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Predictable Revenue: Turn Your Business Into a Sales Machine with the $100 Million Best Practices of Salesforce.com Paperback – Illustrated, July 8, 2011
"Alexander Graham Bell discovered the telephone, Thomas Edison discovered electricity and Aaron Ross discovered the Enterprise Market for Salesforce.com."
SHELLY DAVENPORT - VP Worldwide Sales at Replicon & ex-VP Corporate Sales at Salesforce.com
Discover the outbound sales process that, in just a few years, helped add $100 million in recurring revenue to Salesforce.com, almost doubling their enterprise growth... with zero cold calls.
This is NOT another book about how to cold call or close deals. This is an entirely new kind of sales bible for CEOs, entrepreneurs and sales VPs to help you build a sales machine. What does it take for your sales team to generate as many highly-qualified new leads as you want, create predictable revenue, and meet your financial goals without your constant focus and attention?
LEARN INSIDE
- How an outbound sales process ("Cold Calling 2.0"), that without cold calls or a marketing budget, can generate a 9% response rate and millions of dollars from cold prospects.
- The Seven Fatal Sales Mistakes CEOs and Sales VPs (even experienced ones) make time and time again.
- How outbound sales and selling can be friendly, helpful and enjoyable.
- How to develop self-managing sales teams, turning your employees into mini-CEOs.
- And more...
"I couldn't put it down. It's saved me so much time, and now revenue is ramping up. After reading the book, we closed major deals immediately with the strategies." KURT DARADICS CEO, Freedom Speaks / CitySourced.com
"Reading Predictable Revenue is like having a delicious conversation with a sales guru who generously shares his sales process, results and lessons learned. I'm so impressed, energized and refreshed to hear such relevance mixed with humor and unabashed logic. This book is honest, relevant and logical and it's rated A++ because it's guaranteed to make you think and convinces you to change things up....fast. Now, please excuse me as I'm running out to a funeral for my phone. After reading my favorite chapter on RIP Cold Calling there's no doubt its dead and gone and Aaron tells us why."JOSIANE FEIGON, CEO of TeleSmart and author of Smart Selling on the Phone and Online
"I just finished reading your book. Unbelievable! I now know what's wrong with our sales process..."PAT SHAH, CEO, SurchSquad
"I have read Predictable Revenue and it's Entrepreneurial Crack!" DAMIEN STEVENS, CEO, Servosity
"Working with Aaron Ross has been nothing short of amazing! His methods applied to our sales organization helped us produce a profitable and scalable new stream of predictable revenue. We saw at least 40+% new business growth. The best part is, we had a blast while doing it!" MICHAEL STONE, VP Sales and Strategy, WPromote (#1 ranked Search Marketing Firm on the Inc. 500)
For A Summary...google "Why Salespeople Shouldn't Prospect"
- Print length213 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPebblestorm
- Publication dateJuly 8, 2011
- Dimensions6 x 0.48 x 9 inches
- ISBN-100984380213
- ISBN-13978-0984380213
Discover the latest buzz-worthy books, from mysteries and romance to humor and nonfiction. Explore more
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Editorial Reviews
From the Author
About the Author
Aaron graduated from Stanford University, is an ex-Ironman triathlete and graduate of the Boulder Outdoor Survival School. He lives in Los Angeles with his wife and five children (also expecting two other kids coming the way via adoption), loves motorcycles, and he keeps his work to 25 hours a week.
His next book is underway with Jason Lemkin, The Predictable Revenue Guide To Tripling Your Sales.
Product details
- Publisher : Pebblestorm; Illustrated edition (July 8, 2011)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 213 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0984380213
- ISBN-13 : 978-0984380213
- Item Weight : 10.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.48 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #80,798 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #5 in Telemarketing (Books)
- #98 in Sales & Selling (Books)
- #521 in Entrepreneurship (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
Videos
About the authors
Aaron Ross helps founders craft books that make millions. He is the author of "Predictable Revenue" and "From Impossible To Inevitable" (with Jason Lemkin), called the Sales Bibles of Silicon Valley. His newest book, due 2024, is "Income Operating System: Win Financial Freedom, Earn Like The 1%" Aaron is married with 10 children (half through adoption), and lives in Scotland.
Marylou Tyler, is Founder of Strategic Pipeline, a Fortune 1000 outbound sales process improvement consulting group. Her client list includes Apple, Bose, AMA, Talend, CIBC, Prudential, UPS, Orkin, AAA and Mastercard.
She’s also the co-author of the #1 Bestseller Predictable Revenue: Turn Your Business Into A Sales Machine With The $100 Million Best Practices Of Salesforce.com. It’s sold over 50,000 copies and has over 250 reviews on Amazon averaging over 4.3 stars. Predictable Prospecting: How to Radically Increase Your Sales B2B Pipeline, her new book published by McGraw-Hill, is already being touted as a must-read book for any sales professional or business owner who prospects for new business.
In 2016, she was nominated to the 20 Women to Watch in Sales Lead Management.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book provides practical pieces of advice and is written in a very consumable, easy-to-follow manner. Moreover, they appreciate the actionable examples and consider it an excellent resource for business owners. However, the content receives mixed reactions, with some finding it engaging while others find it boring. Additionally, customers disagree on whether it's worth the price.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book provides practical advice and concrete suggestions, with one customer noting it develops solid success models.
"I definitely enjoyed the book Predictable Revenue and really like the author's style...." Read more
"The book contained some nice insights on sales and predictable revenue growth - however at many places it touched more on high level topics and does..." Read more
"Great book. I love the coaching style. This is a great guide for sales teams, technologist and managers leading digital automation such as sales..." Read more
"...A great point to start organizing your workforce specially for software and licencing businesses" Read more
Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a wonderful and excellent resource for business owners, with one customer noting that it's more than just fluff.
"...Ideas on cold calling 2.0 are quite good and worth implementing...." Read more
"Great book. I love the coaching style...." Read more
"...If that’s what you’re looking for then this is a decent book to read...." Read more
"...This book is personable, and a pleasure to read...." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, finding it very comprehensible and easy to follow and reproduce.
"I definitely enjoyed the book Predictable Revenue and really like the author's style...." Read more
"...to turn a haphazard and unpredictable sales process into a visible, manageable, and predictable revenue generator...." Read more
"...the ideas make sense and are easy to implement. Just 2 areas that I felt kept it from being a '5' star:..." Read more
"...the book is accurately advertised in its subject matter and is very easy to read, clear and concise...." Read more
Customers appreciate the actionable content of the book, with one mentioning it provides a good mix of strategy and tactics.
"This book is a good mix of strategy and tactics...." Read more
"...The content is actionable and engaging. You can implement many of the concepts today on your team or in your org...." Read more
"...The author discusses some good, actionable ideas and concepts. I would recommend." Read more
"This was a great read that provide practical and actionable information. This is a must read for SaaS start ups." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's content, with some finding it engaging while others describe it as a boring read.
"...The content is actionable and engaging. You can implement many of the concepts today on your team or in your org...." Read more
"...predictable revenue growth - however at many places it touched more on high level topics and does not go to the working or examples of how others..." Read more
"...Buy the REAL book and read the pages because the content IS interesting when it's coming from the page and the illustrations (many) are helpful and..." Read more
"...The reasons for a 2-star reviews are: - It was a boring read -..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's value for money, with some finding it a great deal and infinitely valuable, while others consider it not worth the price.
"So glad I bought this book - a great price for the information contained within...." Read more
"...So not worth the buy, at all." Read more
"...I have found it infinitely valuable. Just hoping to finish it soon." Read more
"Got it at the right price and a good business book to read. Happy! ^_^" Read more
Customers find the pacing of the book too basic and not suitable for beginners.
"...There is no technical advice - there is nothing. In short the book can be summarised: make your list, spam everyone, call the ones who has responded...." Read more
"Nothing bad... Nothing spectacular... The book will likely have you yawn. The authors' free stuff online has as much content as the book...." Read more
"...The concepts are sound but quite basic, sales force focus and specialisation is widely practised already and not a new concept...." Read more
"...time it mentioned salesforce.com I would have $100 Million... Too basic of a book. Did not give any good strategies. Did not make me think...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on August 26, 2013I definitely enjoyed the book Predictable Revenue and really like the author's style. Ross did an amazing job helping Salesforce.com generate its opportunities, and this book tells his story of building the lead generation function from scratch and gives some great examples of his leadership style.
I would have liked it to have been more specific, but it still fully deserves a 5 star rating for being the course on "Bay Area Lead Gen Scaling 101." Having built and managed a 5+ member lead generation team from scratch exactly like the author, here are my thoughts on the book:
Ross' Vision:
1) Don't let the so-called "reality" stop you. (Love this comment)
2) Subteams and miniCEOs, cool idea for teams within companies. (Great vision, his best)
3) Design CEOs and VPs of Sales out of the sales process. (Hmm, interesting. Agreed)
4) The future of sales is on new user acquisition and important titles like VP of Lead or Demand Gen. (Agreed)
5) Design self-managing teams. (Good)
The 4 things Ross nails especially well:
1) "Prospects should earn proposals." (This is the best line ever, I always say this)
2) Always get prospects to talk about their business, not selling the product. Ask "why" 3x or more. (Great!!)
3) In 6 months, follow-up on all past opportunities. (Important)
4) Ask yourself in order, "what can I:"
A. eliminate
B. automate
C. outsource
D. delegate
Some facts:
1) "Short and sweet" emails get over 9% open rate vs. sales-y at 0%.
2) Responsibilities of VP Sales includes: goal setting, involvement in big deals, culture, etc. (See full list)
3) Most inbound leads come from small businesses, not enterprises.
Things I found interesting:
1) "Send messages before 9am or after 5pm and avoid Monday and Fridays." (It would be interesting to see these stats in much more specificity)
2) "Did I catch you at a bad time" is best intro line. (Hmm, maybe, need to think about)
3) "Return on Salesperson's time." (Very interesting concept and would be interesting to track both to company and as an individual)
4) Ross says: don't assume sales people will find deals by Rolodexes and cold calling. (Great!! Yes)
Parts of Ross' Process:
1) Define what companies are most similar to the top 5-10% of your clients. (Good)
2) Voicemail and email combinations are effective. (Ok)
3) Create a "success plan" for after product is sold. (Good)
4) Always start high 1-2 levels above decision maker. (Maybe. Good rule of thumb, but I don't like the word "always." Finding influential people is key)
5) Free trials - help create "what defines success" and make sure there is follow-through. (I like paid trials better)
6) Track call conversations with DM's per day for sdr team. (Yes)
7) Always set up a next step with qualified dms. (Very important)
8) Need a market response rep for every 400 leads. (Ok, maybe)
9) Metrics to track at board level: new pipeline generated per month. (Good)
Some additional thoughts:
1) Scaling is "not about hiring more salespeople." (Agreed. Ideally this process would be systemized and automated)
2) Hubspot's suggestion on blogs: Participate with others' blogs, comment, and make it a 2 way conversation. (Very good!)
3) The trends in sales & marketing are: more accountability on marketing budgets and lead generation teams on ROI. (Yes)
Recommended products to check out:
1) Landslide - design your sales process for free.
2) InsideView
3) Connectandsell.com - ondemand conversations
4) How Marketo uses Marketo:
a. Lead scoring breakdown. Very cool!!
b. An email is sent 11 min after web form..
Suggestions for improvement:
1) Would have likes to have seen more specific examples of success at Responsys, HyperQuality or other clients rather than vaguely "tripled results."
2) How important is predictable revenue? Is there a trade-off between predictable revenue and more revenue? I wonder. Maybe, maybe not. I know that I've seen AEs (ClearSlide is one example) incentivized to sandbag to hit 120% of monthly quota rather than have wild swings of 300% ten 40%. That's terrible.
3) Didn't include: process for data management, recommended software for deduping, or how leads and accounts were structured.
Connect with me at LinkedIn.com/in/caseydkerr or on Twitter @drcaseykerr
- Reviewed in the United States on February 19, 2017The book contained some nice insights on sales and predictable revenue growth - however at many places it touched more on high level topics and does not go to the working or examples of how others have done. The authors expects that you engage their consultancy firms if you want more. Its fine but mentions like "will show later in the book" never happens and thats not fair.
Ideas on cold calling 2.0 are quite good and worth implementing. The team management and organizational behavior topics are without much examples and just boring text only.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 29, 2023Great book. I love the coaching style. This is a great guide for sales teams, technologist and managers leading digital automation such as sales force automation in todays turbulent business world. The key to business growth is a foundation built upon predictable and repeatable processes. This in turn leads to self managing teams that drive business value through greater scalability and specialization.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 5, 2023I ve been working with similar approaches for half a decade and when reading the book I realized about many things going on within my organization. A great point to start organizing your workforce specially for software and licencing businesses
- Reviewed in the United States on August 4, 2015We all want predictable revenue right? We want to know that if we get 5 qualified leads we can turn 2 of those in to paying customers that are worth $XX over time.
We want to have a process to take leads and qualify them for our business to move them down that sales funnel.
If that’s what you’re looking for then this is a decent book to read. I say decent because it regularly feels like a ‘sales’ book for Salesforce.com (which was where this sales process was developed though the author is no longer employed there).
My favourite points were around how to nurture and qualify leads. It’s important not to just ABC (always be selling) and to ruthlessly qualify the leads that come in. You don’t have 50 ‘best’ leads you have 5 maybe 10 that you should be working on the rest are a waste of your time.
I feel that this book is better for larger organizations that have a dedicated sales team. Smaller business like mine (which is just me) can benefit from the talk of process and cutting leads so you only focus on the ‘best’ ones, but are going to struggle with parts of it since a 1 person business by definition struggles with having many duties divided up on one person.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2011This book is *not* about selling snow to eskimos, and not particularly for the sales person on the ground. It's about systematically getting your company's awesome product/service in front of the right people who should buy it, in a way that makes them feel like an empowered buyer, not someone being sold to. Aaron talks about how to get them using your product/service so they dont have buyers regret. This book is personable, and a pleasure to read. It's for CEOs and VP Sales types, or for people who want to take that much higher paying job (not just meet their quota).
For me personally, it's already paid for itself many times over, helping me design my next outreach campaign with less mistakes (I'm the CEO of an enterprise software startup). Buy this book now, for yourself, and for your VP Sales.
- Ken Lynch
CEO of reciprocitynow.com
Top reviews from other countries
- Dakx TurcotteReviewed in Canada on October 2, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars and then the predictable part of things is relatively easy to see
I couldn't wait to read Aaron's book, and couldn't wait to implement the predictable revenue process once I read the book, and now that Aaron's personally given me feedback that our implementation is delivering results that are on par with what he's seen before, I can't wait to scale and accelerate this. I'm really excited about the Predictable Revenue model.
This should be read by anyone who's interested in launching a business and finding his first 10 customers, as much as his next 50 to 500 customers. In my case, we have 25 customers, and we're also doing inbound marketing, so I am hoping the Predictable Revenue model will help generate at least half of our next 25 customers within the next 3-5 years.
Take note that the book will provide you with a recipe. But you'll have to add at least 1 dedicated person full time to implementing it. It takes a few months to show real results (depending on the length of your sales cycle), and then the predictable part of things is relatively easy to see.
-
Cliente KindleReviewed in Brazil on November 20, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente leitura !
Aron explica muito bem como devemos separar os recursos (pessoas) e tarefas em cada parte do processo de vendas.
Recomendo !
- Susan MorganReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 1, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars This is an amazing book. I thought it was only me that ...
This is an amazing book. I thought it was only me that felt dreadful about sales. It's inspirational and has made prospecting my new normal. I realise now that sales isn't just about being fabulous at closing sales (although that's a given) It's about learning how to cope with rejection and the video interview with Tom Hopkins made me realise that you get the big bucks for coping well with being told 'No'. Then moving on to 'yes' from the right people. Thank you Jeb Blount. Truly grateful for your work.
One person found this helpfulReport -
Carlos Nuño LangreReviewed in Mexico on April 25, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente libro para aumentar las ventas y su predictibilidqd
Inicia diciendo que para vender más nos solo metiendo mas vendedores y de ahí desarrolla todas sus teorías creo que ha cambiado mis estrategias y visión este libro. Gracias
- Ahmed AbdellaReviewed in the United Arab Emirates on April 28, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Insights
Some of the things are a bit outdated in 2021 but the fundamentals remain the same. Great lessons and insights into many different areas of the revenue journey. I highly recommend it.