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    <td colspan="14" align="left" valign="top" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" ><h1>How To Make A &quot;Training Superstore&quot; A Super Success.</h1>
    <h4>Once upon a time, training providers were small, specialty 
        firms with focused client followings.</h4>
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      <p>Then along came some well-heeled folks with an enterprising 
        idea. They reasoned: &quot;Let's acquire a bunch of these 
        niche providers and splice them together. Then we'll be able 
        to offer HR buyers a one- stop-shopping experience -- and 
        enjoy superior economies of scale for ourselves in the bargain.&quot;</p>
      <p>They envisioned becoming a &quot;category killer&quot; in 
        the mode of Wal-Mart, Staples and Home Depot. But, surprisingly, 
        few of these training industry aggregations has amounted to 
        any more than the sum of its parts. Let's examine why, and, 
        if you're among them, what you can do to achieve the rewards 
        you were looking for.</p>
      <h2>A. Why &quot;One-Stop-Shop&quot; Is No Walk In The Park.</h2>
      <h4>Sure you'd to like to wrap up all of a customer's training 
        needs in one blanket purchase order. But there's a problem. 
        Chances are the budget for training is spread across multiple 
        departments who see no benefit in combining their efforts 
        on your behalf.</h4>
      <p>Ok, HR is a good place to start for staples like supervisory 
        training or diversity training. But don't try to sell sales 
        training to anyone but the sales department. And, if you're 
        seeking to sell training on technology topics like systems 
        administration and application development, chances are IT 
        is the place you need to be. Got training in safety or ISO 
        9000? Call on Manufacturing. Get the picture? All too often, 
        there is no centralized training purchase authority.</p>
      <p>So if you're seeking to achieve a pure one-stop-shopping 
        proposition, best to combine training providers that serve 
        the same buying center.</p>
      <p>For HR, combine a supervisory training provider with a performance 
        appraisal specialist. Add in sexual harassment prevention 
        and diversity, perhaps project management and presentation 
        skills. And, while you're at it, sweeten the pot with basic 
        training in written and verbal communications and in social 
        and behavioral styles.</p>
      <p>For Sales, try combining an interpersonal selling skills 
        provider with a specialist in account planning. Add in negotiating 
        and presentation skills. Don't forget proposal writing. How 
        about a specialist in selling to the executive level. And, 
        by all means, a custom product knowledge training provider. 
        Customer service training may also prove a natural add on 
        -- since it is frequently aligned with Sales.</p>
      <p>For IT, consider adding Oracle and Cisco training to your 
        core Microsoft offerings. And expand your certification paths 
        to include Webmasters and Website developers. But be wary. 
        Sometimes IT training is partitioned right down to the individual 
        server or application.</p>
      <p>And if your training portfolio covers the waterfront? All 
        is not lost. Consider repurposing courses to help you achieve 
        critical mass. For instance, customize a presentation course 
        aimed at managers to selling situations so you can complement 
        your interpersonal selling skills offerings. Or perhaps you 
        can tailor a basic business writing skills course to the requirements 
        of writing compelling sales proposals.</p>
      <h2>B. Sharing A Single Sales Force: Easier Said Than Done.</h2>
      <h4>Another questionable assumption of &quot;Training Superstore&quot; 
        proponents is that efficiencies will be easily gained in channeling 
        multiple types of training through a single sales force. This 
        can pose not just one, but three problems.</h4>
      <p><b>Problem One:</b> It can take a very different type of sales professional 
        to be successful across each training buying center. For instance, 
        sales training purchase authorities typically come out of 
        the sales ranks themselves. They welcome an aggressive, go-for-the-jugular 
        selling approach and lack patience for a lot of preliminaries. 
        Meanwhile, the folks who purchase management and supervisory 
        training are more apt to be academic types who want to endlessly 
        debate behavior theory and instructional design before they 
        open their wallets. Finding a single salesperson with the 
        style flex to appeal to both crowds is next to impossible.</p>
      <p><b>Problem Two:</b> Training is an intangible sell where a skilled 
        and savvy salesperson provides a great deal of the value. 
        Much of this value comes from being expert in what it takes 
        to be successful in a given industry and job function. Now 
        take a soft skills salesperson who can't figure out their 
        sales automation software or their digital phone and assign 
        them to sell in an IT data mining training solution. What 
        kind of value add is that!</p>
      <p><b>Problem Three:</b> While the need for product knowledge is over- 
        emphasized in most training sales forces, it's a fact that 
        most salespeople tend to gravitate to one or two product sets 
        for most of their business. So when you increase from three 
        lines of business to twenty-three, unless you're smart about 
        it, all you're doing is adding to the number of products on 
        the cutting room floor. What's worse, because of backbreaking 
        product knowledge requirements your people wind up spending 
        a lot more time cramming and a lot less time selling.</p>
      <p>As for how to make a single sales force work, begin by thinking 
        externally, not internally. Don't knock yourself out with 
        cross training and elaborate revenue sharing schemes. Instead, 
        make your expanded product set easier for customers to buy 
        in a solutions way. Simplify pricing and purchase terms. Reward 
        high volume, cross product line purchases. Build in safety 
        nets to minimize risks for customers who engage with you across 
        the board. For some ideas on how to do this, visit the back 
        issues section of our Website for &quot;Stop Arguing About 
        Training Pricing&quot; (5/9/99), &quot;Using Safety Nets To 
        Sell More Education Agreements&quot; (5/27/99) and &quot;How 
        To Write Training T's and C's That Sell Not Repel&quot; (11/15/99).</p>
      <p>Finally, rather than expect one salesperson to represent 
        all of your training offerings across an entire account, appoint 
        a senior person to serve as Account Manager. Charge this individual 
        with deploying and orchestrating the efforts of your specialists 
        where they can best add value. Support this account team with 
        goals and metrics that support and reward a collaborative 
        selling effort. Minimize internal channel conflict by also 
        making the Account Manager responsible for inside sales and 
        direct marketing initiatives directed at the account.</p>
      <h2>C. Pooling Your Product Development Resources: A Potential 
        Sinkhole.</h2>
      <h4>People who develop training courses can be fiercely territorial. 
        So when you combine previously unacquainted development units 
        in the interests of increased efficiency and economies of 
        scale, you're more likely to wind up with an instructional 
        methodology turf war.</h4>
      <p>If the preponderance of your developers are dyed in the wool 
        ILT veterans, you can be sure that e-learning will be marginalized 
        into a superficial classroom training pre work or follow up 
        afterthought.</p>
      <p>If the tightly choreographed ID proponents win out, then 
        you can say goodbye to your ability to develop topical, informational 
        public seminars.</p>
      <p>Another problem in combining development groups is that you 
        create a functional ghetto that is more focussed on the instructional 
        state of the art than market needs. Which brings me to a general 
        concern.</p>
      <p>Many niche providers that have sold out to aggregators originally 
        rose to prominence on a founder's visionary idea. However, 
        the core of this idea -- the intellectual property -- was 
        likely aging by the time ownership was transferred. But rather 
        than rejuvenate the idea -- or replace it with a new vision, 
        it's tempting for the inheritors to simply re-format or recycle 
        the idea -- and there's a limit to how long intellectual property 
        can be recycled before it begins to taste like yesterday's 
        leftovers.</p>
      <p>So <b>Suggestion No. 1</b> for becoming a successful training superstore 
        is to hire talented course development people and push the 
        envelope in R&amp;D to keep that product content fresh and 
        uncover tomorrow's visionary ideas. Pure consolidation is 
        unlikely in itself to lead to growth.</p>
      <p><b>Suggestion No. 2</b> is to leave the development groups in the 
        business units where they are closer to market needs. This 
        needn't jeopardize the possibility for creating cross-unit 
        learning solutions, reusable learning objects and blended 
        learning. These priorities can be addressed by a tiny headquarters 
        group charged with encouraging course development and delivery 
        standards and with spurring each business unit to work together.</p>
      <p>Will tomorrow's training industry be dominated by the Superstores? 
        Not necessarily. But with more realistic goals and better 
        execution, there's no reason why they can't claim a disproportionate 
        share of the spoils.</p>
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Anon7 - 2021