Ask before advocating

An essential quality of effective sales coaching is collaboration between the sales manager and the salesperson, where both co-create and implement
a plan to improve skills — the opposite of telling.

In order to avoid telling and instead create a collaborative sales coaching environment, a sales manager should enter into each sales coaching conversation with a mindset of asking before advocating, says David Jacoby, managing partner at Sales Readiness Group.

Good sales coaching questions to ask include:

What…

•   What else did the customer say?

•   What surprised you about the customer’s reaction?

•   What did you notice when you started asking the customer more questions?

So what…

•   So what did you notice?

•   So what went well?

•   So what could have been executed better?

Now what…

•   Now what steps would you take?

•   Now what would you do differently?

•   Now what questions do you have?

Assume best intentions

Sales coaching should never be viewed as remedial or a punishment for poor performance. Great sales coaches assume their salespeople want to improve their skills. Making this assumption, says Jacoby, helps create a positive environment where the salesperson is motivated to engage in behavior change.

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