“It doesn’t matter which side of the fence you get off on sometimes. What matters most is getting off. You cannot make progress without making decisions.” —Jim Rohn

When sales cycles are longer than management wants and deals drag on and on, I am called in to troubleshoot the problem. I do this enough that I have a list of 10 steps I go through, so if you're dealing with this issue I'll share a few.
1. Troubleshoot new cycles, not old ones
Once a sales cycle is moving it's hard to change the direction. When troubleshooting, the temptation is to go back and get creative with current deals. The key is to change future sales cycles. Don't stress about what was missed in a current cycle. Approach the new cycles with the idea that you want Yes's or No's to happen faster. What's done is done, let it go.
2. Opportunity development
The bigger the promised outcome, the harder the prospect works to get the deal done. ROI in the minds of most sales people is new sales, cost savings, or time saved which are great, but they are lagging indicators and push ROI calculations down the road which adds time to the sales cycle. If I'm generating more leads, for instance, a company has to wait a year to see the impact on sales. . .making it harder to take immediate action.
Asking for leading indicators helps speed up sales cycles because it moves the prospect's ROI thinking closer to today. To use the same example, if more sales from the more leads is how the CFO will determine ROI, ask what early indicators will tell them they're on the right path. How will they measure early progress? How will they know it's working? It's not uncommon to get blank stares for these questions, so be prepared to help with language like, "other people in your situation, looking for the same results, look at X or Y. . ."
3. Decision Process Mapping
Once an opportunity is fully developed (which is the #1 way my clients bump sales) the next item to troubleshoot is understanding the client's decision process. In most companies there will be multiple buyers in a decision. Working with your contact to map the sales cycle speeds up the process. I have seen it referred to as "working the steps" because it's easy to think about decisions as steps in a process.
Start by having your buyer list the steps of the decision process. The language is simple, "tell me about the steps your company takes to make a decision like this." We don't ask our contact how THEY make a decision or WHO ELSE is involved - we start by listing the steps.
Step 1
Step 2
Step 3
Most companies haven't formalized a decision making process, so often this step is immensely useful to them.
Once we have their steps, we need to know what decision is made in each step. "Since these are the steps, let's talk about what decision is made in each step."
Step 1 - what decision?
Step 2 - what decision?
Step 3 - what decision?
Now it's time to ask who makes that decision in that step. Doing it in this order (steps, what decision, who makes it?) reveals more people, more buyers, you need to visit.
Step 1 - what decision? - who makes it?
Step 2 - what decision? - who makes it?
Step 3 - what decision? - who makes it?
You need to talk to all of the "who's" on your list because the fourth part of the grid is "and what criteria will they use to make the decision?" Will they just sit and think? Will they compare to competitors? Will they consult someone?
Step 1 - what decision? - who makes it? - how do they decide?
Step 2 - what decision? - who makes it? - how do they decide?
Step 3 - what decision? - who makes it? - how do they decide?
Besides working on opportunity development, working decision lists creates the second biggest jump in speeding up sales cycles (and it makes sales bigger, which is interesting).
4. Dig Into Resources
Sales cycles develop along these lines: identifying companies is first, identifying buyers is second, building opportunities follows etc. Here's the cycle I have in my head:

As you develop opportunities, it's natural to cover resources. There are 3 main kinds of resources - Money, People, Time - and most business development people focus their energy on money because it's important. I maintain that the speed of your sales cycle depends just as much on People and Time . . .because the secret in sales is there is always money. If the outcome is big enough, money always turns up. Over time, I've found the hardest parts of delivery are either people oriented or timing oriented. People refers to both internal and external workers, who is doing what? And timing is when the results need to happen. Sooner is harder, later is easier. Concentrating on people and timing resources as much as you focus on money will speed up sales cycles because it helps the prospect envision the outcome in clearer terms.
Those four are a good start.
If you find them helpful, good. If you have questions, ask. If it's stuff you already know, I'm happy to be a reminder.
The Business Development seminar I'm hosting in Sept. is all about opportunity development because it's the fastest route to fast sales cycles. If you're curious, click here.
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