Over the last year, we've learned a lot about how sales and service organizations are using gamification within their teams. It shouldn’t be a surprise that improving general adoption of CRM has been a common goal. But, we’ve found that those who are too overly fixated on “fixing adoption” are focusing on the wrong thing.

Why you bought a CRM system 

Take a step back for a second, and remember why your company purchased Salesforce in the first place. If you’re a CEO or VP of Sales, your goal and the reason for the investment was probably quite simple: If you could just measure what’s happening within the sales organization, ultimately you could motivate what you want to see happening more often.

Focus on behavior, and adoption will follow

Companies like Comcast, Kelly Services, Stanley Black & Decker, Concur and dozens of others who are seeing big results from sales gamification share a common trait: They’re singularly focused on the sales behaviors they want to drive: making more calls, following up on leads, shortening their sales cycles, taking new products to market faster, or getting more client meetings, to name a few.

When you take those critical sales behaviors and launch contests and leaderboards around them, you can watch your sales team’s competitive sidekick into high gear and they’ll be excited to do it. But the key is that the goal isn’t “adoption,” it’s motivating the right sales behaviors that will help you sell more and grow faster. And because salespeople understand that the leaderboards are populated based on what they enter into Salesforce, adoption will come along for the ride.

So, if you’re considering gamification for your sales team, start first with identifying the behaviors you want to see more often that you know will in drive sales; then figure out how to track it in Salesforce, and just like that, adoption will follow.

About the Author

FBob Marsh is CEO of LevelEleven, a sales gamification and CRM solutions company, with the #1 most popular gamification app on the Salesforce AppExhange: Compete. Bob has almost 20-years experience in sales management. Follow Bob on Twitter @BobMarsh5.

Learn more about ganification and movitating your salespeople with the free Salesforce e-book below.

Motivate