Strong sales reps ask qualifying questions in their first call with prospects, not talk about their product. What kind of questions does a sales rep ask?
And the list goes on exploring the acute pain point of the prospect to understand which features of the product could solve that problem.
Maybe it’s just me, the product person, but don’t they sound familiar? These questions resemble the questions asked in product discovery calls trying to understand how to improve the conversion funnel.
It’s no coincidence. Both sales and product need to develop a deep understanding of (1) how a potential new customer solves a problem today and (2) where they experience pain in this process. The difference is, a sales rep will do around 40 calls a week while a product manager may do 4.
I know, 4 is an arbitrary pick. :) But I think we all agree about the magnitude of difference between the two roles.
So let’s learn from sales reps about product pain points, shall we?
I have some bad news for you: sales reps are measured on leads & contracts closed - not on pain points passed on to the product team. While product feedback does get back to the product team, it has two inherent flaws:
Sales doesn’t do this because they are lazy - the opposite. Their job is to close deals and everything else they do on top is systematically not incentivized.
Where does this leave us? First sales calls are a goldmine of insights about pain points, unmet needs and other product feedback but they are inaccessible to product teams.
How about not optimizing a flawed process but trying something new instead?
Sales calls are typically recorded. If they are not, start recording them today. Not just for the sake of product feedback but for the sake of improving the sales team’s performance.
Instead of relying on Sales to pass on product feedback, let’s analyze the source data - the recordings. Airtime can analyze up to 1000 calls in a batch and crystalize feedback patterns. On top of that, it can also pull together relevant feedback from this call database about any of your questions - like “what did prospects say about our [wow] feature?
Advantages?
Fireflies, Gong and similar meeting summary tools are game changers for sales & customer success teams. However, they have a couple of vital shortcomings from a Product perspective:
Airtime turns user calls into product insights. Using the video or audio recordings of calls, Airtime identifies & interprets recurring feedback patterns within seconds for up to 1000 calls in a single analysis.
If you have a specific question, Airtime will pull together all relevant feedback for you so you can have a holistic view of customer feedback.
No manual work with highlighting, defining labels, tags or keywords.
Here is a 1 minute demo to give you a glimpse.
A number of Airtime clients have been using Airtime to tap into product feedback from sales calls.
For instance, Kitchn.io has been analyzing feedback patterns using initial sales call recordings in fireflies.
Kitchn.io is a platform boosting the productivity of marketers through paid social ads automation. Check out what Simon, their Co-founder had to say about Airtime.
It couldn’t be more simple to give Airtime a spin:
Done.
Airtime provides you the key patterns as well as sources from individual recordings so you can track back patterns to individual prospects.
Check out Airtime using our free trial or book a short demo with us if you’d like to discuss how to best use Airtime for your use cases.