How coaching drove $10M in additional sales

 

What value does investing in sales leadership skills have for the bottom line? BetterUp Labs conducted a study to find out.

If you ask any CEO, they will tell you: the effectiveness of the sales organization has a huge impact on the success of the business.

Even in times of normalcy, many sales organizations invest significant resources for training for their salesforce. And with the massive disruptions of the past year to how organizations sell, helping people adjust to what it takes to be successful in the new normal has been critical.

Agility, navigating uncertainty, innovation and creativity, and resilience have become more important for sales teams because the changes to business operations have been profound in response to the global pandemic. 

That said, it’s one thing to invest in sales training and enablement, and it’s another to invest in sales leadership to build the human capabilities necessary to sustain performance through massive change.

What value does investing in sales leadership skills have for the bottom line? BetterUp Labs conducted a study to find out. 

In March of 2020, a publicly-traded global technology company with over 1 billion dollars in annual revenue engaged BetterUp. This company wanted to improve the leadership capabilities in first-line sales managers and increase overall sales performance.

What makes this case even more interesting is the timing. The investment for coaching coincidentally began in the third week of March, coinciding with the World Health Organization’s declaration of the COVID-19 pandemic — the start of a period of unprecedented challenge, change, and stress for businesses, and sales organizations, globally. 

As a part of this study, 100 senior and director-level sales managers got unlimited coaching and 58 sales managers did not. On average, sales managers had 5.5 direct reports. Both groups were equal in tenure. After 8 months of coaching, we examined the data. 

What the data showed

Result 1. Sales performance for the teams led by coached sales managers skyrocketed compared to those without a coach.

  • Teams of coached sales managers improved goal attainment relative to the same quarter from the prior year by 11%. Uncoached leaders who saw a 13% decline in goal attainment. 
  • Coached sales managers saw a 20% increase relative to the same quarter from the prior year in the value of their opportunities. The non-coached group saw a decline in the value of their opportunities. 
  • Coached sales managers saw a 60% increase relative to the same quarter from the prior year in the number of their team members that achieved their individual quotas. The non-coached group saw no increase. You can see the holistic shift toward greater salesperson quota achievement for coached teams below.

    Result 2. The coached group had a high level of engagement in coaching with over 1200 sessions completed, equating to about 10 hours per manager on average. That is 50% more time spent on coaching compared to other populations we work with. 

    Result 3. Sales managers attributed their success to coaching. Across the totality of sessions for the coached leaders, 100% were reported by the sales managers as a valuable use of their time.

    Why this matters

    Compared to those without a coach, those teams with coached sales managers collectively earned an additional $10 million dollars in total bookings per team. The teams with coached sales managers also saw an average of $4.5 million dollars of additional opportunity per team

    Why such a massive difference to the bottom line? Sales managers improved their personal effectiveness which directly helped their teams thrive through operational and market disruptions.

    These leaders saw a 24% increase in focus, a 16% increase in strategic planning, and 22% increase in coaching culture, meaning they didn’t just improve their own abilities to execute the work, but they improved their abilities to coach others and help others improve their own effectiveness as salespeople. 

    As one sales manager with a coach put it, “It’s brought a lot of clarity to me in the way that I’m seeing the potential in the team and being more deliberate about not only how I interact with them, but developing them into [...] high engagement, high accountability reps.”


About the author

Erin Eatough, PhD
Dr. Erin Eatough is an occupational health psychologist who has published research on employee well-being in over 30 outlets such as the Journal of Applied Psychology and has been featured in media outlets such as Harvard Business Review. Erin currently serves BetterUp in translating data to insight and helps to bring the science of BetterUp to life through content marketing. Erin received her Ph.D. in Industrial-Organizational Psychology from the University of South Florida.

Before BetterUp, Erin was a professor of Industrial and Organizational Psychology. She lives in Alexandria, VA with her husband and two young children. When not working, you can find her and her family on adventures in their tiny home on wheels, a converted Sprinter van.