How sales training can make CIOs and IT staff more effective and sucessful. I was recently asked about the importance of selling skills for CIOs – does a CIO need to be a good salesperson? It seems to me the answer to this should be a resounding yes. After all, IT executives need to be able to sell themselves effectively in order to attain the heights of the C-Suite. Great CIOs must be great communicators, capable of delivering a compelling presentation or a memorable speech, and inspiring others to follow them.But what of sales skills beyond being a good presenter? Since many sales skills are focused on understanding people and connecting with them, I’ve found sales training to be highly effective on two levels:Developing better listening skills. One of the first things you learn as a salesperson is not how to make a pitch, but how to listen to a customer – only by listening can a good salesperson effectively satisfy the needs of a prospect/customer.Understanding how products/services meet the customer needs. Salespeople spend a lot of time learning about a firm’s products and services; they learn how they meet the various customer needs and they learn how to present them in the best light.So go ahead and sign up for the next sales training class being run in your organization – you may be pleasantly surprised!Are CIOs the only people in IT needing sales skills? I’d like to make the case for putting everyone in IT through sales training – here’s why:Active listening is a critical skill for everyone in IT, and understanding your organization’s products or services is fundamental to a thorough understanding of your organization’s value proposition. In addition, sales training offers many other benefits, such as: More awareness of the sales process – and why satisfying customer needs is the most important job in any organization.Increased understanding of the role of marketing to communicate value.Gaining practical skills that can be applied daily in interacting with IT’s internal customers.Improved ability to engage with the sales force and interact with end-customers by accompanying salespeople.Why not have your IT staff attend regular training sessions held for your organization’s new sales staff? This will also help build relationships between IT and sales.Let’s face it, if IT were a stand-alone business we would absolutely have to train front-line staff in selling skills. They would need this to better understand customer needs and translate them into value-generating services. And shouldn’t everyone in the organization understand the ins and outs of the role that keeps us all paid?What do you think? I’d love to hear from CIOs who have already done this.by Nigel Fenwick Related content opinion 2012 EA Award Winners: Business-Focused, Strategic And Pragmatic In Forresters EA Practice Playbook, we describe high performance enterprise architecture programs as business-focused, strategic and pragmatic. They are business-focused so that the direction and guidance EA provides has By Forrester Research Oct 08, 2012 3 mins Enterprise Architecture IT Strategy IT Leadership opinion Focus Your Information Strategy On Business Impact Today's organizations must manage the explosive growth of all types of information while addressing greater-than-ever business demand for insights into customer needs and the business environment. Meanwhile, the significant regulatory and compli By Forrester Research Oct 01, 2012 6 mins Regulation IT Leadership opinion Digital Disruption: What Software Dev & Delivery Competencies Matter? In this age of digital disruption and a society empowered by software-fueled technology, firms that can cultivate competencies in software development & delivery will establish competitive advantage as they will be better equiped to meet, and exc By Forrester Research Sep 14, 2012 3 mins Developer Enterprise Applications IT Leadership opinion Can IT Open New Sources Of Revenue? At an IT strategy offsite a senior director of IT asked this simple question: "How can we use information technology to help our company open up new streams of revenue?" A refreshing question, given that nine out of ten CIOs ask the opposit By Forrester Research Aug 31, 2012 4 mins IT Leadership Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe