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Does it make sense for HR or Learning and Development to own Sales Training?

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richardsonsalestraining

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Does it make sense for HR or Learning and Development to own Sales Training? Professionals in Human Resources (HR) and Learning and Development have tremendous expertise and can be extremely valuable to organisations.

However, we believe that neither HR nor Learning and Development should own sales training. That may have made sense in the past, but it no longer fits today’s business environment.

Rather, these functions should be positioned as a trusted business partner to either the line or the sales organisation. One reason for the change from owner to partner is that the world of sales and marketing is changing at breakneck pace, which is being driven by advancements in technology and evolving customer-buying behaviour. Think of the way you buy products and services as a consumer as compared to 10 or 15 years ago. The “consumerisation” that has plagued bricks-and-mortar stores has leaked into the business-to-business world.

Can HR or Learning and Development keep up with this level and degree of change occurring in sales and marketing in addition to keeping up with all of the change that is happening in their own world? It’s a lot to ask. Their role would be better served as a trusted partner to the business to ensure that good learning principles and practises get applied to helping the sales force develop the skills necessary to operate in this new environment that we are being pushed into – but not necessarily as the owner.

Don’t take away the efficiencies gained through a central Learning and Development group. There has to be scalability between the overall Learning and Development initiatives, modalities, and approaches that are used within an organisation. Every learner within the organisation can and should benefit from those practises.

It comes down to forging a collaborative partnership between HR and the business units, but allowing the subject-matter experts to drive the training. HR and Learning and Development reps are not subject-matter experts in sales, although they are not subject-matter experts in accounting either. But it is a real wake up call for many HR professionals to say, “You are going to have to become a bit of an expert and live in the world of your learning audience in order to really be collaborative.” The takeaway is that HR should no longer own the process.

However, HR should take ownership of working with the VP of Sales and with all of the sales management. Travel to the field, get to learn what sales trainers are putting out there, and then start to think about what things you can help them with, how you can collaborate on new and different ways of practical, relevant training approaches. As learners, sales teams need to know that there are new learning models and approaches, in which HR should be an expert.

Do you agree that HR should no longer “own” sales training? Let us know in the comments below?

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