• Own a Franchise
  • Alumni Center
  • Careers
Login
Shop
Locations
Sandler
Login
Shop
Locations
  • Solutions
    Training Programs
    Sales Development Series
    Sandler Enterprise Selling
    PerformanceIQ℠
    Sales Certification
    Prospecting
    Leadership Programs
    Sales Leader Growth Series
    Leadership for Organizational Excellence
    All Programs
    DISC
    Assessments & Benchmarking
    SANDLER SOLUTIONS
    Data-driven sales performance solutions designed for measurable, continuous success.

    Start The Transformation

  • Who We Serve
    By Type
    Individuals
    Enterprise
    Small And Mid-Sized Businesses
    By Role
    Business Development
    Human Resources
    Learning And Development
    Customer Success
    By Industry
    All Industries
    Technology
    Professional And Financial Services
    Construction & Building Materials
    Manufacturing And Logistics
    Call Centers
    Medical Devices & Pharma
    WHO WE SERVE
    Sandler’s personalized sales performance solutions drive growth and elevate organization of all sizes

    Discover Tailored Solutions

  • About
    Our Company
    Sandler Sales Methodology
    Franchising
    Why Sandler
    Summit
    Delivery Methods
    Collaborative Learning
    SANDLER SELLING SYSTEM
    Equip your sales team with behaviors, attitudes, and techniques to elevate sales performance.

    Explore Sandler Selling System

  • Insights
    All Insights
    Articles
    White Papers
    Podcasts
    Books
    Webinars
    News & Press
    Events
    Awards
    Sandler Research Center

    FEATURED ARTICLE

    UNLOCKING SUCCESS: UNDERSTANDING 4 TYPES OF WORKPLACE COMMUNICATION

    Read Full Article

    FEATURED EVENT

    2025 Sandler Summit: Annual Sales And Leadership Conference

    Reserve Your Seat

Let's connect
  • Sandler Solutions
  • Who We Serve
  • Our Company
  • Insights
  • Careers
  • Corporate Training
  • Alumni Center
Home » Insights » Selling in 2020: The Survival of the Fittest?
Sandler Research Center

Selling in 2020: The Survival of the Fittest?

There is an air of inevitability that at some point, in the not too distant future, many of the tasks now routinely handled by “salespeople” will become automated – in fact, it is already happening.

Commoditization virtually eliminates seller-buyer human interaction and, at the time of writing this, it is a B2C “phenomenon.” It is of course due largely to consumer’s new affection for online shopping via the Internet and sales organizations desire to capitalize on the breadth of audiences they can reach, and the lower costs of sales and delivery.

However, it would be foolhardy to not anticipate that, as buyers continue to become increasingly self-educated about our products, companies and our market sector, the sales role in many industries will undoubtedly become diminished. The role of sales is shifting to a consulting model that brings expertise in the areas of business, industry, company, stakeholder, and capabilities.

While the role of the order taker salesperson will go the way of the Internet, for the complex sale for the foreseeable future, the role of the salesperson is secure. There will always be a place for the professional business consultants – the “Top 5% Players.” These people consult more than sell, as they assist their clients in making sound buying decisions.

I am not a clairvoyant, but in working with salespeople, sales leaders and customers, a vision of sales is emerging. Let me share those ideas…

The ability to gather and analyse data will help salespeople be more precise in identifying customers and anticipating their needs, so they get to them before those customers get to the market.

Everything will be more precise. I see sales organizations not having a defined sales process, but rather multiple processes for renewals, new business or accounts at risk, etc.

Telephone and online conferencing will be the way of the sales, and face-to-face will be reserved for major deals and major milestone points in the sale.

As machines get smarter, they will do more of the work – will they be personal assistants, provide sales coaching, figure out pricing, set the sales strategy and so on? How far am I looking out—maybe 10 years?

So how does a sales organization survive in this current changing world? How do we get ready for the world of sales hot on its heels?

I see two avenues that are vital… The first is expertise and the second is relationship. I see the second as the greater challenge.

Expertise is exactly what customers are looking for today. The bar has been raised for sales organizations in how they select and develop their people. Customers will spend time with salespeople who they believe will bring them relevant expertise, and who will help them solve their business problems. In the content era, expertise was product expertise, but today it goes far beyond that to business acumen, industry knowledge, company and stakeholder knowledge, and team leverage knowledge and access, etc.

Relationships: Technology has given us so much, but as young people rely more and more on on-line communication, they are not developing relationship skills such as the skills to read people’s expressions, read body language, or tone of voice. People need to relate, they need to trust and to use intuition in making decisions. Research shows emotions are more a factor in decision-making than data (David Brooks). The need to connect is hard wired into people.

But my concern is salespeople and customers alike will not have the skills needed to connect. The ability to connect and build relationships will be the big differentiator.

It is the ability to earn trust and connect built on transparency, vulnerability and genuine concern in working with customers to bring value, that will help them grow their business. Young people would rather send a text than use the phone. Face-toface is warmer than phone and video, and both of those are warmer than text. Computers will win out with data, but making emotional connections is the advantage humans bring to the table.
Sales 2.0 gave us improved technology and did accelerate the rate at which more and more sales teams went inside. The image that we had of an inside sales professional performing routine tasks, cold- calling, dealing with account administration issues, and all the time looking enviously out of the window as their external sales colleagues drove away in the expensive company cars to wine and dine clients, has now been replaced. Today’s insider is a career professional who is able to manage the entire sales/buying process from open to close, utilising video technology when required – they are no longer simply on the first step of the sales career ladder.

Obviously, economics has played a big part in this lemming-like rush for companies to convert their sales teams – it is not all technology influenced. Typically, an outside sales team costs twice as much to run as an inside one, which makes it a no-brainer in most scenarios -especially here in the UK, where one could be forgiven for thinking we are attempting to create the largest car park in the world, stretching from John O’Groats to Lands End, and sideways from Felixstowe to Anglesey!

Survival, let alone reaching a Sales Superstar status, requires significant changes in our worldview, how we think about ourselves and how we think about our relationships with key stakeholders. We are faced with new ways of thinking, many of which directly challenge what has proven successful in the past.

Despite my predictions, we all know that nobody has a crystal ball! Perhaps the way to look at the future of selling is to compile a team consisting of a sales and marketing professor, a technology professor from MIT, maybe someone from Apple and Disney, a few buyers and, for good measure, a science fiction writer – history has shown writers like Ray Bradbury have been truly prophetic.

Sales organizations have a long way to go to achieve optimum fitness!

Copyright © 2019 by Jonathan Farrington All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without permission of the publisher.

Tags: Account management Research sales management
Share THIS

You might also like

Sandler Webinar
Webinars

Getting A Seat At The Decision-Maker’s Table

Read Full Article
Woman try on glasses for good vision
Articles

Developing the Elite Seller

Read Full Article
Welcome Marni
News & Press

Driving Growth: Sandler Names Marni Smith as Vice President of Franchise Development

Read Full Article

Sales Training and Performance Improvement Organization

Get Social With Us
Stay Inspired
Tactics, strategies, articles, tools and more information about our events and solutions for sales professionals and leaders.
Name(Required)
Privacy(Required)
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.


Smiling man holding a laptop
Sandler
  • Sandler Solutions
  • Who We Serve
  • Our Company
  • Insights
  • Careers
  • Corporate Training
  • Alumni Center
©2023 Sandler Systems, LLC. All rights reserved. Sandler, SANDLER (stylized) and E (stylized) are registered service marks of Sandler Systems, LLC.
PRIVACY POLICY |  COOKIE POLICY |  TERMS OF USE |  DMCA