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Why Your Rivals Pray You Cut Training—And Why You Shouldn’t (Money Monday)

Why Your Rivals Pray You Cut Training—And Why You Shouldn’t (Money Monday)

Published 4 months, 2 weeks ago
Description

This time of year is critical. As sales leaders map out their budgets for the new year, the conversation always centers on a core conflict: How to cut expenses and, simultaneously, motivate teams to hit larger quotas.

What’s the first line item to feel the squeeze? Training and development.

It is often incorrectly labeled a ‘want’ and not a ‘need.’ We hear leaders say, “It can wait until next quarter,” or, “Once we stabilize revenue, we’ll invest in the team.” 

This short-sighted thinking doesn’t save money. Instead, it’s costing organizations a significant, quantifiable amount of revenue and talent. When professional development is treated like a luxury, we undermine the foundational ability of our teams to perform consistently at a high level.

Training is the Foundational Requirement for Peak Performance

Sales leaders should consider peak performance in any high-stakes environment. In the military, or in elite professional sports, ongoing training is not a choice—it is a non-negotiable, daily priority. 

So why is it that, in Sales, we view continuous development as optional or too expensive? The simple truth is that lack of training is the most expensive mistake you can make.

Think about the rate of technological change. Most of us have upgraded our cell phones in the last three to five years because the old ones simply couldn’t keep up. 

The same principle applies to your sales team’s skill set. If your representatives are still relying on techniques learned 5, 10, or 15 years ago, then they are operating at a competitive disadvantage. They will be outmaneuvered and outperformed by competitors who are strategically investing in modern sales frameworks every time.

Henry Ford’s famous quote still holds true: “The only thing worse than training employees and losing them is to not train them and keep them.” If you believe training is expensive, you must take a moment to calculate the monumental loss of reps consistently missing their quotas.

The True Cost of Inconsistency and Turnover

Look at the numbers. Assume three of your representatives are consistently missing quota by just 20%. That deficit is lost revenue—but it also represents wasted leads, missed opportunities, and the corrosive ripple effect of deals that never even make it into your pipeline. The amount of potential revenue lost due to underperformance is often far greater than the entire annual budget you would allocate to comprehensive sales training.

Action Plan for Sales Leaders & Managers

To reverse this loss, you must treat coaching as a continuous operational requirement, not a perk.

  1. Calculate the ‘Cost of Inaction’ to Justify Budget: Reframe thinking of training as an expense and start focusing on the cost of the status quo. Calculate the annualized revenue loss from your bottom 20% of underperforming reps (e.g., missed quota * average deal size). Use that concrete number to justify and secure a budget for development, proving that not training is your biggest liability.
  2. Implement a Continuous
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