15 Expert B2B Sales Hacks to Try Now
September 8, 2014
Dive into a collection of cutting edge sales strategies, tactics, and hacks employed by experts and B2B salespeople at the top of their game.
With the latest Sales Hacker Conference scheduled for September 15th in Boston, Sales Hacker Media founder and CEO Max Altschuler takes a look back at previous conferences and recalls 15 of the best B2B sales hacks presented there, from experts like John Barrows, Kyle Porter, Jason Lemkin, Tawheed Kader, and more.
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Hack #1: “Become a hero maker”Farlan Dowell, VP of Sales at Upsight, @farlandowellRemember to keep your champion uppermost in your mind when dealing with corporate buyers. Your champion cares more about themselves individually than he or she does about their company. Often their highest priority is their salary, not equity or stock like you may have. Make your champion look good to their boss. Be sure to provide the tools they need to sell upwards. Make them a hero. |
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Hack #2: “On a scale of 1 to 10”Orla Moran, Director of Sales EMEA at New RelicThere’s a saying that the second best answer is No. Knowing where you stand is incredibly important in a high velocity sales org. Using the phrase “on a scale from 1-10” helps you figure out how close a person is to making a decision. The decision maker’s score also helps you understand how far along you are so you can react accordingly. |
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Hack #3: “Give new hires a few slow pitch softballs”Kyle Porter, CEO of SalesLoft, @kyleporterOften, new hires step into roles where things are a mess or they have deals in their queue that might not close for months. If possible, line up a few easy deals to build up their confidence and show what a win feels like. A quick success helps a new hire get up to speed quicker and helps create a sales culture that will keep your reps fighting through the inevitable slumps. |
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Hack #4: “The right reason at the right time”John Barrows, CEO of John Barrows Sales Training, @jbarrowsUse public info on social media like Linkedin and Twitter or an app like GageIn to find triggers that allow you to reach out using valid information at precisely the right time. Triggers include job changes, fundraising, positive press, etc. |
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Hack #5: “Make sure you’ve created a polarizing message”David Priemer VP of Sales, Salesforce, @davidpriemer*When creating a message for prospects, consider the big problem you’re solving, the universal issue you’re improving, and the target of your solution.
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Hack #6: “Persistence is the key to being a top rep”Jake Dunlap, CEO of SkaledOnce you’ve started to prospect, follow up until you have an answer, no matter how many touches it takes. Hubspot’s study found it took nine touches to reach the point of diminishing returns. Set a date and time and make a very clear ask. If you believe you have the right person, stay on top of them. |
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Hack #7: “Hire the right VP of Sales for the current stage of your company”Jason Lemkin, Managing Director at Storm Ventures, @jasonlkDon’t make the mistake of hiring the wrong person too early or too late at your company. According to Jason, 70% of SaaS VP of Sales don’t make it 12 months. He attributes this to companies not hiring a stage-appropriate VP of Sales. |
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Hack #8: “Outsourcing prospecting can save you more than $76 per appointment set”Jaspar Weir, President of TaskUs, @jasparweirSDRs are expensive and should be spending their time on the phones, not setting up appointments. The skill set required to set appointment can be outsourced, and costs significantly less than the $60K per year and overhead/benefits to pay a good SDR. Let your high value employees do the high value work. |
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Hack #9: “Salespeople should behave like mini marketers”Tawheed Kader, CEO of ToutApp @tawheedSalespeople are able to do much more in less time with all of the new technology available to them. Technology allows the rep to share relevant content their prospects might find valuable at scale (this hack goes along with John Barrow’s hack that you should always have a reason to reach out and provide value). |
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Hack #10: “You may not want every interviewee to work for you, but you want everyone to want to work for you”Carolyn Betts, CEO of Betts Recruiting @carolynbettsThis is a key concept all interviewers should understand. Don’t forget to sell the potential employee on working for your company, even if you don’t end up hiring them. Turn a job prospects into evangelists and it opens all sorts of doors. |
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Hack #11: “Be ruthless about analyzing your metrics and implement a validated sales process”Tim Bertrand, VP of WW Sales at Acquia, @timbertrandKeeping on top of your most important metrics is your only way to forecast and fix things that aren’t working. If you know what areas of your process are consistently failing, then you know where to focus your attention on fixing the sales process. |
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Hack #12: “Set goals with the buyer that have implied consequences for both parties”Matt Cameron, VP of Sales at Scripted @TMattCameronMatt compares the objection process to an armbar. When Matt was asked how does one break an armbar, his reply was, “ Don’t get in that position in the first place.” |
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Hack #13: “Specialize your sales team”Aaron Ross, CEO of Predictable Revenue, @motoceoDedicate reps to manage inbound sales, and dedicate separate reps to manage Outbound prospecting. After qualification by those teams, the deals go to the Account Executives, AKA deal closers. After the deal closes, then Customer Success gets the account (these are your “farmers” that cross sell and upsell). Keep everyone specialized and focused on what they do best. |
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Hack #14: “Sales Ops & Sales Enablement should be your next two hires after your VP of Sales”Cory Ayers, VP of Sales of Host AnalyticsSales Ops is your defense and Sales Enablement is your offense. Sales Ops is in charge of setting up your sales team with the tools and reporting they need to be more efficient. Sales Enablement gives the salespeople the ammo they need to be effective in their sales pitches. |
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Hack #15: “Take advantage of the honeymoon period by asking for a referral soon after the deal closes”Emmanuelle Skala, VP of Sales at Influitive, @elleskalaThis is a great piece of advice salespeople often forget. You just closed a deal and if you did your job right, both parties are pretty happy. Take this time to ask for a referral. Make sure you frame it as if your account is doing the person they’re referring a favor. If your new customer truly believes he or she just secured a deal on something of value, they’ll be happy to make the referral. |

Image courtesy of brittgow