Richard Ruff

Richard Ruff

Sales Horizons
For more than 30 years Richard Ruff has worked with the Fortune 1000 to craft sales training programs that make a difference. Working with market leaders Dick has learned that today’s great sales force significantly differs from yesterday. So, Sales Horizons offers firms effective sales training programs affordably priced. Dick is the co-author of Parlez-Vous Business, to help sales people have smart business conversations with customers, and the Sales Training Connection.
  • 0 comments 335 reads
    Posted on 2012-05-08

    Most people would agree that the last couple of years have been pretty tough times.  Lots of bad things have happen to companies and to individuals – there are no shortages of telling stories.

    The good news is more and more people are starting to see some light at the end of the tunnel.  Most nonpartisan economists say that while the economic improvement is slow, things are moving in the right direction and precluding any major international event that story is likely to continue.

    This economic picture matters because history tells us that as an economy recovery begins in earnest, sales force turnover increases. In most job categories there are negative consequences to turnover, but in sales the consequences can be particularly costly.

    Let’s look at some of the effects of ...

  • 0 comments 217 reads
    Posted on 2012-05-05

    The vast majority of sales training programs have solid content and excellent instructional design.  Any company looking to purchase sales training programs has a wide variety of viable options. Yet, too often  great sales training programs don’t produce great results. Although the reasons may vary as to why many sales training efforts don’t work, the main culprit is the lack of buy-in from the sales force.

    For sales people to change what they do and how they do it, they must first decide there is a need to change.  Simply telling the sales team they need to attend a great program at a really nice conference center is not going to create the need. And, the sales training program, per se, cannot be expected to both persuade the attendees that a behavior change is needed and help them to learn the new behaviors.  Sales training programs do the latter – not the...

  • 0 comments 412 reads
    Posted on 2012-04-27

    In  major B2B sales where the sales cycle is long, competition is keen and multiple players are engaged in the decision, developing internal champions is one of the more effective best practices. Why? A lot of  discussions and decisions about the winner go on when you’re not there.  So if you have a champion in the room, it’s more likely you’ll have a better outcome.

    But like many things that work really well, developing an internal champion is not easy.  As a matter a fact it requires substantial thought, time, and effort to get it right.  And the negative consequences can be telling – if you don’t get it right and your competition does, it could be the difference between winning and losing.

    Because it’s an effective best...

  • 0 comments 365 reads
    Posted on 2012-04-20

    Way back in 1955 when the average cost of a new car was $1,900 and a gallon of gas was 23 cents, Louis Mobley was given a blank check by Tom Watson, IBM’s CEO,  to create a school for training IBM executives.

    The first step he took was to locate a group of the very best executives he could find.  Then he developed a battery of test to find the skill sets they had in common.  The logic being find out the skills the very best possess and then develop a comprehensive training program to help others learn those skills.

    So on which skills do you think the very best executives consistently scored high?  Interestingly, the answer was – there weren’t any.  Regardless of the skill tested the proven top executives were all over the normal distribution – on any given skill some were at the top, some in the middle and some at the bottom.  Maybe the tests were flawed – possible but unlikely since Mobley had contracted with the Educational Testing Service to help in the testing....

  • 0 comments 532 reads
    Posted on 2012-04-13

    Winning in B2B sales means doing a better job helping customers arrive at a more comprehensive view of their needs and more compelling views of your solution. In short, it is about formulating and delivering superior value.

    Because of global competition and advanced manufacturing technologies, it’s becoming increasingly difficult to sustain a competitive advantage by product alone.  Today, a sales force must not only sell a competitive advantage; they must be a competitive advantage.

    This means a sales force’s ability to communicate the value of the product being sold is insufficient.  A sales team must be able to create value...

  • 0 comments 255 reads
    Posted on 2012-04-09

    Recently we published a blog framed around the idea that if you wanted to get coaching right, three fundamental questions need to be answered – what to coach, how to coach, and who to coach. In that blog we focused on the “who to coach” question.  This time around we thought spending a little time on the “what to coach” part of the equation might be useful.

    Heretofore, when we designed sales coaching programs for our clients, we have customized the “what to coach” portion of the program around the core selling skills and best practices relevant for that individual client.

    Destructive behavior study. The other day we reviewed an article in the McKinsey Quarterly...

  • 0 comments 419 reads
    Posted on 2012-04-07

    Sales Tips

    Sales Tips are a new type of post you will be seeing on the Sales Training Connection. You can recognize a Sales Tip by the the icon on the left, and the title, of course.

    A Sales Tip is a short post about one best practice when you are selling in a B2B market.  For the inaugural post we’ve selected the age-old topic – Closing.

    In B2B selling, Closing is about obtaining a commitment from the customer that moves the sales cycle.  You don’t just “close for the order,” you close on...

  • 0 comments 472 reads
    Posted on 2012-04-05

    If you look back over the last decade, a number of industries have gone through dramatic change.  As a result, the organizations in those industries have substantially changed how they do business with those companies that sell to them.  They have changed what they buy, how they buy, and what they are willing to pay for it.

    If your customers are making changes of that magnitude, then the case is made that it is no longer business-as-usual for your sales team.  If you are to be responsive, it becomes a matter of doing something different rather than simply doing a better job doing what you are doing. The required shift in the sales process isn’t incremental; it’s transformational.

    So, what does it take for a company to plan and implement a sales transformation?  First, let’s explore that question from a sales leadership perspective, then...

  • 0 comments 618 reads
    Posted on 2012-03-26

    When I started in the sales training industry about 25 years ago, I had the good fortune to start with a great company and work with a really smart guy.  At the time we were selling sales training programs that helped our clients do a better job selling value in major accounts.

    The programs were well received worldwide because they were based on solid research.  But that was only half of the success story. The other half of the success was attributable to the fact that most of the competition was talking about other topics such as: 101 ways to close the sale, how to craft and deliver an effective product pitch, or why objections were really buying signals.

    Well, that was then – this is now.  Those other topics are now just old tales heard around the campfire.  Everyone agrees that selling value is the key to success in major account selling.

  • 0 comments 460 reads
    Posted on 2012-03-19

    Let’s assume you’re a sales manager and the VP of Sales has just suggested that something needs to be done about improving the effectiveness and efficiency of your sales team, ending with “seeing some results in 3 or 4 months would be great.”

    What might you do?  Well, there are several possibilities, but let’s explore one that’s often overlooked – getting the team better at lead qualification.

    A good starting pointing is recognizing that different people in different customer organizations play different roles in any particular type of opportunity.  Depending on the role and perspective, the players will have a different sense of value, different concerns and different challenges.  And, they may have a different view of your capabilities.

    Because all the different role players impact...