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Negotiation Skills Enhance Sales Performance

By Michael Leimbach, PhD

Executive Summary

In today’s business era, it is a given that to be effective, salespeople need to embrace the art of negotiation. However, there have been few studies that demonstrate the impact of negotiation skills development on sales performance and business results. A recent study was designed to assess the impact of a sales performance improvement process created around Wilson Learning’s Negotiating to Yes (NTY) workshop.

The effectiveness of Negotiating to Yes was clearly demonstrated in our study of a large U.S. company that provides a variety of environmental services to industrial clients (hazardous waste disposal, site cleanup services, etc.). The results showed:

  • Positive improvement in all skills and performance outcomes
  • That 53% of the total revenue value (approx. $2.5 million/year) of individual sales opportunities was attributed to negotiation skills acquired in the improvement process
  • That Negotiating to Yes had the greatest impact on improvement in client relationships, better internal staff interactions, and better negotiation outcomes leading to more profitable business

The results strongly support the value of Negotiating to Yes in improving the salespeople’s negotiation skills and work performance. In turn, having salespeople who excel in the art of negotiation has helped the company gain better financial return, as well as improved overall organizational performance.

Negotiating to Yes and Effective Negotiation Skills

A successful negotiator knows the importance of finding balance between accomplishing business objectives (“keeping your eyes on the prize”) and nurturing and building relationships with clients for long-term mutual success. However, many salespeople have difficulty finding this balance. Negotiating to Yes is therefore designed to teach salespeople skills for focusing on business objectives while simultaneously enhancing client relationships.

Negotiating to Yes is a negotiation workshop jointly developed by Wilson Learning and William Ury, coauthor of the best-selling book Getting to Yes. We believe that balance between achieving business objectives and nurturing client relations can be achieved by following three principled negotiation processes: aligning people, exploring issues, and reaching agreement. Aligning people teaches salespeople how to gain perspective on the negotiation and create an environment in which “people issues” do not prevent the achievement of positive negotiation outcomes. In exploring issues, salespeople are taught how to identify interests beyond what’s obvious and to offer options accordingly. Finally, in reaching agreement, salespeople learn how to create win-win offers and to develop alternative options if a mutually satisfying agreement is not easily reachable.

For this study, we were interested in four principle research questions:

  • Does Negotiating to Yes improve the salespeople’s negotiation skills?
  • Do the new skills improve the salespeople’s productivity?
  • What is the financial return that can be attributed to Negotiating to Yes?
  • Which Negotiating to Yes skills have the greatest impact in improving business?

The Study

Background

This study was conducted in a large U.S. environmental services company that provides a variety of services to industrial clients (hazardous waste disposal, site cleanup services, etc). Negotiating to Yes was implemented to support a new pricing strategy. Management was aware that the new strategy could result in a significant increase in pricing to some of their clients and would have a major impact on customer loyalty. Thus, it was essential that all salespeople knew how to effectively negotiate on the new pricing strategy and help clients see additional value in the company’s services.

It is Wilson Learning’s (and our client’s) belief that training can only be effective when it is implemented within the context of a broader performance improvement process. Therefore, the Negotiating to Yes implementation in this company consisted of multiple activities centered on the Negotiating to Yes skills. Specifically, the 120 salespeople involved in this study:

  • First identified specific and important sales opportunities
  • Participated in a two-day Negotiating to Yes workshop, during which they developed negotiation strategies for the identified sales opportunities
  • Received biweekly tips and e-mail reminders after the workshop over a 12-week period to reinforce the use of the skills
  • Had available one-on-one coaching to address problem areas and provide support

Performance Measures

The first step was to determine how to measure performance. To prove the impact of negotiation skills development on the company, we wanted to use a strategically significant performance metric. We were interested in both the salespeople’s perceptions of improvement and the real bottom-line outcome. Thus, the study consisted of two parts:

  • Participant Surveys: Participants were asked to fill in an online survey approximately three months after the program to determine their use of Negotiating to Yes skills and the impact of those skills on critical business outcomes; 120 people responded to the online survey.
  • Opportunity Reviews: During the Negotiating to Yes workshop, each participant developed a strategy for a specific negotiation. We then sent a follow-up survey to determine how Negotiating to Yes skills affected the negotiation outcome and the dollar value attributed to the workshop; 47 people responded to the follow-up surveys. We selected 18 specific opportunities that were significant to the organization’s success and had been completed during the six months of the study. We then conducted in-depth interviews on these 18 sales opportunities to gain greater insight into the outcomes.

Findings

Our findings provided strong support for the value of Negotiating to Yes and this performance improvement process in improving the salespeople’s negotiation skills and the company’s overall business results.

Improvement in Negotiation Skills

The following graph shows the results of the participant survey on skill improvement. Participants were asked to indicate how much their negotiation skills improved as a result of the program, from No Change (1) to Significant Change (4). As the graph shows, there was significant improvement in all skills. Eight of the ten skills received average ratings of 3.0 or above, and all ten were rated 2.7 or above.

Impact on Work Performance

The new negotiation skills, in turn, had a significant impact on work performance. In the survey, we asked salespeople if there was a change in specific performance outcomes that resulted from participation in Negotiating to Yes. Participants agreed that the skills they learned in Negotiating to Yes had a positive impact on their performance outcomes. The results of the survey are shown in the graph at right. On average, salespeople agreed that all skills showed meaningful improvement.

In another question, we asked the participants how much improvement in their work performance they would attribute to Negotiating to Yes. As shown in the graph at right, over half (52%) attributed 25–50% of their productivity improvement to Negotiating to Yes—a significant improvement when you consider all of the other factors that affect performance.

Financial Impact of Negotiating to Yes

Of course, one of the most important questions associated with any training and development effort is its impact on the financial performance of the organization. We were able to explore this question through an in-depth analysis of selected sales opportunities.

As part of the Negotiating to Yes improvement process, we asked each participant to complete a negotiation plan for a specific client opportunity. After the anticipated closing date of the sales opportunity, we e-mailed the participants asking them the status of the negotiation; 47 salespeople responded that their sale had in fact closed. We selected 18 opportunities on which to conduct in-depth interviews. In these interviews, we asked how the participants used the Negotiating to Yes skills, the effect of these skills on the sale, the total dollar value of the sale, and the percentage of the sale they would attribute to Negotiating to Yes.

The graph at right shows the impact of Negotiating to Yes on those 18 sales opportunities. The total value of those sales opportunities was approximately $5 million. When asked the percentage of the sales they would attribute to their Negotiating to Yes skills, salespeople attributed approximately $2.7 million of that $5 million to their Negotiating to Yes skills (about 53%).

Of course, not all salespeople attributed the same amount of the negotiation outcome to Negotiating to Yes. The graph at right shows individual Negotiating to Yes contribution to the negotiation outcome, as reported by the 18 salespeople we interviewed. As you can see, they range from 0% to 100%, with an average of 53% of the final sale attributed to Negotiating to Yes skills.

Finally, while we do not have total actual costs associated with implementing the Negotiating to Yes development program, it was estimated that about $2,000 was invested for each salesperson (combining the workshop costs, coaching sessions, travel and living expenses, evaluation, and other miscellaneous costs). Thus, for this group of 18 salespeople, the estimated total cost of $36,000 returned $2.7 million in revenue, or a 75:1 ROI.

Negotiating to Yes Skills Having the Greatest Impact on Performance

Combining the results of the surveys and interviews gave us a clear picture of the impact of Negotiating to Yes skills. The skills that helped this group of salespeople the most in their negotiations were:

  • The ability to step back from the negotiation to better understand the client’s perspective and to manage their own emotions
  • The ability to separate people problems from the real issues
  • The ability to ask the right kinds of questions in order to identify the underlying issues and concerns
  • The ability to anticipate what clients would do during difficult negotiations and develop alternative sets of actions if the negotiation failed

This was effectively summarized in the statement of one of the participants:

“. . . we were certainly more aware of the participants from the client company and their stakes and possible positions. This helped immensely as we proceeded through the negotiation process and had favorable results.”

Conclusion

This study showed that a sales performance improvement process centered on Negotiating to Yes had the intended impact:

  • Better negotiation outcomes and increased sales revenue
  • Improved client relationships for future business opportunities
  • Better internal staff interaction

Although the study was conducted in a U.S.-based company in the environmental services industry, we believe that the findings have implications for organizations in other industries as well.

First, the findings provide support to the significance of the art of principled negotiation for salespeople in general. Strategic initiatives, like pricing increases, could easily affect client relationships and influence organizational performance negatively. This did not happen with this company! Clearly, having the ability to focus negotiations on sales objectives and, at the same time, build and nurture client relationships improved the performance of the salespeople. This, in turn, proved to be advantageous for organizational performance, improving revenue and increasing customer loyalty.

Furthermore, these findings provide support to the value of viewing training within the context of performance improvement. The Negotiating to Yes implementation went beyond a two-day negotiation workshop. A variety of Learning Transfer Technologies (LTTs), such as biweekly e-mail tips and reminders, individual coaching, and sales opportunity reviews, were applied. We also worked closely with top executives and participants’ managers to ensure that Negotiating to Yes skills learned in the program were incorporated into participants’ daily work processes and supported. We believe that these types of support, beyond the two-day training workshop, made a significant contribution to the client’s results.

In summary, the findings of our study indicate that implementation of Negotiating to Yes as part of a performance improvement initiative had a positive impact on the company’s performance. Negotiating to Yes supported the company’s strategic initiatives and contributed to the increase in salespeople’s productivity. We believe that companies with a similar need to make salespeople part of their sustainable competitive advantage can benefit from Negotiating to Yes implementation as well.

Michael Leimbach, PhD

“Michael Leimbach, Ph.D. is a globally recognized expert in learning design and provides leadership for solution research and design solutions that turn learning into performance.

Dr. Leimbach has served as editor for multiple professional journals, consulted with numerous global clients, published over 100 professional articles, co-authored six books, and is a frequent speaker at national and global conferences. Michael received his Doctorate from the University of Minnesota and has worked in the learning and development industry for over 35 years.”