The Extra Mile

I’ve spent the better part of the day going through my annual “virtual” spring cleaning. I was doing some maintenance on my home PC when I started receiving some weird errors I traced to a memory problem–as in the memory test was even freezing.

I have a two-year old Dell which is still under warranty for another year. I’ve always liked their service tag approach where I could look up my warranty info online. While I was there I just happened to see a Dell Chat window. I’ve had poor experiences with these things in the past but decided to give it a chance. Here is basically what happened:

I opened up the chat window and got connected to a tech in under a minute. After a brief intro to the problem we ran a few tests and found it to be one of my memory sticks. Just to be on the safe side he offered to overnight me two replacement sticks. He was very cordial and I never got a hint that he was copying and pasting from a script. After the session I received a copy of the conversation along with the tracking information.

Very slick.

This incremental investment by Dell to provide me this experience has given me a huge boost in confidence about its products. This is a perfect example of a company leveraging technology to improve interactions rather than as a way to cut contact and minimize cost.

This dilemma presents itself time and time again as SEs. Do you give the customer your cell number? Do you even leave your cell number on your office voicemail message? Do you give out your instant messaging name? Do you try to summarize a response in an email or do you pick up the phone? Do you give the customer the support escalation desk number or do you make the call for them?

Each situation is different, but here my point: My experience with Dell was only fantastic because I am so use to others’ mediocrity at best and complete incompetence at the worst. Every time you go do just a little bit better by your customer you are helping create that experience that customers crave.

When you do this consistently you are creating a value-add for your company that is extremely hard for a competitor to overcome with product features. To me, spending that little extra time to go the extra mile is time very, very well spent.

Happy holidays everyone!
Darrin

Review – The Evolving Sales Engineer

In my third book review I turn my attention to The Evolving Sales Engineer by Edward Levine.

The Evolving Sales Engineer
Hardcover: 252 pages
ISBN-10: 1598584146
2 Reviews on Amazon.com
5 star:    (2)
4 star:     (0)
3 star:     (0)
2 star:     (0)
1 star:     (0)

Managing the Evolving SE

The book is broken down into three sections. Section 1 focuses on strategies for SE managers to coach SEs into “evolved” status.

Assessing Current Talent

The first step involves ranking and counting your SEs based on how high up the food chain they interact. The four categories move from technical users to their managers to non-technical managers and finally VPs and above. The result is a broad pattern you can further investigate.

Charting Competencies

In suggesting the creation of a competency matrix, a rather detailed approach is illustrated. This begins with the list and grouping of critical SE skills. Compare each of these needs against their applicability to each of the four groups from the previous chapter. For each group, a separate list of each applicable skill is listed with meets/doesn’t meet checkbox.

Depending on which group you think the SE should be achieving at is the assessment level you use. For any lacking skills, then next assessment is an able/willing analysis. This forms the basis of the manager’s corrective approach.

What I like about this method is that it breaks up the typical 1-5 skill rating into multiple dimensions. When starting out I was pretty good at technical presentations but had much to learn about presenting to CXOs.

The down side is that some people may have the opposite problem. Comparison against the highest group only will cause you to miss blind spots lower on the chain. If you use this approach I recommend you make the comparison for each level to ensure nothing is missed.

Choosing and Developing Talent

After a brief look at the considerations to be made before searching for talent, interviewing styles are introduced. For SEs, situational questions are ideal. There is also a nice tie in to using the skills identified in the previous chapter is the basis for creating your situational questions.

For example if “Dealing with difficult meeting participants” is a required skill, your situational question would go something like this: “Tell me about a time you had a difficult meeting participant. What happened and how did you respond to the situation.”

Next, various types of training are explored. The big take away is the importance behind reinforcing your development programs. The need to continually emphasize and promote the program is the real way to affect long-term change.

I’m not a huge fan of situational questions; I rely almost exclusively on a combination of heavy screening based on references and in-person presentations. Then again, not everyone may have this luxury and may find it useful. I did like the idea of mapping these questions to your desired competency levels. I also couldn’t agree more about reinforcing development goals. I covered it in some detail here.

Coaching

The author makes the distinction that feedback is an event while coaching is a program. The important lesson is that this program needs to have defined goals and an action plan. He then outlines a recommended process of setting the climate, confirming understanding, being specific, co-creating an action plan, summarizing with benefits, and finally committing to follow up sessions.

One tip that I thought important was the need to craft your coaching around the personality of the coachee. I personally thrive on critical feedback and appreciate prescriptive recommendations. Others prefer a facilitative style. To be most effective you need to work within this mindset.

Coaching in general is something I’m a huge fan of, but honestly not good at following up on. I probably need to do some research on the subject. Though the word “SE” was used throughout, unfortunately I didn’t find much information specific to coaching the SE archetype which would have been infinitely more valuable.

Strategic Thinking

The second section focuses on critical thinking, creativity in the sales process, and understanding and dealing with complexities. To me this section is about understanding the motions rather than just going through them.

Being Perceived as Strategic

To condense the chapter, the basic messages are to be able to understand the business, the big picture, and to become trusted. The underlying idea is not to lead with technology, but with an understanding of the customer and being able to solve business problems with technology. Once you demonstrate competency with more than your own technology, you are perceived as being able to add a higher level of value. Assuming you demonstrate tact with confidential data, you then can also become a trusted advisor.

Mapping Client Organizations

Levine provides a three-part criteria model for mapping players in your opportunities. This includes the degree of decision authority they have, how much of a supporter they are, and whether they are threatened by the sale in any way. Using a combination of rating on each, you get a clearer idea about the map of the client

He emphasizes the need for simplicity in the model, which I agree with 100%. If you are without a sales methodology this may be useful. If your company has one, I would stick with that. Rather than doing this yourself, I would always use encourage the AE to manage the document with you providing input.

Reacting to Competition

Competition is a tricky subject. The chapter covers some of the basics including not bashing the competition, being able to position using competitive pitfalls, and not over asserting your knowledge of others’ products.

Of particular importance is the caution provided around contrasting features with the competition. Because you do not work for them you are surely not privy to specific roadmap elements and their own competitive positioning. In my experience this is has been a huge source of lost credibility for SEs that state something that contradicts what a prospect believes about the product, even if the SE is technically correct.

Understanding Office Politics

If there is one thing trickier than dealing with competitors it is dealing with politics. The author devotes significant time to this topic—more than I can cover here. Much of the advice would be found in books such as Carnegie’s How to Win Friends and Influence People.

The key piece of advice is that when you meet customers you cannot be sure of their motivations. Because of this you need to be observant of their corporate culture and personal actions. There are some good example walkthroughs in the text.

In my experience, often when you see someone acting irrationally, it is only because you don’t know enough about the person or their situation. Many times the source is political. I personally detest “playing” politics, but not being aware of reality will make you far less effective.

Keeping Account Managers Happy

This is all about communication. Pre-call planning, not making concessions without prior discussion, and coordinated presentations are the cornerstones mentioned. The first part of the chapter also addressed the “rep envy” comments that arise from time to time. Understanding the ups and downs and additional pressures on an AE demonstrate the counterbalance to the (sometimes) higher pay and higher visibility.

In my experience, if you do most of things outlined in this book well, add good communication and a joint planning process, you will have a fantastic relationship with your AE. This is true even in lean times and even when personalities don’t mesh well.

Tactical Essentials

The third section covers specific elements of “evolved” SEs. Although you could probably just rename this chapter to “Miscellaneous.”  I will briefly highlight the main point of each.

Maintain a Proper Airtime Ratio

Don’t make the mistake of talking when you should be listening. While the correct ratio depends on the situation, a good rule of thumb is 50/50.

If you have a rep with you I would divide your 50 between the two of you.

Tee-Up the Conversation

Define process up front to your meetings. Establish a win/win reason for the conversation, define the steps to follow, and implement timelines.

Ask Thought-Provoking Questions

Ask open-ended questions, but not the same typical questions. Ask questions that generally require thought before answering such as “how do you see your systems evolving over time.”

I know what the author is getting at, but use these techniques very sparingly or you risk sounding contrived.

Look Expensive

You should look expensive because your products are expensive and you want to those perceptions aligned. You can overdue it but you should generally position yourself in the upper end of the spectrum.

Optimize Email Use

Be very careful with the words you use in email because nonverbal queues are not available. Understand the receiver may not interpret sarcasm or emotion in the text the way you meant them. Despite the ease of use, it is not a replacement for most types of conversations.

Plan What Not to Share

Rather than withholding information, this is more about focusing your communication down to the essential. When situations arise where you feel unethical about not sharing specific information, if you cannot work it out with your AE you should involve your manager.

See a Problem, Probe It

Instead of trying to resolve or provide a quick fix to a problem, engage the client and fully probe and understand the problem before jumping to a solution. Not only does this show a greater appreciation of the situation, it also provides more color so that can better target your reply.

Create a Gap

Think of a movie, it wouldn’t be much fun if you just cut to the ending. When presenting solutions, also demonstrate the process of how you arrived at the solution. Not only does it show a more thorough approach, but it builds anticipation for the unveiling.

Keep You, Not your Slides, the Star of the Show

This is a lengthy chapter on presentation techniques. As I mentioned in previous reviews, you’re much better off studying presenting as a standalone art form.

Satisfy Personal Needs

Similar to the chapter on politics, the SE should be aware of the personal goals and needs of clients. When it is mutually advantageous you should seek opportunities to meet these needs.

My Recommendation

At about a $30 price point and 200 pages of content, I’d rate this as a nice to have for SEs, but not essential. I’d rate it slightly more important for SE managers or those senior SEs that feel they have topped out and are looking for new angles to explore.

Pros

I feel Levine did a good job of capturing his experiences as a development consultant working with SEs and SE organizations. Almost all of the chapters have relevant examples and sample conversations which help illustrate the topics. Rather than rehash many of the fundamentals he was able to keep the book more concise by focusing more on the standard deltas he sees between junior and senior SEs.

The first section of the book on development, as well as the chapter on dealing with politics, was covered in greater detail here than in any of the other books I’ve read.

Levine definitely comes across as an experienced and knowledgeable individual regarding the role of the SE. Even senior SEs and managers should be able to find numerous useful bites of information.

Cons

I think Levine’s sweet spot is the coaching and development aspect of his work. I got the sense that other parts of the book were a compendium of miscellaneous hot button tips picked up over a long period of time. A few of the other topics were simply highlights from other disciplines and not related specifically back to the role of the SE which would have been more helpful. I struggle with this myself in my writing.

I think if he expanded on the coaching and development as a book unto itself it could have made an A grade. I don’t think the unique challenges of developing SEs have been fully explored.

He worked in a few subtle plugs for his consulting practice, but I didn’t ding him too much for that since I can’t say I wouldn’t have done the same ;)

Fight the Bull!

As I have covered before, our choice of words is critical. This point again was echoed in my conversation with John Care (see The Perfect Pitch section). Even with this knowledge firmly in mind, I still find “bull” words creeping into my articles and emails.

Help is here! I came across a great little utility called Bullfighter. It’s an add-in for Word and PowerPoint that searches for “filtered, jargon-filled corporate speak.” I’m using it with Office 2007.

Simply install the application and run the utility on any documents you want reviewed. It works very much like Spellchecker and even makes replacement suggestions—very cool! You can also get a score (called a Bull Index) on your document before and after you run it.

I also really like that it attempts to analyze your writing style by measuring average word count per sentence and average syllables per word. These scores will force your attention on being concise and using plain language.

I plan on using this on all my articles and lengthier emails and will track my scores over time. I’ll post my results in a brief follow-up.

One thing I did notice right away is how many words it considers “bull” that I wouldn’t have considered. I even started arguing internally a bit :) . That is to say, if nothing else, it’ll make you think.

Enjoy! I would love to hear any personal results you achieve. Just for the record, here is my score for this article:

Sales Engineer MBOs

I recently covered some of the different compensation split options available for Sales Engineers at a very high level. This prompted a few questions, mostly around the use of MBOs. As a follow-up, let me go into the various options available to SE management as well as some common pitfalls.

MBOs are targeted performance goals. As such they should always follow the SMART approach. Even though a standard quota plan is just an example of an MBO, most sales/SE managers use the term more to apply to goals other than sales targets. For this article, I will refer to it in its more general sense.

The Four Pillars

Others may group them differently, but to me there are 4 categories of MBOs for SEs:

  1. Business/financial
  2. Employee satisfaction/enablement
  3. Customer satisfaction
  4. Process (continuous) improvement

This ensures that the 3 main stakeholders in business are accounted for: shareholders/owners, employees, and customers.

Business/Financial

These are the goals that concentrate on the financial statements and address the needs of shareholders or owners. I suppose this is technically a euphemism for “shareholder satisfaction” These are also the most common compensation plan metrics—sometimes the only one (over 70% of SEs have a bonus plan tied to sales/revenue). This is even more so for AEs. Here are some options that may be available depending on your company’s revenue reporting capabilities:

  • Percent attainment of quota
  • Number of new customers
  • Number of tradeshows attended
  • Percent time spent in customer-facing activities
  • Percent growth in pipeline
  • Percent growth in average opportunity size
  • Percent decline in average opportunity age
  • Percent decline in assigned opportunities without SE involvement/tasks
  • Percent growth in deals won with SE involvement or specific activity (e.g. POC)
  • Percent growth in deals won vs. competition or specific competitors

Employee Satisfaction/Enablement

There is a host of revenue generating activities that are not specific to one’s own accounts. Creating sales collateral and supporting other account teams are specific examples. This category also applies to activities that go to morale boosters which address the needs of the employee stakeholder. Examples include:

  • Number of supplemental sales/marketing/support/implementation collateral created (and shared!)
  • Number of opportunities assisting regional sales teams in your personal niche
  • Number of posts on company bulletin boards or other social networking contributions
  • Number of published trip/win/loss reports
  • Number of informal training sessions (e.g. lunch and learns) delivered

Customer Satisfaction

Goals in this category encourage positive and long-term relationships with customers, which is in everyone’s best interest. These can include:

  • Number of repeat customers (renewals)
  • Number of published case studies or customer references
  • Percent achievement on customer sat surveys
  • Number of customer requested product features submitted to product management

Process (continuous) Improvement

Each of the other categories addressed a specific business stakeholder. Process improvement is a very broad category that concentrates on the foundational goals that generate continuous improvement in each of the others. This is best illustrated by the concept of moving the fulcrum over, or sharpening the saw in Covey terminology. It covers everything from contributions to business process improvement to personal development. Examples include:

  • Number trainings attended
  • Acquisition of a new skill or certification
  • Percent of activities documented in CRM
  • Contribution to special projects
  • Time management goals

Flexibility

Each of these basic options can be tailored (and weighted too) in numerous ways limited only by your creativity and ability to get at the data. You can focus these goals on specific products, business segments, or even competitors so that they align to company strategy.

Pitfalls

With the ability to be flexible also comes the possibility of actually lowering productivity if you aren’t wise in how you approach them. Some of the most common pitfalls include:

  • Not keeping them SMART. The biggest culprit here always seems to be measurability. In many cases a desired result is qualitative. In these cases I employ “correlated result” approach where I seek out measureable events that typically lead to (or are correlated with) the desired result I am after. Example: It’s difficult to measure someone’s product knowledge, so the measureable result is attending a training, passing a specific test, etc.
  • Not publishing continuous results. We all need immediate feedback to make the biggest impact on results. If you’re only reviewing quarterly or (gulp) annually, you’ll find the process very ineffective and discouraging.
  • Reliance on manual compilation. If you need to manually jump through hoops to get the data you need it is that much harder to integrate them into daily practice. Automate the process whenever possible.
  • No scoreboard. Even if you just keep it in your team, your people need to benchmark. Friendly competition in my experience is good. The best will benchmark against themselves. Keep it updated frequently.
  • Tedious recordkeeping. If your SEs have to spend an inordinate amount of time entering data so that you can report on it, your program is destined for failure (or minimally noncompliance).
  • Unintended consequences. Over reliance on these metrics leads to pressure to game the system. Communicate the spirit of the goals and the behavior you are wanting to see.
  • Top down only. When each of us is involved in setting our own goals, we feel natural ownership. Involve your team in the creation process, even if by a committee that standardizes them for the entire organization. No taxation without representation!
  • Not communicating the why. If your SEs don’t know why something is important, you will have a difficult time getting ownership of the number.
  • Metric overload. Anything over 10-12 goals starts to become overwhelming. Keep is short and sweet.
  • Business only. We in Sales are naturally focused on business results. Over-weighting your goals in Business ignores other stakeholders and ultimately leads to lowered effectiveness.

Hopefully this gives you a head start on crafting your own MBO program. By no means is my list comprehensive and should be thought of as a starting point of discussion. Mastering Technical Sales also has a balanced scorecard that may be helpful that matches fairly well with this post. I’m also working on a template for me to use personally that I will include here in the future.

Reducing Home Lab Clutter with Synergy

As someone that had quite an extensive lab set up at home, this application is a lifesaver. Synergy basically allows you to control multiple machines using the same keyboard or mouse–even across multiple OSs. The main difference between Synergy and a KVM is the “V”. Synergy assumes you use different monitors. I would typically have 3-4 monitors on so I could see multiple views at once. Plus, the clipboard share is a huge timesaver.

From the Synergy website:

Synergy lets you easily share a single mouse and keyboard between multiple computers with different operating systems, each with its own display, without special hardware. It’s intended for users with multiple computers on their desk since each system uses its own monitor(s).

Redirecting the mouse and keyboard is as simple as moving the mouse off the edge of your screen. Synergy also merges the clipboards of all the systems into one, allowing cut-and-paste between systems. Furthermore, it synchronizes screen savers so they all start and stop together and, if screen locking is enabled, only one screen requires a password to unlock them all. Learn more about how it works.

Carrying Buckets

Once a company expands its portfolio to 2 or more products, a question arises: Should sales (and SEs) be specifically incentivized to sell all of them. And, if so, how?

You run into ethical issues if you have competing products (such as stocks in a brokerage or mortgages for a loan broker) that encourage sales to put themselves ahead of the customer. We’ll assume your company has a portfolio of mostly complementary products and simply want reps evenly focused on all or other specific products.

Incenting SEs

Ways in which I have seen this done—both directly and indirectly—include:

  • Directing specific incentives for sales reps – SEs typically have to, or should, follow the reps lead with a customer
  • Quota buckets – Having separate quotas for each product
  • SPIFFs – a bonus for specific sale or activity
  • MBO – a bonus typically not tied to specific quota attainment

While these are usually monetary based they could also be tied to awards or rewards such as club attendance.

Trouble Spots

Here are a few things to avoid when leveraging the options above.

  • Not inclusive – Only incenting reps has two problems. 1) it creates a dividing line between reps and SEs, and 2) it can create animosity when SEs are doing a lot of the specific work to drive the desired behavior and are not seeing any of the direct reward.
  • No alignment – Don’t have competing objectives. The simplest way to ensure rep/SE alignment are to have comprehensive programs meaning both take part in the same programs rather than creating separate ones. I’ve seen misalignment more often than one might think.
  • Not immediate – Year long programs don’t yield the results and focus that quarterly programs do. You need long-term programs to maintain momentum and continuity, but always try to attach quarterly milestones. This way the SEs receive immediate reward and the positive reinforcement.
  • Not realistic – This is especially important for shorter-term programs. If your average sales cycle is 9 months for a product you’re promoting, don’t set the 1st quarter SPIFF on revenue goals of the product. The SPIFF money will only go to those that already have the sale in their pipeline. It also negatively incentivizes sales teams to push the sales cycle which may be poor for customer relations.
  • Too complex – The bigger the product portfolio the more temptation exists to build in qualifiers and rules to address every situation and product. Keep the programs extremely simple and make the purpose behind clause easy to understand and clearly mapped back to corporate strategy. People are very willing to accept these decisions as long as they understand the reasoning behind them.

Finally, make sure all details are well communicated and understood as early in the term as possible. Poorly defined compensation plans are one of the biggest morale killers in a sales/SE force I have seen.

Quick test – Are you being proactive?

I was going through and organizing my calendar the other day when I decided to check in with myself on my progress towards my goal of better organization. A while back I had gone through and color coded my calendar and also started documenting where I was spending my time. I knew I needed to get a better handle on where my time was going if I wanted to manage it.

If I look at where much of my time was going, most of the entries (not including the ones I went back and added) were generated by others. Since that time, most of my calendar entries are self generated. This isn’t to say I’m spending vastly more time in meetings, but that I am generating/accepting meetings from topics or agenda items that I initiated.

Seeing it from this perspective for the first time was very exciting!

From that I devised a quick test you can perform to gain the same insight.

  1. Select a review period. A quarter works well but you can use a typical week too in a pinch.
  2. Tally your time. This is easy with color codes but you can do it manually too. For each entry, log the length of the meeting and label it as proactive if you set the agenda (even if working with a rep/customer) . Label it reactive if someone else set the meeting and you had little or no say in the agenda. Also included in this category is any firefighting and non-scheduled activities. Yes, this includes the last minute RFP you had to drop everything for and spend 4 hours on.
  3. Review the comparison. The more time you’re spending on the former, the more proactive you are being with your time.
  4. Check back in.With this quick test, try performing next week, month, quarter, etc. and see if you can start moving the needle.

It’s pretty easy to think (or even assert) that you are managing your own time; it’s another to have a datapoint that can confirm your story.

If you want to get more exact and/or automate the process, you can export your calendar and use color codes to sort your time and perform calculations. Save the template you create and every quarter you can create a visual depiction of your time slices.