Internationalisation

Unlocking Growth in New Markets: Why Most Corporate Innovation Misses the Mark

Unlocking Growth in New Markets: Why Most Corporate Innovation Misses the Mark

inudstry analysis

Growth Strategy / Innovation / International Expansion

04. July, 2025

The Growth Imperative and Its Hidden Risks

For established companies, the pursuit of sustainable growth is a constant challenge. As core markets mature and competitive pressures intensify, business leaders are compelled to seek new opportunities beyond their traditional boundaries. Expanding into new markets, customer segments, or technologies—what many call “outside-the-core innovation”—is now a strategic necessity for organizations aiming to remain relevant and competitive. However, the failure rate for such initiatives remains stubbornly high. Studies show that up to 90% of startups and a significant percentage of corporate innovation projects fail to achieve their intended outcomes. While the risks of entering unfamiliar territory are well recognized, the underlying causes of failure are often misunderstood. Contrary to popular belief, the greatest threat to outside-the-core innovation is not the novelty of the market or the complexity of the technology, but the hidden, untested assumptions that teams bring from their core business.


Why Most Outside-the-Core Innovation Fails

A common misconception among executives is that the further a project moves from the core business, the higher its risk of failure. While distance from the core does introduce new challenges, research and practical experience reveal a more nuanced reality. The most significant risks arise when organizations fail to recognize and rigorously test the assumptions embedded in their business models—especially those that feel routine or “safe.” In-depth case studies across multiple industries have shown that even projects perceived as “high risk” due to their distance from the core can succeed if teams systematically surface and adapt their assumptions. Conversely, projects that seem only a step or two away from the core often falter when teams underestimate the degree of change required in areas such as distribution channels, cost structure, unit margins, and operational velocity.

The Waterfall Effect of Faulty Assumptions

Hidden assumptions can create a cascade of negative effects across the business model. For example, assuming that existing sales channels will work for a new product can lead to misaligned pricing strategies, unsustainable cost structures, and ultimately, poor market adoption. Similarly, projecting legacy overhead costs onto new ventures can lock projects into uncompetitive economics before they even launch. These “waterfall effects” are rarely isolated. One false assumption can undermine multiple aspects of the business, compounding risk and making recovery difficult. The most successful organizations are those that recognize the interconnectedness of business model components and proactively test their assumptions at every stage.

The Role of Organizational Learning and Ambidextrous Leadership

To overcome the risks of hidden assumptions, organizations must embed explicit learning and adaptation into their innovation processes. This approach involves starting new ventures at a manageable scale, growing them at a pace determined by validated learning, and allowing time for false or hidden assumptions to surface and be addressed. Moreover, outside-the-core innovation demands ambidextrous leadership. Senior executives must be able to manage established businesses with discipline and efficiency while simultaneously fostering an environment of experimentation and learning for new initiatives. This dual capability is essential for navigating the inevitable setbacks and pivots that characterize successful innovation efforts.

Practical Strategies for Success in New Markets

 
  1. Systematically Challenge Assumptions
    • Use structured frameworks, such as an enhanced Business Model Canvas, to map out every component of the new business. Pay particular attention to areas that seem routine, such as channels, cost structure, margins, and operational velocity.
    • Treat every assumption as a hypothesis to be tested, not a fact to be accepted.
  1. Start Small and Scale with Learning
    • Launch new initiatives at a scale that allows for rapid experimentation and adaptation.
    • Allow the pace of growth to be dictated by the rate at which key assumptions are validated or refuted.
  1. Foster Ambidextrous Leadership
    • Identify and empower leaders who can balance operational excellence in the core business with agility and openness in new ventures.
    • Ensure that senior management is prepared to provide persistent support, even when early results are disappointing.
  1. Embed Organizational Learning
    • Create feedback loops that capture lessons from both successes and failures.
    • Encourage teams to view setbacks as opportunities for learning and improvement, not just as risks to be avoided.
  1. Prioritize Adaptation Over Perfection
    • Recognize that no business model is perfect from the outset. The ability to adapt quickly to new information is a key differentiator between successful and unsuccessful projects.
    • Encourage a culture where course correction is seen as a strength, not a weakness.
 

Turning Failure into Opportunity

Innovation failure is not necessarily a negative outcome. In fact, some of the most valuable organizational learning comes from projects that do not meet their original objectives. By treating failure as a source of insight rather than a setback, companies can refine their business models, improve their innovation capabilities, and ultimately drive better organizational performance.

Conclusion: Building a Resilient Growth Engine

Sustainable growth in new markets is within reach for organizations willing to challenge their own thinking. The real risk in outside-the-core innovation lies not in the unfamiliarity of the market, but in the comfort of old assumptions. By systematically surfacing, testing, and adapting these assumptions, leaders can transform high-risk ventures into engines of sustainable growth.

Unlock Your Next Level of Sustainable Growth

Ready to accelerate your business beyond the core?

Partner with International Growth Solutions to unlock sustainable growth through strategic insight, transformative leadership, and operational excellence—at every stage of your innovation journey. Whether you’re venturing into new markets or rethinking your business model, our expertise helps you identify hidden risks, validate assumptions, and build resilient engines for lasting success.

Book your complimentary consultation today and discover how our proven approach can help you achieve measurable, sustainable results.


 

Inna Hüessmanns, MBA

 

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Performance Management in Sales: The Strategic Lever for C-Level Growth

Performance Management in Sales: The Strategic Lever for C-Level Growth

new building in london skyscraper          financial district and window

Performance Management / Growth Strategy 

27. June, 2025

For Chief Sales Officers, CEOs, and their executive peers, the effectiveness of performance management systems is not just a matter of operational detail—it is a strategic imperative that shapes growth, profitability, and long-term competitive advantage. But despite decades of investment in incentive plans, sales enablement, and process optimization, many organizations still find themselves grappling with missed targets, unpredictable sales cycles, and disengaged sales teams. Why does this happen? The answer lies in the complex interplay between incentive design, monitoring, territory management, and the behavioral dynamics of high-performing sales organizations.

Why Performance Management Is the C-Level Priority

 

Performance management is far more than setting targets and reviewing dashboards. It is the art and science of aligning individual effort, motivation, and organizational goals to drive sustained business results. For sales-driven companies, this means designing systems that not only incentivize effort but also channel it toward the activities that matter most for value creation.

Research and field evidence show that the structure of performance management—how you monitor, incentivize, and allocate resources—directly impacts both top-line growth and bottom-line profitability. Yet, too often, organizations fall back on legacy compensation plans and outdated territory structures, missing out on substantial gains in productivity and engagement.

 

Behavior-Based vs. Outcome-Based Controls: Two Sides of Performance Management

At the heart of sales performance management are two contrasting approaches:

  • Behavior-based controls emphasize direct managerial involvement: coaching, collaboration, and ongoing feedback. Here, sales managers work closely with their teams to guide activities, correct course, and foster development.
  • Outcome-based controls rely on the market and incentive systems, managing at arm’s length through compensation and quotas. This approach gives salespeople greater autonomy but places the burden of motivation on financial rewards and targets.

 

The most effective organizations blend these approaches, tailoring the mix to the complexity of the sales role and the maturity of the team. For example, behavior-based controls are particularly valuable in complex, multi-tasking environments, while outcome-based controls excel in focused, transaction-driven roles.

 

The Power—and Pitfalls—of Incentive Design How Incentive Schemes Shape Behavior

The choice between bonuses and commissions has profound effects on sales force productivity and behavior:


  • Commission plans boost overall productivity by about 24% compared to bonus plans, especially among lower-ability salespeople. Why? Because commissions motivate both low- and high-ability reps to exert more effort—low-ability reps now have a chance to earn beyond a fixed salary, and high-ability reps are no longer capped by a fixed bonus ceiling.
 
  • Bonuses, while effective at driving reps to hit quotas, often lead to a sharp drop in effort once the quota is achieved. Salespeople tend to “push” or “pull” sales between periods to maximize their payout, resulting in erratic sales cycles and operational inefficiencies.
  • Commissions, on the other hand, can create multitasking distortions. Reps focus on what is measured and paid for, sometimes neglecting important but non-incentivized activities such as customer onboarding, cross-selling, or market development.
 

The Role of Ability and Effort

Sales teams are inherently heterogeneous. Each rep brings a unique mix of skills and motivation. Under bonus plans, high-ability reps reach quotas with less effort, while lower-ability reps may disengage. Under commission plans, high-ability reps are incentivized to keep pushing, and lower-ability reps are motivated to increase effort for a chance at incremental earnings.

The most significant productivity gains under commission plans are observed among lower-ability reps who previously put in minimal effort under bonus schemes. For high-ability reps, the absence of an earnings ceiling in commission plans drives even higher performance.

 

The Quota Conundrum: Setting the Right Targets

Quotas are a double-edged sword in performance management:

  • Set too high: Reps become discouraged and may disengage, believing targets are unattainable.
  • Set too low: Reps coast, earning bonuses with minimal effort and leaving value on the table.
  • Set just right: Quotas provide a psychological challenge and a clear path to reward, aligning effort with organizational goals.

However, bonuses can amplify timing games and demotivate after quotas are hit, while commissions keep effort high but may lead to neglect of non-incentivized tasks. The key is to calibrate quotas using data-driven methods that reflect territory differences and market potential, and to regularly review and adjust them as conditions change.

Monitoring and the Cost of Control

Monitoring is a critical component of performance management. Internal activities (such as CRM updates or compliance tasks) are relatively easy to monitor, while external, customer-facing activities are much harder and more expensive to track. Over-monitoring can distort effort, with reps focusing on what is measured rather than what matters.

The optimal approach? Monitor internal activities only where necessary for compliance or process improvement, and use incentives to drive external, outcome-focused efforts. Align risk preferences—risk-tolerant, entrepreneurial reps thrive under high-powered incentive plans, while risk-averse reps may require more monitoring and support.

The Strategic Importance of Territory Design

Territory alignment is often an afterthought in performance management, but it is one of the most powerful levers for sales effectiveness:

  • Poorly designed territories constrain opportunity, demotivate reps, and inflate costs.
  • More than half of all sales territories are either too large or too small, leading to suboptimal customer coverage and misaligned performance evaluations.
  • Optimized territories can increase sales by 2–7% simply by improving customer coverage and reducing wasted effort.

Regular audits and data-driven realignment of territories are essential to ensure balanced opportunity and workload, protect core strengths during new launches, and manage transitions to minimize disruption.

Motivation, Job Satisfaction, and the Will to Win

Effort and motivation are not the same. Motivation is the driving force that impels action, while effort is the energy invested in behavior over time. Salespeople who are highly involved with their work and satisfied in their roles are more likely to exert discretionary effort and persevere in the face of setbacks.

Sales managers play a crucial role in this dynamic. By providing meaningful challenges, clear communication of goals, and opportunities for intrinsic motivation, managers can foster higher engagement and performance. Well-articulated goals help salespeople understand and accept their roles in achieving organizational success.

Managerial Implications: Building a High-Performance Sales Organization

To unlock the full potential of your sales force, C-level leaders should focus on these research-backed strategies:

  • Choose incentive plans that match the complexity of the sales task portfolio. Use commissions for focused, measurable roles and bonuses for complex, multi-tasking environments.
  • Calibrate quotas with precision. Leverage analytics to set challenging yet achievable targets and adjust regularly to reflect market realities.
  • Balance monitoring and autonomy. Monitor only what matters and support autonomy to foster intrinsic motivation.
  • Optimize territory alignment. Use advanced tools to ensure balanced opportunity and workload, and manage transitions proactively.
  • Foster a culture of engagement and satisfaction. Invest in job satisfaction, communicate clear goals, and recognize effort as well as outcomes.

Conclusion: Performance Management as a Strategic Growth Engine

Performance management is not just a sales issue—it is a boardroom priority. The most successful organizations don’t just pay more; they pay smarter, aligning incentives, monitoring, and territory design with business goals and the realities of human motivation. By taking a holistic, research-driven approach to performance management, C-level leaders can unlock hidden productivity, reduce costly turnover, and drive sustainable, profitable growth.


Are you ready to transform your sales performance management?

Our consulting services are designed to help you diagnose hidden inefficiencies, optimize incentive systems, and build high-performing sales organizations. Contact us today to schedule a Sales Force Effectiveness Assessment and discover how you can turn your sales team into a true growth engine.

This article is part of the Insights section of our website, where we share the latest thinking on performance management, sales effectiveness, and strategic growth for C-level leaders.

 

Inna Hüessmanns, MBA

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From Local Success to Global Impact: How C-Level Leaders Can De-Risk Product Launches

From Local Success to Global Impact: How C-Level Leaders Can De-Risk Product Launches

Market Orientation

Product-Market-Fit / Growth Strategy /Market Intelligence / International Expansion

20. June, 2025

The Executive Challenge: Why Proven Ideas Still Miss the Mark

For today’s C-level leaders, launching new products—especially across international markets—presents both opportunity and risk. Even the most experienced organizations can fall into the trap of relying on internal assumptions or replicating local market wins, only to face disappointing results abroad. The stakes are high: resources are invested, reputations are on the line, and growth targets depend on successful execution.

The Stark Reality: Why So Many Product Launches Fail

Recent research indicates that between 55% and 80% of B2B product launches fail to meet their revenue or performance targets in the first year. Our experience partnering with both SMEs and global organizations confirms this sobering trend. The most frequent causes include:

  • Unclear Value Propositions: Launches without a compelling, differentiated customer promise.
  • Insufficient Market Intelligence: Decisions driven by intuition or anecdotal evidence instead of robust, data-driven insights.
  • Lack of Adaptation: Assuming local strategies will work globally, without considering cultural, regulatory, or competitive nuances.
  • Siloed Execution: Internal barriers and lack of cross-functional alignment dilute impact and slow time-to-market.

 

The Solution: Product-Market Fit Analysis and Market Intelligence

Product-market fit is the foundation of sustainable growth. It means your offering solves a real problem for a clearly defined customer segment—so much so that customers are eager to buy, recommend, and return. Achieving this, especially in new markets, requires more than a great idea.

 

Why Product-Market Fit Matters for C-Level Leaders

  • Reduces Risk: Validates real demand before major investments, minimizing costly missteps.
  • Drives Local Adaptation: Uncovers market-specific needs, enabling tailored features, pricing, and messaging.
  • Accelerates Growth: Delighted customers become advocates, fueling organic expansion and brand credibility.
  • Attracts Investment: Demonstrates traction and market understanding, increasing stakeholder and investor confidence.

 

Building a Market-Oriented, Growth-Driven Organization

To consistently deliver successful product launches, leading organizations embrace:

1. Customer Orientation

  • Ongoing analysis of customer needs throughout the product lifecycle.
  • Innovation across the entire business system, including service, support, and delivery.

2. Competitor Orientation

  • Systematic monitoring of competitor strengths, weaknesses, and strategies to identify differentiation opportunities.

3. Cross-Functional Coordination

  • Breaking down silos to ensure insights from sales, marketing, R&D, and customer support are shared and acted upon.

4. Superior Market Intelligence

  • Investing in comprehensive market analysis, competitor analysis, and customer value research.
  • Leveraging both quantitative data (usage metrics, sales trends) and qualitative insights (customer interviews, feedback loops).

 

Actionable Recommendations for C-Level Executives

  • Start with the Problem: Validate real customer pain points before building new features or entering new markets.
  • Pilot and Iterate: Test in small, diverse segments and adapt quickly based on feedback.
  • Localize with Purpose: Don’t assume your local strategy will work abroad. Adapt your product, positioning, and go-to-market approach for each market.
  • Foster a Culture of Intelligence: Make market intelligence and customer feedback central to every strategic decision.
  • Measure What Matters: Track metrics that reflect true product-market fit—retention, repeat usage, referrals—not just vanity metrics.

Unlock Confident Growth with International Growth Solutions

Avoid the costly pitfalls of failed product launches—over half of new B2B products miss their targets, often due to a lack of clear market understanding. Our Product-Market-Fit Analysis is designed to ensure your product delivers real value to your target clients before you invest further, helping you validate demand, reduce wasted resources, and accelerate your time-to-market.

 

Why Partner with Us?

  • Market Analysis: In-depth research to identify trends, opportunities, and threats in your target markets.
  • Competitor Analysis: Comprehensive benchmarking to reveal gaps, strengths, and strategic positioning.
  • Customer Value Research: Actionable insights into what your customers truly value—enabling you to innovate with confidence.
  • Product-Market-Fit Analysis: Rigorous validation of your offering, tailored for international and cross-border growth.
  • Strategic Guidance & Execution: From go-to-market planning to interim leadership, we help you drive transformation and results at every growth stage.

Take the Next Step

Book a complimentary consultation to discover how our market research and product-market-fit solutions can help you avoid costly mistakes, accelerate growth, and achieve sustainable international success.

Inna Hüessmanns, MBA

 

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The Integration Framework: Transforming Sales and Marketing into a Unified Growth Engine

The Integration Framework: Transforming Sales and Marketing into a Unified Growth Engine

market intelligence

CHANGE / BUSINESS GROWTH / SALES / MARKETING

10. May, 2025

Imagine an organization where sales and marketing are not just adjacent functions, but a single, unified force. Every campaign is amplified, every customer touchpoint is seamless, and every opportunity is captured with precision. In today’s volatile, fast-paced business environment, this level of integration is not just a best practice - it’s a strategic imperative for those determined to outperform and outlast the competition.

Why Integration Is Essential

 

Research consistently shows that organizations with a high degree of sales-marketing integration achieve stronger revenue growth, improved customer satisfaction, and greater brand equity. Yet, many companies still struggle with siloed teams, missed opportunities, and inconsistent messaging. The stakes are high: in a world where agility and customer centricity are paramount, integration is no longer optional-it is the engine of sustainable growth.

 

The Integrator Role: Orchestrating Seamless Collaboration

 

One of the most effective ways to bridge the gap between sales and marketing is to create dedicated integrator roles. These market managers or integrators are responsible for coordinating activities such as advertising, pricing, and service support for specific market segments. Their mandate is to facilitate communication, resolve conflicts, and ensure alignment between both functions.

 

What sets successful integrators apart is not formal authority, but their expertise, balanced perspective, and strong conflict management skills. They leverage unique knowledge to influence outcomes, acting as the connective tissue that brings sales and marketing together. The use of integrators is especially valuable for complex, high-stakes projects like new product launches, where seamless collaboration is mission-critical. While this approach does involve additional investment, the returns in alignment, speed, and execution quality can be substantial.

 

Process and System Levers: Building the Integration Framework

 

  1. Communication: The Art of Balance

 

Effective integration is built on communication-but more is not always better. The optimal approach blends formal channels (scheduled meetings, structured reports) with informal touchpoints (spontaneous conversations, quick check-ins). Formal communication is vital for strategic alignment and recurring updates, while informal exchanges foster agility and creativity, particularly when navigating ambiguity or rapid change.

 

For innovative projects, informal, free-flowing communication is essential to encourage idea exchange and adaptability. Conversely, for routine initiatives, a more structured approach ensures efficiency and clarity. The key is balance: too little communication breeds misalignment, while too much can overwhelm teams and drain productivity.

 

  1. Information Systems: Empower, Don’t Control

 

Technology can be a powerful enabler of integration-if it’s designed with the user in mind. Sales and marketing professionals are quick to embrace systems that are intuitive and help them do their jobs better. However, overly complex or control-oriented platforms often breed resistance and underutilization. The best systems facilitate both formal and informal communication, streamline reporting, and make information sharing effortless. When information systems are seen as empowering rather than monitoring, adoption and integration soar.

 

  1. Job Rotation: Building Empathy and Networks

 

Strategic job rotation between sales and marketing builds empathy, expands internal networks, and breaks down cultural barriers. Immersing managers in different functional areas helps them understand the challenges and priorities of their counterparts, fostering a more collaborative organization. However, moderation is essential: too little rotation yields minimal impact, while too much can disrupt operations and erode specialized expertise. The most effective programs are targeted, with clear objectives and support for participants.

 

  1. Integrated Goals and Incentives: Driving Joint Accountability

 

Shared objectives-such as joint revenue or customer satisfaction targets-align interests and create a common purpose. When both functions participate in setting these goals, buy-in and motivation increase significantly. Layering in cross-functional incentives further reinforces collaborative behaviors, ensuring both teams are invested in achieving shared outcomes.

 

  1. Culture and Talent: The Foundation of Integration

 

A culture that values sharing, adaptability, and collaboration is essential for sustained integration. Hiring and promoting individuals who are open-minded and team-oriented strengthens this foundation. When team members view their success as intertwined with the broader organization, integration becomes part of the company’s DNA.

 

The Performance Payoff-and Why It Matters Now

 

The link between integration and business performance is well established. Integrated sales and marketing teams deliver faster growth, higher profitability, and greater resilience. These benefits are amplified in dynamic markets, where coordinated action and rapid adaptation are essential for success. Integration enables organizations to respond quickly to market shifts, capitalize on new opportunities, and deliver a consistent, compelling customer experience.

 

Navigating the Trade-Offs

 

While the benefits of integration are clear, it is not without its costs. Investment in people, systems, and change management is required. The trade-off is most favorable when integration is focused on complex, novel tasks-such as new product launches or market expansions-where the payoff in speed and effectiveness is greatest. Leaders must weigh these factors carefully and tailor their approach to the unique needs of their organization.

 

The Influence of the Business Environment

 

Integration becomes even more critical in uncertain environments, where rapid change and complexity are the norm. When customer needs are evolving, competition is fierce, or the pace of innovation is accelerating, the ability to coordinate seamlessly across functions can mean the difference between leading and lagging. Environmental uncertainty, customer concentration, competitive intensity, and the rate of new product introduction all heighten the need for robust sales-marketing integration.

 

Is Your Sales and Marketing Engine Ready?

 

This brings us to a pivotal question: are your sales and marketing teams operating as isolated units, or as a unified engine driving sustainable growth? The rewards of true alignment are immense-accelerated growth, increased profitability, and a resilient, unified brand.

 

If you recognize that your sales and marketing connection could be stronger, you’re not alone. Many organizations are on this journey, but the difference lies in taking decisive action now. Don’t let silos and misalignment hold your business back.

 

The time to integrate is now. Break down barriers, unify your approach, and build a future-ready revenue engine. Take the first step and explore how a robust integration framework can redefine what’s possible for your organization.

 

Inna Hüessmanns, MBA

 

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Sales & Marketing: The Collaboration Blueprint for B2B Growth

Sales & Marketing: The Collaboration Blueprint for B2B Growth

CHANGE / BUSINESS GROWTH / SALES / MARKETING

07. May, 2025

What if the greatest threat to your company’s growth isn’t your competitors, but the invisible wall between your sales and marketing teams? Every day, businesses leave revenue on the table because their two most customer-facing functions operate in silos, missing out on the transformative power of true collaboration. Imagine the performance gains if these teams worked in lockstep, sharing insights, strategies, and a unified vision for customer success. The data is clear: organizations that break down these barriers consistently outperform those that don’t.

The Business Impact of Collaboration

 

Academic research confirms a direct and positive relationship between sales-marketing collaboration and business performance. When these teams work together, companies benefit from:

 

  • Stronger customer relationships and improved retention

 

  • Enhanced brand consistency and equity

 

  • Higher lead conversion rates and increased revenue

 

  • Greater innovation and adaptability in the marketplace

 

Conversely, a lack of collaboration leads to dissatisfied customers, lost business, and diminished competitiveness. In the current B2B environment-characterized by complex buying journeys and rapidly shifting customer expectations-alignment between sales and marketing is a strategic imperative.

 

Why Collaboration Fails: Common Barriers

 

Despite the compelling business case, many organizations struggle to achieve effective collaboration. The most common barriers include:

 

  • Interdepartmental Conflict: Differing goals, backgrounds, and philosophies often breed mutual distrust and negative stereotyping, making cooperation difficult.

 

  • Poor Communication: Without regular, structured communication, misunderstandings persist and valuable insights remain siloed.

 

  • Role Ambiguity: Unclear responsibilities and objectives create confusion, inefficiency, and frustration.

 

  • Cultural Resistance: Deep-rooted functional identities and specialized knowledge can foster a sense of “us vs. them,” impeding collaboration.

 

Overcoming these challenges requires deliberate leadership, process redesign, and a cultural shift toward shared success.

 

Five Proven Drivers of Effective Collaboration

 

Research identifies five key antecedents that enable robust sales-marketing collaboration and drive superior business outcomes:

 

  1. Senior Management Support

 

Leadership sets the tone for collaboration. When senior executives champion cross-functional teamwork-by modeling integrative behaviors, setting shared objectives, and aligning incentives-teams are more likely to overcome resistance and work toward common goals.

 

  1. Conflict Reduction

 

Addressing sources of interdepartmental conflict is critical. This involves clarifying roles, aligning performance metrics, and facilitating open dialogue to resolve misunderstandings. Organizations that proactively manage friction foster an environment where collaboration can thrive.

 

  1. Enhanced Communication

 

High-quality communication-both formal and informal-is the backbone of successful collaboration. Regular joint meetings, shared digital platforms, and informal touchpoints enable knowledge sharing, synchronize activities, and build trust between teams.

 

  1. Organizational Learning

 

A culture of organizational learning encourages teams to share knowledge, experiment with new approaches, and adapt quickly to market changes. Cross-functional training, joint workshops, and knowledge-sharing platforms help break down silos and foster mutual understanding.

 

  1. Effective Market Intelligence Systems

 

Robust systems for gathering, analyzing, and disseminating market intelligence enable both sales and marketing to operate from a shared understanding of customer needs and market dynamics. When both functions participate in generating and interpreting market data, they are better equipped to align strategies and tactics.

 

Beyond Alignment: The Power of True Collaboration

 

It is vital to distinguish between mere interaction and genuine collaboration. Interaction includes routine activities such as meetings and information exchanges, while true collaboration is characterized by mutual understanding, a shared vision, and joint problem-solving. Leading B2B organizations are moving away from rigid, formal control systems toward more flexible processes that encourage trust-based relationships between sales and marketing.

 

This shift is especially relevant in today’s environment, where agility and responsiveness are critical. Collaborative teams are better positioned to co-create value for customers, respond to competitive threats, and capitalize on emerging opportunities.

 

Practical Strategies for B2B Organizations

 

To foster a high-performing sales-marketing partnership, consider these actionable strategies:

 

  • Joint Goal Setting: Develop shared objectives focused on customer acquisition, retention, and growth.

 

  • Cross-Functional Training: Provide opportunities for teams to learn from each other’s expertise and perspectives.

 

  • Regular Collaboration: Establish routine meetings and touchpoints for knowledge sharing and problem-solving.

 

  • Celebrate Successes Together: Recognize and reward joint achievements to reinforce a culture of shared success.

 

  • Leverage Technology: Implement shared platforms (CRM, marketing automation) to ensure real-time access to data and streamline collaboration.

 

The Customer Experience Advantage

 

A unified sales and marketing approach delivers a seamless customer journey-from initial awareness to post-purchase support. Consistent messaging, personalized interactions, and timely follow-ups build trust and engagement, increasing conversion rates and fostering long-term loyalty. When both teams share insights about customer preferences and behaviors, they can tailor strategies that resonate with buyers and drive repeat business.

 

Measuring Success: The Role of Joint Metrics

 

Tracking joint performance metrics-such as lead conversion rates and customer acquisition costs-provides visibility into shared goals and fosters accountability. By analyzing these metrics, teams can refine their approaches, optimize resource allocation, and enhance communication, leading to improved targeting and more effective campaigns.

 

The Path Forward:

 

In a rapidly evolving B2B landscape, aligning sales and marketing is not just a best practice-it is a strategic necessity. The path to high performance begins with a clear assessment of current barriers, followed by targeted interventions across leadership, communication, learning, and intelligence systems.

 

Whether your organization is struggling with entrenched silos or seeking to unlock new growth opportunities, a structured approach to sales-marketing collaboration can be the catalyst for transformation.

 

Are you ready to bridge the divide and accelerate your business performance? Let’s start the conversation.

 

Inna Hüessmanns, MBA

 

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From Silos to Success: Unleashing the Power of Sales and Marketing Alignment

From Silos to Success: Unleashing the Power of Sales and Marketing Alignment

CHANGE / BUSINESS GROWTH / SALES / MARKETING

02. May, 2025

In today’s dynamic business environment, sales and marketing stand as the twin pillars of organizational success. Yet, far too often, these critical functions operate in isolation, divided by both economic pressures and deeply ingrained cultural differences. For organizations seeking not just to survive, but to thrive in the face of fierce competition, bridging this divide is no longer optional—it's a strategic imperative.

The Two Fronts: Economic and Cultural Friction

 

The Economic Divide: A Battle for Resources

 

One primary source of tension stems from the allocation of budget. Senior management typically provides a combined budget for sales and marketing, forcing the two groups to compete for their share. Sales teams often scrutinize marketing expenditures, particularly concerning the “four P’s”: pricing, promotion, and product.

 

Regarding pricing, marketing aims to “sell the price” to achieve revenue goals, whereas salespeople often prefer lower prices for easier sales and greater negotiation flexibility. This conflict is compounded by organizational structures where sales may bypass marketing for special pricing, sidelining marketing and breeding resentment.

 

Promotional costs also fuel friction. Marketing invests in creating customer awareness and desire, but the sales force may view large promotional campaigns—especially those focused on brand awareness—as a misuse of resources. They might argue that these funds would be better spent on expanding and improving the sales team. Similarly, when marketers contribute to product development, salespeople may complain that the resulting products lack the features or quality that their customers demand. This is because the sales group’s perspective is shaped by the immediate needs of individual customers, while marketing focuses on broader market appeal.

 

The Cultural Divide: A Clash of Mindsets

 

The cultural conflict between sales and marketing is often even more entrenched than the economic one. This divide stems from the different types of people the two functions attract and the distinct ways they spend their time.

 

Marketers tend to be highly analytical, data-oriented, and project-focused. They concentrate on building competitive advantages for the future. They judge their projects’ performance with a critical eye, but this performance-focused approach may not always translate into visible action for their colleagues in sales, as it happens primarily behind a desk rather than in the field.

 

Salespeople, on the other hand, spend their time engaging with current and potential customers. They are skilled relationship builders, attuned to customers’ willingness to buy and the product features that resonate. They thrive on closing deals and are not easily discouraged by rejection. These fundamental differences in perspective and daily activity often make it difficult for the two groups to collaborate effectively.

 

Furthermore, misaligned incentives can exacerbate these tensions, leading to conflicts over which products to prioritize. Salespeople might push products with lower margins but more immediate sales potential, creating further discord. The two groups are also judged by very different metrics. Salespeople are evaluated on closed sales, while marketing’s impact is often assessed based on long-term programs and their contribution to the organization’s overall competitive advantage.

 

Four Types of Sales and Marketing Relationships

 

Given these inherent conflicts, it’s no surprise that strains often develop between sales and marketing, even when the heads of the two departments are on good terms. The relationships between sales and marketing departments typically fall into four categories:

 

Undefined: Sales and marketing operate independently, each preoccupied with its own tasks and agendas. Communication is limited, and meetings are ad hoc, focusing primarily on conflict resolution.

 

Defined: Sales and marketing establish processes and rules to prevent disputes. Each group adheres to its defined tasks, building a common language in contentious areas such as lead definition. Meetings become more reflective, addressing questions like “What do we expect of one another?” Collaboration occurs on large events like customer conferences and trade shows.

 

Aligned: Clear but flexible boundaries exist between sales and marketing. The groups engage in joint planning and training. Sales understands and uses marketing terminology, and marketers consult salespeople on important accounts, playing a role even in transactional sales.

 

Integrated: Boundaries blur as the groups redesign their relationship to share structures, systems, and rewards. Marketing, and to a lesser extent sales, focuses on strategic, forward-thinking tasks. Marketers are deeply involved in managing key accounts, and both groups develop and implement shared metrics. Budgeting becomes more flexible and less contentious, fostering a “rise or fall together” culture.

 

Strategies for Moving Up the Maturity Curve

 

Once an organization understands the nature of the relationship between its sales and marketing groups, senior management can take steps to strengthen alignment. However, it’s crucial to assess whether greater alignment is necessary, as some situations may not warrant significant changes.

 

Moving from Undefined to Defined:

 

In small organizations where sales and marketing enjoy good, informal relationships, formal intervention may be unnecessary. However, if conflicts arise regularly due to undefined roles, managers should establish clear rules of engagement, including handoff points for critical tasks like following up on sales leads.

 

Moving from Defined to Aligned:

 

While a defined relationship can be comfortable, it may not suffice if the industry is changing significantly. To move towards alignment:

 

  • Encourage Disciplined Communication: Implement regular meetings between sales and marketing to discuss opportunities and problems. Focus discussions on action items that will resolve issues and create opportunities. Develop systematic processes and guidelines for communication, such as involving brand managers in high-value sales opportunities or requiring sales review of marketing collateral.

 

  • Create Joint Assignments: Provide opportunities for marketers and salespeople to work together to foster familiarity and understanding. Marketers should occasionally join sales calls and account-planning sessions, while salespeople should help develop marketing plans and preview campaigns.

 

  • Appoint a Liaison: Designate a trusted individual to act as a liaison between marketing and sales, resolving conflicts and sharing tacit knowledge. The liaison should be deeply embedded within the sales force, attending meetings and providing insights into market needs.

 

  • Co-locate Marketers and Salespeople: Physical proximity encourages interaction and collaboration. Organizations can allocate space in a shared location to different teams within sales and marketing, facilitating communication and shared work.

 

  • Improve Sales Force Feedback: Establish processes to tap into the sales force’s experience with minimal disruption. Marketing can ask the sales VP to summarize insights or design shorter information forms to gather customer information.

 

Moving from Aligned to Integrated:

 

In complex or rapidly changing situations, integrating sales and marketing may be necessary. This involves integrating planning, target setting, customer assessment, and value-proposition development. It also requires developing shared databases and mechanisms for continuous improvement, along with a cultural shift towards shared responsibility and disciplined planning.

 

  • Appoint a Chief Revenue (or Customer) Officer: The primary rationale for integrating sales and marketing is their shared goal: generating profitable and increasing revenue. Placing both functions under one C-level executive ensures a unified approach to achieving corporate objectives.

 

  • Define the Steps in the Marketing and Sales Funnels: Sales and marketing are responsible for a sequence of activities that lead customers toward purchases and ongoing relationships. Defining these funnels from both the customer’s and seller’s perspectives is essential for alignment.

 

Seize the Advantage: The Time to Integrate is Now

 

The choice is clear: will your sales and marketing teams continue to operate in separate spheres, or will they unite to form a powerhouse of growth?

 

If you recognize that your sales and marketing alignment is falling short, you’re not alone. Many organizations struggle to overcome these challenges. However, the potential gains from achieving genuine synergy are undeniable.

 

That’s where we can help. Our expertise lies in assessing and optimizing sales and marketing alignment, identifying friction points, and unlocking opportunities for collaboration. We partner with you to develop and implement a tailored strategy that integrates your teams, streamlines your processes, and empowers you to achieve sustainable business growth.

 

Don’t let your sales and marketing teams remain disconnected. Contact us today to schedule a consultation and discover how we can transform your revenue engine. The time to integrate is now—let’s build your success story together.

Inna Hüessmanns, MBA

 

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Beyond Assessment and Redesign: Mastering Measurement, Sales Support Programs, and Implementation in Sales Change Programs

Beyond Assessment and Redesign: Mastering Measurement, Sales Support Programs, and Implementation in Sales Change Programs

CHANGE / SALES EXCELLENCE / SALES TRAINING

02. May, 2025

Change initiatives should begin with thorough assessment and thoughtful redesign - two foundational stages where organizations diagnose their current sales capabilities and envision a new, improved structure. But the journey doesn’t end there. The true test of transformation lies in what follows: measurement, sales productivity and investments, and sales support programs-including the vital collaboration between marketing and sales, and sustaining sales force motivation.

These next stages are where strategy meets execution, where plans become reality, and where lasting competitive advantage is forged. Let’s dive into these critical phases that ensure your sales change program not only launches but thrives.

 

Measurement: Transforming How You Gauge Sales Success to Drive Customer-Centric Growth

Organizations that have embarked on change programs quickly realize that traditional sales metrics no longer suffice. Prior to change, companies often relied on base revenue and new revenue as their primary performance indicators. However, these metrics fail to capture the full story-especially the costly phenomenon of customer churn, where buyers switch to competitors shortly after purchase.

Why Measurement Must Evolve

To truly align sales efforts with long-term business health, companies now incorporate more nuanced metrics such as:

  • Customer satisfaction – reflecting the quality of the customer experience.
  • Customer profitability – ensuring efforts focus on the most valuable clients.
  • Customer retention and account growth rates – key indicators of sustained success.

This shift moves the focus from simply “selling more” to selling smarter-prioritizing relationships that yield lasting value.

Activity Drivers: Measuring What Matters

Some companies go further by integrating activity drivers into their measurement systems. These are behaviors proven to lead to success, such as:

  • Deepening engagement within customer accounts.
  • Building comprehensive account profiles.
  • Understanding evolving customer and prospect needs.
  • Leveraging cross-selling opportunities across the organization.

By rewarding these activities, organizations align incentives with the behaviors that truly drive profitable growth.

 

Productivity and Investments in the Sales Function: Maximizing Salespeople’s Time and Impact

After redesigning the sales organization and redefining success metrics, the next challenge is boosting sales productivity-getting the highest possible return on the limited time salespeople have each day.

The Time Challenge: Making Every Minute Count

Imagine if salespeople had 36 hours in their day instead of 24. Since that’s impossible, companies must instead optimize how salespeople spend their time by:

  • Reducing or reallocating non-selling tasks that can be handled by others.
  • Streamlining administrative burdens.
  • Providing tools and systems that simplify internal processes.

The goal is to enable sales teams to focus on what they do best: building customer relationships and closing deals.

Investing to Avoid Corporate Anorexia

In pursuit of cost-cutting, many companies have trimmed sales forces to dangerously lean levels-sometimes too lean to seize growth opportunities. This “corporate anorexia” limits the ability to pursue new markets or deepen existing customer relationships.

Smart organizations recognize that strategic investments in hiring, training, and technology are essential to fuel growth and maintain competitive advantage, especially during periods of change.

 

Sales Support Programs: Energizing Performance Through Training, Collaboration, and Motivation

Change can be disruptive, and sustaining momentum requires robust sales support programs designed to energize and guide the sales force.

Training, Compensation, Rewards, and Technology

Effective sales support includes:

  • Continuous training to build new skills aligned with the change.
  • Thoughtfully designed compensation and reward systems that motivate desired behaviors.
  • Deployment of sales automation and artificial intelligence tools to reduce friction and increase efficiency.
  • Strong supervision and coaching to reinforce new processes and mindsets.

Marketing and Sales Collaboration: Bridging the Divide to Serve Customers Better

A common obstacle in sales transformation is the “coffee room turf war” between marketing and sales – an often underestimated cultural clash that can undermine customer-centric strategies.

However, when marketing and sales collaborate effectively, the benefits are significant:

  • Sales teams provide marketing with rich customer insights that inform product development and messaging.
  • Marketing equips sales with targeted leads and tools to focus efforts on the highest-potential prospects.

Closing this gap is essential for delivering seamless customer experiences and maximizing revenue.

 

Sustaining Sales Force Motivation: The Heartbeat of Change

Maintaining morale during transformation is critical. Key strategies to keep motivation high include:

  • Using compensation strategically to reinforce new priorities.
  • Eliminating unnecessary administrative burdens so salespeople can focus on selling.
  • Engaging in ongoing dialogue between management and sales teams about the change process, challenges, and future vision.

Without this sustained focus, salespeople tend to revert to old habits that may no longer align with company goals or customer needs.

 

Lessons Learned: Essential Change Management Skills for High-Performing Sales Organizations

Drawing from extensive research and practical experience, here are critical recommendations for leaders driving sales change programs:

  • Act Before It’s Too Late: Become a learning organization that anticipates market shifts and initiates change proactively.
  • Involve Marketing and Sales Broadly: Engage key stakeholders early and often to build ownership and reduce resistance.
  • Assemble and Use Factual Information: Base decisions on rigorous data rather than anecdotes to accelerate and improve change outcomes.
  • Invest in Tools, Processes, and Programs: Recognize the scale of change needed and upgrade sales infrastructure accordingly.
  • Communicate Change to Customers: Keep customers informed to manage expectations and reinforce your commitment to meeting their evolving needs.

Take the First Step Towards Strategic Renewal Today.

Are you ready to move beyond assessment and redesign to truly transform your sales organization? The stages of measurement, productivity enhancement, and sales support are where change takes root and delivers lasting impact.

How We Can Support Your Journey:

    Schedule Your Free One-Day Sales Organization Assessment: Gain a comprehensive review of your sales processes and strategies.

    Identify Key Areas for Improvement and Growth: Receive tailored, actionable recommendations.

    Partner with Experts: Leverage our proven methodologies to design and implement change programs that drive measurable results.

Secure your complimentary 60-minute consultation today and start building a more effective, customer-focused sales organization.

Contact us now to take the next step in your sales force change management initiative. Together, we’ll turn change into your greatest competitive advantage.

 

Inna Hüessmanns, MBA

 

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Building an Unbeatable Sales Force: The Competitive Advantage No One Can Copy

Building an Unbeatable Sales Force: The Competitive Advantage No One Can Copy

new building in london skyscraper          financial district and window

CHANGE / SALES EXCELLENCE / SALES TRAINING

19. April, 2025

In today's volatile marketplace, where fleeting trends and disruptive technologies reign supreme, the quest for enduring competitive advantage has become a relentless pursuit. Many organizations focus on outsmarting the competition, chasing the latest market hacks, or acquiring cutting-edge tools. Yet, the most sustainable form of competitive advantage lies not in what you get, but in what you build. Specifically, a high-performing, strategically managed sales force can serve as an unassailable fortress, shielding your business from commoditization and imitation.

Beyond External Analysis: Unleashing Internal Potential

While external factors, such as market dynamics and competitive landscapes, undoubtedly influence business success, a sole focus on these aspects provides an incomplete picture. Organizations that achieve lasting competitive advantage recognize the power of internal resources and capabilities. These resources, when viewed through the lens of value, rareness, imitability, and organization, can transform your sales force into an unstoppable engine of growth.

Value: Does your sales force possess the skills and knowledge to effectively seize opportunities and neutralize threats in the marketplace?

Rareness: Are your sales practices and strategies unique, setting you apart from the competition?

Imitability: Can competitors easily replicate your sales approach, culture, and talent?

Organization: Are your structures, systems, and policies aligned to support and empower your sales force to maximize their impact?

When these questions are answered affirmatively, your sales force transcends its traditional role and becomes a potent source of competitive differentiation.

The Human Factor: The Uncopyable Asset

In an era where technological advancements and operational efficiencies are readily accessible, the human element emerges as the most difficult asset to replicate. The way you manage, develop, and empower your sales force is often subtle, deeply embedded in your organizational culture, and nearly invisible to outsiders. This “human edge” isn’t about generic best practices; it’s about a cohesive set of principles and practices that, when executed in harmony, create a formidable barrier to imitation.
The Thirteen Pillars of Sales Excellence

As highlighted by Pfeffer (1995), several key practices characterize organizations that excel through effective people management. When strategically applied to your sales force, these pillars can unlock unprecedented levels of performance and competitive advantage:

1. Employment Security: Cultivate a culture of long-term commitment and mutual loyalty. When salespeople feel secure in their roles, they are more likely to invest their time and energy in building lasting relationships and driving long-term results.

2. Selective Recruiting: Rigorously select the best talent. By setting a high bar for entry, you create a sense of prestige and belonging, attracting top performers who are driven to excel.

3. High Wages: Invest in competitive compensation. Higher wages not only attract skilled professionals but also send a powerful message that the organization values its salespeople and their contributions.

4. Incentive Pay: Align rewards with performance. When salespeople directly benefit from their success, they are more motivated to go the extra mile and exceed expectations.

5. Employee Ownership: Foster a sense of ownership. Granting salespeople a stake in the company’s success aligns their interests with those of the organization and encourages a long-term perspective.

6. Information Sharing: Empower with knowledge. Equip your sales force with the data, insights, and market intelligence they need to make informed decisions and effectively serve customers.

7. Participation and Empowerment: Encourage involvement. Involve salespeople in shaping their work processes and decision-making. Empowerment fosters a sense of ownership and drives innovation.

8. Self-Managed Teams: Leverage collaborative power. Empower sales teams to manage their own performance and drive accountability through peer monitoring and shared goals.

9. Training and Skills Development: Invest in continuous growth. Provide ongoing training and development opportunities to ensure that your sales force remains at the forefront of their profession.

10. Cross-Utilization and Cross-Training: Cultivate versatility. Encourage salespeople to develop multiple skills and take on diverse roles, enhancing their job satisfaction and organizational agility.

11. Symbolic Egalitarianism: Foster a culture of respect. Promote a sense of equality and shared purpose throughout the organization, signaling that everyone’s contribution is valued.

12. Wage Compression: Minimize internal competition. In collaborative sales environments, reducing pay disparities can foster teamwork and enhance overall efficiency.

13. Promotion from Within: Nurture internal talent. Offering clear paths for advancement incentivizes professional development and ensures that future leaders understand your culture and values.

The Power of Measurement and Coherent Philosophy

To ensure that these practices drive tangible results, it’s essential to establish clear metrics and track progress consistently. Measurement provides feedback, promotes accountability, and signals what the organization truly values. More importantly, successful organizations integrate these practices into an overarching management philosophy, creating a unified approach that fosters resilience, adaptability, and clarity.

Ready to Transform Your Sales Force?

In a hyper-competitive landscape, building an unbeatable sales force is no longer a luxury—it’s a necessity. By focusing on the human element, aligning your organizational structure, and fostering a culture of empowerment and excellence, you can transform your sales team into an unassailable competitive weapon.

Are you ready to unlock the full potential of your sales force and create a competitive advantage that others can only envy?

Contact us today to learn how our customized training solutions can help you build a team that thrives in any market condition.

Inna Hüessmanns, MBA

 

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Strategic Renewal in Action: Navigating the Redesign Phase of Change Management

Strategic Renewal in Action: Navigating the Redesign Phase of Change Management

CHANGE / SALES EXCELLENCE

18. April, 2025

In our previous article, we explored the assessment phase of a change management program, focusing on strategic customer renewal. We shared actionable insights and offered our Strategic Renewal Guide to help organizations evaluate their sales processes and align with customer needs. Now, it’s time to move forward—this article dives into the redesign phase, where the real transformation begins. The redesign phase is where vision meets execution. It’s about reshaping your sales organization to thrive in a dynamic marketplace, addressing leadership, strategy, processes, and technology. Let’s explore how to master this critical stage of change management.

Mastering the Redesign Phase: Where Change Takes Shape

After assessing the environment in which customers buy, organizations must move into the redesign phase—a decisive step toward building a high-performing sales team. This phase often requires transformation in four key areas:

  1. Leadership and Management Skills: Leading from the Front

Change starts at the top. To meet evolving customer demands—especially those from larger and strategic clients—leaders must embrace agility and adaptability. Customers increasingly impose stringent requirements on suppliers, demanding innovative solutions and seamless collaboration.

Effective leadership during this phase involves developing:

  • Financial expertise for value-driven decision-making.
  • Advanced communication skills across teams and geographies.
  • Cross-functional and cross-country coordination to align resources with customer needs.
  • Consensus-building capabilities to foster collaboration within and across organizations.

When leadership sets the tone for change, it empowers teams to rise to new challenges and deliver exceptional results.

 

  1. Sales Strategy: Targeting Growth Opportunities

A well-crafted sales strategy is the backbone of organizational success. It defines how resources are deployed to target customers with the right products, services, and solutions. At its core lies customer segmentation, a powerful tool that identifies high-potential customers and aligns them with tailored solutions.

Why does segmentation matter? Because different customers offer varying growth and profit potential—and when matched with optimized sales channels and strategies, organizations can achieve accelerated revenue growth and productivity gains. Yet, segmentation is often overlooked, falling into the gap between sales and marketing responsibilities. Bridging this gap unlocks opportunities for sustainable growth while ensuring resources are allocated effectively.

  1. Sales Processes: Redefining How You Sell

To achieve strategic objectives, companies often need to rethink how they sell—whether to existing customers, new customers, or both. Redesigning sales processes can also lead to redefining roles within the organization.

For example:

  • A company may shift from deploying product specialists to account or solution specialists who collaborate with technical experts to better serve customers.
  • Structural changes may follow process adjustments, ensuring alignment between customer orientation, strategy, and execution.

By reshaping processes and roles, organizations can create a more agile and customer-focused sales force that drives results.

  1. Technology and Sales Support Programs: Energizing Performance

Technology and support programs are essential for empowering sales teams during organizational redesigns. Training initiatives, performance-based compensation structures, rewards systems, AI-driven tools, automation platforms, and supervisory frameworks all play a vital role in energizing teams and sustaining success.

Investing in these areas ensures that your sales force has the tools it needs to adapt quickly and perform at its best in an ever-changing market.


Are you ready to take your sales organization to the next level?

Contact us for expert guidance through every stage of your change program—from assessment to implementation.


Inna Hüessmanns, MBA

 

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Guide for Strategic Renewal

Guide for Strategic Renewal

Guide_For_Strategic_Renewal_30.03.25

CHANGE / ORGANIZATIONAL TRANSFORMATION / by Inna Hüessmanns

31. March, 2025

This guide focuses on the critical components of the assessment phase, with a specific emphasis on strategic customer renewal as the foundation for driving meaningful change.

Our guide on strategic customer renewal serves as a starting point to help you transform your sales organization. It is designed to be a valuable resource as you embark on your change management journey, offering insights to evaluate your current approach and identify opportunities for growth.

Strategic renewal is an ongoing process that requires thoughtful planning, collaboration, and adaptability. By applying the principles outlined here, you can begin to align your organization’s efforts with long-term success and strengthen relationships with the customers who matter most.

Request our free guide for strategic renewal at ih@i-g-solutions.de

Take the First Step Towards Strategic Renewal:

Contact us to help you with the assessment, redesign, measurement, and implementation stages of your change program. Reach out for a complimentary 60-minute consultation.

Inna Hüessmanns, MBA

 
 
 

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