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Trust improves the Learning and Development culture

Building trust is key to sustainable long term sales relationships. This is surprisingly true even for very large B2B sales, despite the availability of hard facts on the buying company’s reliability, cash flow, payment morale, etc. Trust is still key to long term relationships that don’t require controlling and compliance functions all the time.

Creating and earning trust is, therefore, a skill salespeople have to master, and indeed, a lot of sales trainings and the respective literature focusses on this soft skill as part of a well-functioning set of sales capabilities.

However, as with many interpersonal traits, the culture of trust (or lack thereof) within the selling organisation has a strong impact on their salespeople: How much of a trusting, and trustworthy environment do they work in themselves? How much does lack of trust in their abilities and activities damage their own capacity to create trusting relationships with their customers?

It is nearly impossible for a salesperson working in an environment of distrust, jealousy, and misguided internal competition, to succeed in building and maintaining open, transparent, client-focused relationships. Even if they could, the probability of those relationships being jeopardised by other areas of the business (delivery, customer service, accounting, management) seems inevitable.

Smart companies realise the immediate impact an internal culture of trust has on the external relationships with customers. So before hiring salespeople with an “air of trustworthiness” or investing in soft skill training, they first work on creating an environment that sets the scene for success in both directions, creating trust within and earning it with other business partners.

There are a number of factors contributing to mutual trust; some are based on the way people in an organisation deal with each other, their culture, values and attitudes, the consistency and reliability of the resulting behaviours and cooperation. Others are based on more concrete aspects of the work, such as resources, support, career pathways, and opportunities to strive and succeed.

Mindset of the Leadership Team

Trust is critical for the shift from a control base management culture to a supportive leadership approach that truly leverages the potential of ongoing sales training and coaching, enabling salespeople and creating a learning sales organisation.

There is always role ambiguity with a superior who on one day claims to be a team member’s coach, whilst on the next day reviews the same person’s performance. Trust is key to navigate this situation, and it has to start on the leadership side. Only if leaders can live and role-model what trusted relationships entail, are salespeople able to establish similar relationships with their clients without compromise.

Therefore, a mindset that embraces the idea of trust, loyalty, and empowerment, not just as buzzwords but as something to live by every day, is key to enabling salespeople to convey such a culture in their sales approach. The line between ongoing leadership support and micro management is thin, reward and incentive programmes need to encourage the right behaviour, not just the desired results.

The role of Learning and Development

Organisations have to abandon the Learning & Development concept that focuses on short, compact training events and embrace long term, ongoing learning and training, for example through a blend of online training programmes, coaching support through sales leaders, peer to peer learning and behaviour and quality based KPIs, paired with career pathways linked to the individual’s learning journey.

Successful businesses create a learning culture where employees don’t have to fight every year for a training budget or development opportunities. They can be trusted to provide learning and development support where and when it is actually needed.

The other important role of L&D in such organisations is to ensure the underlying framework and culture is aligned, functional, trustworthy, and providing the resources needed beyond the actual training. This includes supporting sales and CRM tools, and a commitment to consistency across the organisation’s value chain, so the business can deliver on the promises their salespeople make at any stage.

Trust and organisational complexity

Learning & Development is still shifting from isolated learning events and other training measures to creating a perpetual, integrated learning environment and culture. However, as organisations become more capable of incorporating a holistic systems approach, they are moving further into building the foundations of their sales operations with permanent links into all other parts of the organisation, horizontally and vertically.

In this sense, L&D will no longer be the obvious first step in developing sales teams. It will only successfully come into play once the underlying fabric that gives sales a solid and even foundation is in place. It will then have the opportunity to contextualise the learning content.

This is pushing L&D further away from generic sales trainings, and bringing classroom based training to yet another level of interactivity, practicality and relevance to participants. Workshops are now sales labs, where salespeople can truly work on real cases, simulate the sales process and prepare for all sorts of potential scenarios in their upcoming client meetings.

In short, organisations are picking up on the opportunity to create a safe environment for their salespeople to work on their skills and complex tasks, with their leaders and peers trusting each other, in order to achieve positive and sustainable results for the whole team and organisation. For them, trust is no longer just a desirable social virtue, but a hard economic driver for their business.

This will enable salespeople to go out to meet their clients and prospects without the fear of being caught between two possible alternatives. It enables them to give their clients that same trust they receive, and build the relationships they need to become successful beyond short term objectives.

Author: Sue Barrett, www.salesessentials.com

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