and director) are professional lookers who will waste your time, slow up your sales cycle and give you false information about buying needs, budgets and opportunities. Why? Because many times they are not in the information loop and just want to sound informed to you and look busy to their boss (the decision makers) by taking a meeting. Decision influencers kill IT sales.

Myth Two
Dropping prices will increase sales long-term.

Reality
Time and time again every technology business segment that has followed a commodity based pricing schema has failed. Selling down and by price is a short-term sales model that cannot sustain financial integrity. Repeat buyers by value; single sales customers buy price.


Myth Three
IT networking is better than IT cold calling for lead generation.

Reality
Another urban myth propitiated by those who do not want to cold call. IT sales reps who will not cold call are half-cycle salespeople. Yes, networking can create leads, but the quantity and the time cycle consistently will never match you cold calling 50 C-level executives each day. Networking is a long-term, minimum volume lead generation opportunity for IT salespeople. Cold calling is the IT sales pipeline of success.

Myth Four
Sales training is a cost center.

Reality
Most technology CEO's do not spend enough on IT sales training. They believe that it is more important to invest in development staff training than sales training. In fact, sales training is more important than programmer education and is a true business profit center investment. Without sales, you don't need development. CEO's can always subcontract development work - but try subcontracting your sales!

Myth Five
Clients buy technology.

Reality
Clients never buy technology. IT account managers who sell technology usually sell less. Clients buy pain management. Technology is just an enabler to repair the pain.

Myth Six
Because you were successful before 2001, you should be successful today.

Reality
Many IT firms succeeded to the 90's not because of their sales skills, but because the 90's represented the greatest buying binge since the invention of the computer. The 90's were an inbound sales model, where existing customers and new prospects called you to help them spend their technology budgets on web enablement, Windows application development or legacy transformation due to Y2K issues. In 2002 and beyond, success in technology sales is and will be based on an outbound sales model. Many IT firms this year will fail because their management teams are relying on old sales models that will not work and are not prepared to make a decision to change their business around. Instead, they will slowly shrink from lack of revenue as they hold to their lost glory days of the 90's.

Myth Seven
Marketing department responsibilities should be focused on brochures, web site communication and trade show management.

Reality
PR is not revenue, marketing is not revenue and advertising is not revenue. Revenue is revenue. The marketing department's primary business responsibility should be creating qualified sales leads for the sales team.

Myth Eight
The sales management job is to close IT sales deals.

Reality
Sales management's responsibility is to help you sell as a salesperson. That means increasing qualified lead traffic, supervising operational issues that affect your deals, updating your sales training skills, and acting as an intermediary with corporate management. That does not mean going to every sales presentation or meeting every Fortune 1000 prospect in person. But, many times this may become the norm instead of the exception because sales management usually carries the department's quota as a whole and revenue is revenue. But, why be in sales management if you have to close every deal?

Myth Nine
The more strategic partners you have, the more IT sales leads you will generate.

Reality
Strategic partnerships and alliance management is a full time job. It is definitely quality over quantity that counts. Most IT and professional firms have many strategic relationships that are worthless. Like any investment of time and money, alliances need to be quantified with an assigned quota for revenue generation and minimum expectations of lead generation volume to warrant the relationship. Partnerships must have an annual ROI or their time and effort is worthless.

Myth Ten
Question-based prospect sales probing will increase IT sales.

Reality
The fact is that asking detailed questions of IT prospects too early in the engagement process actually ends most sales cycles. You cannot cold call or engage a Senior Vice President of a Fortune 50 company the first time and start pinging them with probing business questions and expect them to answer. This myth is propitiated through fluff sales training programs and books designed for insurance and car salespeople. The fact is for technology and professional sales success to senior management teams of Fortune 1000 companies, you first must earn their respect as a business peer, not a vendor. You must first validate your knowledge about industry pains, so you can earn the right to ask investigative questions about their business needs when it is appropriate. The key to IT sales success is not probing questions; it is acting like a business peer in the boardroom with them discussing business options.

 Top Comment : Atul Chaudhary   | 04 16 2008 00:48:26 +0000
The article is excellent i don't fully agree with the third point (cold calling is better) considering the success rate is quite low w.r.t the time spend in cold calling.Networking might be a long-term, minimum volume lead generation opportunity for IT salespeople but it yields high success and also gives you the flexibility of deploying your resources for other meaningful exercises.
 
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26 comments on "Ten IT Sales Myths"
  Commented by  R.SANJAY GREGORY WILLIAMS, Manager HR, Rhytha    | 02 01 2010 05:38:07 +0000
Excellent  post it really helped in identifying what to looking for in the IT sales and marketing professional 
  Commented by  Girish Nair, HR & BD Executive, I-Link Software Pvt. Ltd.    | 10 23 2008 08:54:36 +0000
nice one
  Commented by  japi, HR Manager, ACME Consultants    | 10 23 2008 06:37:29 +0000
nice article..........................
  Commented by  Manjunath Patil, Marketing Analyst, ORACLE Corporation    | 10 22 2008 13:04:08 +0000
A good one.But I don't agree with you on Myth 1 and 8 of your article, it varies on case basis.

I really liked the Myth 2 one, many companies falter on that.
  Commented by  Lakshmi Narasimhan, Project Manager, Tata Consultancy Services    | 10 14 2008 18:05:47 +0000
Rating : +1 
Good One. Thanks for sharing.  I had another point to add, clients not just buy "Pain Management", but they also buy "Pleasures" to their existing portfolio.  

All said & done for commuting a small car is sufficient, but there are a lot of instances, a Sedan is sold, so along with Pain Management extra pleasures also get sold.  That needs to be sold by the Sales guy, he must command the premium or the "Value" mentioned in your article.
  Commented by  varsha mishra, Analytical Chemistry Manager, rfrac    | 10 14 2008 17:50:27 +0000
very good...article
  Commented by  Hardik Patel, Team Lead (Staffing and Recruitment), Rishabh Softwares Pvt. Ltd. / Rishi Infotech Pvt. Ltd    | 07 23 2008 09:44:44 +0000
Rating : +1 
Good One.
  Commented by  Deepali Gulati, Program Manager, Nvish Solutions Pvt. Ltd    | 07 18 2008 22:04:41 +0000
Rating : +1 
Good one, thanks for sharing.
  Commented by  Sourav Chatterjee, IT Engineer- CMC Limited-ATata Enterprise    | 07 17 2008 23:24:08 +0000
Rating : +1 
informative indeed
  Commented by  Vikram Sahay Mathur, AVP SALES & MARKETING eon Technologies    | 07 17 2008 22:58:32 +0000
Rating : 0 
Very interesting and informative article. Couple ofpoints I would totally agree onand could differ on a point or two. Overall an informative articly for all sales pros.
  Commented by  Deepak Singh, Sales/BD Manager, Buyplm    | 06 29 2008 21:53:21 +0000
Rating : +1 
Excellent article..facts told the way reality is..great.At times we dont accept the facts which contradict the established practices.
Good myth busting by IITian.
  Commented by  Sourav Chatterjee, IT Engineer- CMC Limited-ATata Enterprise    | 06 29 2008 21:38:47 +0000
Rating : +1 
excelent article
  Commented by  Sourav Chatterjee, IT Engineer- CMC Limited-ATata Enterprise    | 06 29 2008 21:38:14 +0000
Rating : +1 
good one
  Commented by  Rohit Mittal, Head/VP/GM-Sales Finedgeindia (P) Ltd.    | 06 22 2008 08:38:13 +0000
Rating : +2 
Quite an informative article. Keep sharing such goodies!!;)
  Commented by  Bhanwar Singh, Assistant Manager - Business Development, Harbinger Knowledge Products    | 06 13 2008 14:26:47 +0000
Rating : +3 
really good article...it seems I should attend some of your lectures.. 
  Commented by  Dipak Mawale, Senior Executive, Harbinger Knowledge Products    | 06 13 2008 14:00:10 +0000
Rating : +4 
Thanks for sharing this with us
  Commented by  Syed Feroz, Presales analysis Vertex Offshore Services    | 05 28 2008 06:37:09 +0000
Rating : +4 
Abhayaman, I thank you for providng such an eye opening article
  Commented by  Nagaraj, Sales/BD Manager Orbit    | 05 12 2008 10:35:05 +0000
Rating : +5 
This article is very excellent one and is a learning for each and every sales member. Only we need to adapt in our sales functions and put into practice. At end of the day we should have focussed sales approach ... which yields better results
  Commented by  Sagar Singh, Sales/BD Manager, Celtem Knowledge Solutions Pvt Ltd    | 05 04 2008 23:14:46 +0000
Rating : +4 
Although all the points have its importance but tenth point is the real one......excellent article....
  Commented by  Madhukar P, Sales/BD Manager, Ambtech    | 05 02 2008 02:01:41 +0000
Rating : +4 
good article
  Commented by  Murali Krishna Kesapragada, CEO/MD/Director, Versatile World    | 04 22 2008 02:24:17 +0000
Rating : +6 
Excellent Article.
I completely support point 3. Cold calling was for a long time ignored by IT Sales people as they thought it was not meant for them. Its only recently that they've realised the importance of cold calling. You can find instances wherein a sale could be a result of a normal sales call still the sales team/person mentions it as from contact/networking to be  "with the crowd". 

Its better everyone realises the importance of this and provide enough training to the sales teams in this regard.
  Commented by  Anand Narendra, Tech Architect, AN    | 04 17 2008 09:52:08 +0000
Rating : +4 
excellent article
  Commented by  Atul Chaudhary, Business development    | 04 16 2008 00:48:26 +0000
Rating : +6 
The article is excellent i don't fully agree with the third point (cold calling is better) considering the success rate is quite low w.r.t the time spend in cold calling.Networking might be  a long-term, minimum volume lead generation opportunity for IT salespeople but it yields high success and also gives you the flexibility of deploying your resources for other meaningful exercises. 
  Commented by  Md Abubucker AlAthick J, Training Manager, Accenture Services Limited    | 04 10 2008 19:59:28 +0000
Rating : +4 
thanks for sharing this nice article....
  Commented by  Uttio Putatunda, Head/VP/GM-Sales, Bentley Systems India Pvt Ltd    | 01 06 2008 22:02:20 +0000
Rating : +4 
This is really good but needs more deep insight
  Commented by  kr rajesh, Sales Executive/Officer, US Based Software Company    | 12 26 2007 23:47:54 +0000
Rating : +4 
excellent
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