STRATEGY
Paul Sanders (INSEAD MBA ΄06D), Director of Business Innovation, EMEA, Steelcase, and Philippe Pereira, EMEA Executive Sales Enablement Leader, Steelcase
Key ingredients for start-up success could benefit even giant sales organisations.
Many B2B firms struggle with low sales conversion and sales productivity. In some ways, the rise of e-commerce has made the business environment more challenging. Thanks to the internet, even small players can join the party and chip away at their big competitors’ market share. Meanwhile, buyers have more choice than ever and many prospects, drowning in online information, have become numb. On the bright side, the digital economy has given birth to the likes of Facebook, Amazon and Netflix, some of the world’s most admired firms. All these companies began as tech start-ups. While the worlds of sales leaders and start-ups are certainly very different, we believe that sales leaders can borrow a few concepts from start-ups to help increase their “win” rates on strategic sales opportunities. Specifically, sales organisations can gain much from adopting a focused strategy and a game plan inspired by tech incubators and accelerators. Here’s our step-by-step guide. 1. Stay focused A characteristic of most successful start-ups is their ability to focus. Whether they focus on one business idea, one customer need, one pain point or one specific niche customer group, they do so single-mindedly. Often they have no choice as they lack the resources to fire in all directions. Conversely, many larger sales organisations struggle to focus. There’s a constant trade-off between filling the pipeline (i.e. nurturing ample leads) and garnering “must-wins” in order to meet sales targets. Focusing on a few opportunities is inherently riskier, but it forces sales leaders to make strategic choices. In Playing to Win: How Strategy Really Works, Alan G. Lafley and Roger Martin stress the importance of deciding “where to play”. Sales strategy is about picking one’s battles. Some opportunities, like some accounts, are best dropped. Chasing too many rabbits can lead to at least two negative consequences. The first is lower win rates. The second, a confused and burnt-out sales force. Steelcase, a leading office furniture manufacturer, has created a checklist to help its salespeople determine whether their prospect is in the right zone. Sample questions include:
Looking again at your 20-30 sales opportunities, you can consider putting the ripest opportunities through an “accelerator programme”, which could involve the following:
Paul Sanders is Director of Business Innovation, EMEA, at Steelcase. Philippe Pereira, as part of the Steelcase EMEA Leadership Team, leads the Sales Enablement group which includes sales support, pricing and sales effectiveness, among other teams. This article is republished courtesy of INSEAD Knowledge. Copyright INSEAD 2017.

Many B2B firms struggle with low sales conversion and sales productivity. In some ways, the rise of e-commerce has made the business environment more challenging. Thanks to the internet, even small players can join the party and chip away at their big competitors’ market share. Meanwhile, buyers have more choice than ever and many prospects, drowning in online information, have become numb. On the bright side, the digital economy has given birth to the likes of Facebook, Amazon and Netflix, some of the world’s most admired firms. All these companies began as tech start-ups. While the worlds of sales leaders and start-ups are certainly very different, we believe that sales leaders can borrow a few concepts from start-ups to help increase their “win” rates on strategic sales opportunities. Specifically, sales organisations can gain much from adopting a focused strategy and a game plan inspired by tech incubators and accelerators. Here’s our step-by-step guide. 1. Stay focused A characteristic of most successful start-ups is their ability to focus. Whether they focus on one business idea, one customer need, one pain point or one specific niche customer group, they do so single-mindedly. Often they have no choice as they lack the resources to fire in all directions. Conversely, many larger sales organisations struggle to focus. There’s a constant trade-off between filling the pipeline (i.e. nurturing ample leads) and garnering “must-wins” in order to meet sales targets. Focusing on a few opportunities is inherently riskier, but it forces sales leaders to make strategic choices. In Playing to Win: How Strategy Really Works, Alan G. Lafley and Roger Martin stress the importance of deciding “where to play”. Sales strategy is about picking one’s battles. Some opportunities, like some accounts, are best dropped. Chasing too many rabbits can lead to at least two negative consequences. The first is lower win rates. The second, a confused and burnt-out sales force. Steelcase, a leading office furniture manufacturer, has created a checklist to help its salespeople determine whether their prospect is in the right zone. Sample questions include:
- Are we involved in defining the customer solution or are we just responding to a project tender based on specifications developed by others?
- Do we have meaningful relationships with the right decision makers and influencers?
- Does the customer value the insights we bring?
- Is the customer in a state of transformation that compels them to think differently about the design of their workplace?
- Does the customer see the workplace as a strategic asset or just as a cost to be managed?
- “Win strategy” workshop: The goal is to test and improve the sales team’s win strategy. Is it distinctive? Can you differentiate yourself from your competitors? Can your sales team articulate why you should win?
- Investments to create an advantage: If you enter early enough in the sales cycle, the client may be open to a short and sharp consulting-style engagement. By working directly with the customer, the sales team can acquire unique insights, influence the specifications and develop stronger relationships.
- Internal mentorship: Too often, sales teams do not receive the support they need from sales leaders. Only seasoned sales leaders have the experience needed to know what makes the difference between winning and losing. Sales leaders must be deeply involved in nurturing the company’s most strategic opportunities to maximise win rates.
- External guidance: Look outside your organisation for inputs and insights on the buyer’s needs and on how well your solution will meet them. Bring in external experts like incubators do. Such experts can of course include coaches supplied by the customer.

- A critical path: Define a critical path from the customer’s perspective. What are the steps to secure the win? Balance this with agility and responsiveness. Don’t get bogged down in process. B2B sales cycles are rarely linear.
- Mobilisation workshops: Strategic-opportunity owners must be master orchestrators. They need to know which resources to mobilise and when. Mobilisation workshops can help rally the organisation, gather resources and remove obstacles.
- Hack the system: Sometimes standard approaches don’t work. Maybe you’re too late to marshal the support of all stakeholders. Maybe the initial opportunity is too small, but you see huge potential in the near future. Software start-ups run hackathons where developers, designers, project managers and others collaborate intensively for a short period to solve a critical issue. Sales managers could similarly pull together a small but determined group of sales support people to get the job done.
- Pitching for priority: Create competition between sales teams owning the top strategic opportunities. Force them to compete for scarce resources by pitting them against each other during the pursuit.
Paul Sanders is Director of Business Innovation, EMEA, at Steelcase. Philippe Pereira, as part of the Steelcase EMEA Leadership Team, leads the Sales Enablement group which includes sales support, pricing and sales effectiveness, among other teams. This article is republished courtesy of INSEAD Knowledge. Copyright INSEAD 2017.