Conducting sales training at a national sales meeting is a common practice but typically doesn't result in sustainable selling skills improvement. The key reason for this lack of effectiveness is that it's almost impossible to impact behavior change through a standalone training event.
To make training at a national sales meeting effective, sales leaders must be realistic and intentional about how much time they can dedicate to training, the number of participants to be trained, and the training objectives.
If the time allocation is relatively short (half-day or less), some realistic ideas include:
If the time allocation is 1- 2 days, the training should focus on actual skills development. To maximize the learning experience, it's important to make sure that the program has the essential elements to create a sustainable change in sales behaviors. These elements include pre-training consultation and customization, post-training reinforcement, and ongoing coaching by frontline managers.
Here are a couple of ideas to maximize the impact of sales training at National Sales Meetings:
It's also important to think through the overall number of participants to ensure that the training will be effective. In the case of the short (half-day) format, either the industry expert or program launch can be delivered to large groups (50+ participants).
For the training workshop or skill application session to be effective (1 – 2-day format), the group sizes should be much smaller (16 – 30 participants per group) to allow for a high level of engagement, and personalized coaching by the facilitator. As an example, a team of 100 sales professionals at a national sales meeting could be trained as four separate groups (25 participants per group).
Lastly, and perhaps most important, it's essential to make sure that the overall meeting doesn’t include so much content (e.g., marketing, product, sales enablement, selling skills) that your sales participants walk away overwhelmed. Instead, they should leave confident and enthusiastic about the company’s direction and their role in achieving this vision.