Case Study

Improving the customer journey

Insight

We were approached by an IT service business to help improve their sales process due to internal friction. The sales team were capable and motivated, yet whilst their tech team was well-intentioned, misalignment led to deals getting missed.

When we started digging it turned out the cause of this misalignment was a subtle misunderstanding of exactly how their customers handled purchasing decisions.

Firstly, there was a lack of clarity about roles and responsibilities. In principle it was understood that Sales did the selling whilst Tech provided the equipment. The problems arose when Sales sold something that was out of stock. Or Tech substituted something the customer hadn’t specified.

The second challenge was how and when Quotes were used. It’s quick and easy to send out a quote and those who are interested will negotiate. The problem with this is that a quote is only meaningful and compelling if it delivers against the customer’s needs – and if the quote is produced too early this can be missed.

Improving the customer journey

Solution

Our first suggestion to our client was that working through a process solution had the potential to be a bit uninspiring. So we set up an interactive workshop with the key people to make sure everyone was physically active and emotionally engaged. To make it even more real we brought along one of the client’s biggest customers.

Mapping sales process for a small business is a relatively simple task, so assessing the critical steps was quite easy. The customer input was startling, though. What felt to our client like a frustrating wait for confirmation of order was actually a tough period of navigating internal stakeholders and budgets for their customer. How could they make that smoother?

The breakthrough internally was when we started using a RACI tool to agree who should be doing what. This is a widely-used means of mapping responsibilities to tasks.

Not surprisingly it turned out much of the work in making a sale happen was done by the sales team (they largely carried the R for responsible). But assessing who was Accountable (the A) helped identify why Tech sometimes believed they could prevent a deal from happening. This in turn helped us agree more precise timings for key sign-off decisions rather than wasting time on re-work later in the process.

Outcome

It became much more evident when the quote should go out to a prospect. Significant proposals were based off more robust understanding of the customer’s needs and both Sales and Tech were aligned internally on the best way of satisfying what was required.

Sometimes sales process improvements are about these small steps. It’s nice to demonstrate the glossy innovations that step-change the fortunes of a small business, but for most of us that’s not how the day-to-day plays out. Rather it’s about numerous small improvements all of which add to quicker response times, engaged teams and more rounded decisions.

Ready to achieve results like this?