Commercial leaders have been introducing sales technology for years in an effort to boost seller productivity and efficiency. However, with the pandemic accelerating Sales’ digital transformation, vendors have accelerated the pace of introducing new sales tools and technologies, creating a complex landscape for sales leaders to navigate. Specifically, Smart Selling Tools cites that $1.5B was invested in sales software companies in just the first months of 2021, and from 2020 to late 2021, the number of sales software solutions available to B2B sales organizations increased from 976 to nearly 1200.
With this sustained activity and innovation, SBI often takes questions centered on where and how salestech is deployed most impactfully, partnering with clients to address the following types of questions –and many more:
Whether you are just getting started on your salestech roadmap or are critically evaluating the tools you have in place as you prepare for 2022, SBI suggests three key actions:
Like many complex questions, the answer to what we should have in our SalesTech stack is “it depends.” Your sales environment is unique. Sales software solutions are designed to solve specific problems, so it’s important to first consider the defining characteristics of your sales environment.
Here are a few examples:
These are not the only dependencies but aligning internal stakeholders around the answers to these questions can go a long way in laying the foundations for your roadmap.
Technology can fall into one of five stages of the sales process, sales management, or talent / enablement tools. The next step in building out a viable roadmap begins with identifying the stages where your team struggles the most today. As two examples:
Based on the unique characteristics of a sales function and its top pain points, we help commercial teams prioritize and phase the introduction of new salestech, using our SalesTech Stack Builder as a starting point. SBI has aligned more than 40 categories of sales tools / tech to these stages, categorizing each in terms of its impact on the sales process and/or sales management.
Once you’ve identified the tools with the greatest potential for your organization, you also need to sequence them appropriately.
We’ve grouped technologies into three likely stages of implementation starting with technologies we consider to be table-stakes–those that enable foundational activities, initial automation, and digital connections with customers–to those that drive efficiency and effectiveness with automated processes and rich data. Grouping technologies into a recommended order of adoption is not a precise process without a thorough SalesTech roadmap. However, these groupings can serve as general guidelines as you seek to understand what your tech roadmap might look like.
SBI’s new SalesTech Stack Builder takes client input to four key questions and then displays top tools to consider at each stage in the sales funnel, with suggested phasing. Using the SalesTech Stack Builder will allow you to:
Of course, building a SalesTech strategy and subsequent tech stack roadmap is complicated. SBI’s Commercial Tech Practice advisors can help ensure the right technologies are implemented at the right time and for the right reasons. To receive your starter SalesTech Stack and learn more about SBI’s SalesTech Roadmap visioning, audit, and planning capabilities, schedule a call with one of our commercial tech experts today.