Danny Leonardsales expert, building scalable revenue, 4 exits
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Sales expert. Passion helping people build scalable revenue machines. Sales consultant, startup advisor, angel investor, and 500 Startups Distro. 4 exits. Fmr Groupon, Square, OrderAhead, Storefront, and Thanx.


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This is an important question. It is also a broad question. Let's start by defining each section of the sales funnel and move onto focusing on the section where you can get the most leverage: Qualification.

After working with hundreds of SaaS startups and leading Sales teams at several others like Groupon, OrderAhead, Thanx, and Storefront, I've been able to formalize the sales funnel with the following stages (starting from the top and moving down):

1/Research and Lead Generation - define your target and where to find the complete list of them
2/Prospecting - the type of outreach you wish to perform (e.g. phone, email, LinkedIn, etc.)
3/Qualification - finding a real buyer who wants to buy right now
4/Demo - showing off your product
5/Proposal - sending off a contract
6/Close - locking in the contract

Now, let's focus on Qualification. Qualification is the most important part of the sales funnel because when performed correctly, it allows you to sell your product to folks that are 100% interested in what you have to offer. It's actually more like disqualification than qualification. To properly perform (dis)qualification, you'll need to answer two questions about your prospect:

1. Are they a buyer?
2. Are they a buyer right now?

Buyers (almost) always have a budget and are either the decision maker or are part of the decision-making committee. A buyer cares about your offering enough to pay for it, now, in order to solve their problem, now. A buyer is NOT someone who just wants something/anything, like a CEO who wants HR software but has fourteen other fires to put out yesterday. If the lead you’re working isn't a buyer right now, put them into your marketing funnel and move on. Next, right now means your timeline. This varies significantly based on your industry and product. For point of reference, at Groupon (a highly transactional sales process), the sales cycle was 30–45 days. At enterprise companies, the sales cycle could take north of 12 months. Identifying right now can be the difference between closing a deal and wasting several months hoping a deal will close.

Check out this article in Bootstrapping Sales for a more comprehensive overview as well: https://medium.com/bootstrapping-sales/dis-qualifying-c56160dfd3c3

I recommend a rigorous qualification process to set up your Demo for success. Run correctly, you may end up focusing your time on fewer leads, but they will provide you with greater conversion and faster deals.

Feel free to ping me anytime, and we can set up a call via Clarity. Happy hunting!

Best,

Danny


Great question, and one I frequently get asked. Here they are:

1. Predictable Revenue by Aaron Ross - this book will show you step-by-step how to build a modern revenue machine. A great book for those who love process.

2. The Challenger Sale by Matthew Dixon and Brent Adamson - explains differences between top-performing salespeople and how to win deals in a customer-empowered world.

3. Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill - more a success book than a sales book, but I've found key learnings in this book that have helped me grow as a sales leader. Hill interviewed the most successful people in the early 1900s and compiled interesting tidbits about what made them successful.


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