One thing we consistently see with underperforming sales teams isn’t a lack of effort.
It’s a lack of consistency.
Salespeople are having different conversations. Value is being communicated differently across the team. Follow-ups vary from one person to the next. And over time, that inconsistency starts showing up in the numbers, longer sales cycles, lower win rates, and missed revenue opportunities.
That’s why the strongest organizations don’t treat sales training as a one-time event.
They treat it as an ongoing business strategy.
As per McKinsey, companies that invest in capability building are significantly more likely to outperform competitors over the long term. In sales specifically, organizations with strong capability development can generate up to 4–5 times higher revenue growth than their peers.[1]
But what’s interesting is that high-performing teams aren’t necessarily spending more time in training sessions. They’re reinforcing behaviours more consistently after the training ends. That distinction matters.
Harvard Business Review has reported that without reinforcement, employees forget the majority of newly learned information within weeks.[2] In sales environments, that often means teams leave a training session motivated but gradually fall back into old habits because there’s no structured coaching or accountability afterward.
The organizations seeing real ROI from sales development are the ones building learning into daily execution:
- Coaching conversations,
- role-play practice and call reviews,
- Onboarding reinforcement,
- leadership alignment,
- and continuous skill development.
And the impact is measurable.
Research from the Association for Talent Development found that companies offering comprehensive training programs generate significantly higher income per employee than those with less structured learning initiatives. Additional industry research shows that organizations with ongoing sales coaching and reinforcement see stronger quota attainment, improved productivity, and higher retention across their sales teams.[3]
There’s also a broader business impact that often gets overlooked.
Today’s buyers are more informed than ever. In many industries, products and pricing are increasingly comparable. What differentiates companies now is often the quality of the sales conversation itself.
Can your team communicate value clearly?
Can they ask the right questions?
Can they build trust quickly?
Can they adapt their approach based on the buyer in front of them?
Those are trainable skills.
And when organizations invest in developing those skills consistently, the results extend far beyond revenue. Customer experience improves. Confidence improves. Team alignment improves.
The companies seeing the strongest long-term growth understand something important:
Sales training isn’t just about helping teams sell better.
It’s about helping businesses perform better.
At Optimé International we work with many of the greatest sales organizations in the world, big and small, helping them to achieve and exceed their performance goals. If you would like to learn more about our passion for the sales profession and to make a difference, we’d love to chat with you, maybe over a coffee, virtual or IRL! Click here: Connect with Optimé for a coffee!
Footnotes & References
[1] McKinsey & Company. Building Next-Generation B2B Sales Capabilities.
https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/growth-marketing-and-sales/our-insights/building-next-generation-b2b-sales-capabilities
[2] Harvard Business Review. Why Leadership Training Fails—and What to Do About It.
https://hbr.org/2016/10/why-leadership-training-fails-and-what-to-do-about-it
[3] Association for Talent Development (ATD), 2024 State of Sales Training Report; Sales Management Association, Sales Coaching: Best Practices and Impact on Performance.
https://www.td.org/research-reports/state-of-sales-training
https://salesmanagement.org/resource/sales-coaching/