Design an effective sales onboarding program to ramp up faster.
Best practices can boost employee productivity quickly.
A sales onboarding program can have a big financial impact on a business in both the short and long term. However, most companies fail to follow best practices, resulting in ineffective and costly onboarding programs.
Research on the performance of onboarding programs shows effective onboarding services can improve quota attainment by 17%. On the flip side, an ineffective onboarding service can increase your voluntary turnover rate by 79%.
To succeed, sales leaders need to understand the biggest challenges organizations face when onboarding new reps, the benefits of faster ramping, and more. In this article, you’ll find concrete examples of onboarding program guides you can start using today.
What You'll Learn
- How to build an effective and engaging onboarding program to boost ramp time for reps
- How to provide the right information at each step of sales onboarding
- How to coach your reps and overcome challenges during the onboarding process
- How to get your reps to exceed their quotas quickly and consistently
When new sales reps join an organization, they are often confronted with more playbooks, manuals, and training videos than they can absorb. The problem with too much information being shared too quickly is that it can distract reps from their main focus: the buyer.
Successful sales onboarding programs recognize that sales reps only need the most relevant information to get started. It is your job, as a sales enablement leader, to determine what your new hires need to know (and when) so they can deliver the best possible customer experience.
The most effective onboarding programs have three things in common:
- They are highly engaging. You don’t want to bore new hires with endless hours of training videos and materials in the first weeks on the job.
- They are ongoing. Active involvement and meaningful activities are a way to make sure reps are continually engaged.
- They show clear ROI. Successful onboarding programs show a positive return on the metrics you want to drive the most.
The Sales Onboarding J-Curve
How to Design an Effective Onboarding Program
- Training reps on your CRM, focusing on measurable KPIs, and prioritizing buyer immersion.
- Investing time into prospecting and building a pipeline.
- Practicing prospect conversations and closing the first deal.
- Reviewing sales performance so reps can close their second deal quicker.
- Identifying ongoing coaching and enablement opportunities.
Stage 1: CRM Training, KPIs, and Buyer Immersion
CRM Training
Focus on KPIs
Buyer Immersion
After the first stage, they should have a strong understanding of the buyer, as this will serve as a critical foundation for every sale they make.
Stage 2: Prospecting and Pipeline
In the early stages of their training, it’s not uncommon for new reps to express concern about the job, their skills, or their sales outlook. The key to getting past this is to focus on prospecting as soon as possible. Talking to real prospects will help your reps to learn faster, add leads to their pipeline, and get them comfortable with the relevant tools, such as lead management software that supplements your CRM. Offer microlearning opportunities like videos on how to best use the sales tech stack at your organization.
Tools like Einstein Conversation Insights, which allows you to gather the most relevant customer data from every interaction, and Revenue Intelligence, which can make possible predictable revenue with AI-driven insights and analytics, can also give reps the power to identify important sales trends and accelerate their pipeline.
Stage 3: Prospect Conversations and First Close
By now, reps should have a few meetings booked and the beginnings of a sales pipeline. It’s important to get your reps to close their first deal quickly and take advantage of this momentum.
Encourage them to practice prospecting by role-playing with peers and managers. Have them listen to customer win stories and submit recorded calls for their peers and managers to review using a tool like Einstein Conversation Insights. Give them a few key resources — one-pagers, case studies, quick sheets. You don’t want to overwhelm them with too many how-to guides, but you want to offer support. This way they begin to develop more advanced sales skills that will boost their confidence and ultimately get them to quota faster.
Stage 4: Review Performance and Close the Second Deal
Now, it’s time to have them focus on going after the second deal. The feelings from the first deal will quickly fade and, if they don’t focus on winning that second deal, they may lose momentum.
Arguably, the time to second deal is the most important metric in onboarding. A shorter time to second deal demonstrates that lessons learned during the first deal have become ingrained. It also makes it less likely the initial “win” is a one-off, indicating predictable, repeatable success.
Stage 5: Ongoing Coaching and Enablement
To put a plan in place, have reps talk about where they may have fallen short, and how they can learn from that to improve. Do deal reviews, get them to discuss lost deals, and do pre- and post-mortems.
It’s also a great time to start challenging reps. Experiment with different metrics. How can they build a pipeline faster? How could you shorten the sales cycle? This will help them hone their sales strategy skills.
Once your cohort is ramped, it’s also a good time for sales enablers and leaders to understand the trends for the sum of your reps. Use enablement to start looking at every milestone in onboarding, from first meeting to first deal and quota achievement, and see if any programs, certifications or coaching could help reps ramp faster. Is there something missing? Or are there activities you can cut? You can pull average metrics for your cohort, and understand who’s ahead and who’s falling behind so you can quickly course-correct to avoid quota slippage.
Conclusion: Getting Started with Effective Sales Onboarding
By equipping reps with the right assets, training, and coaching at the right stages of the sales onboarding process, you’ll speed up your ramp time and build a confident sales force.
It’s important to remember: Treating onboarding as a one-time event can limit learning opportunities and growth for your reps. Start by getting your reps familiar with the buyer and your CRM. Then, help them set goals, fill their pipelines, and begin practicing sales calls.
Once the first deal is closed, review their performance together and identify ongoing coaching opportunities so they can close their second deal quickly and start exceeding quota consistently.