Companies with highly engaged sales teams experience 18% higher revenue growth compared to their less engaged counterparts. This shouldn’t be treated as just another statistic; you should treat this as a wake-up call. We live in a time where business growth hinges on closing deals quickly and effectively. The strength of your sales team can make or break your bottom line. But so many teams still operate in silos, lack direction, or are simply under-equipped to perform at their peak.
Our guide reveals the blueprint for building and sustaining an elite sales team. You’ll uncover a 5-step framework that walks you through: 1) strategic recruitment to find your sales superstars, 2) comprehensive training programs that deliver results, 3) leadership that inspires peak performance, 4) mastering sales psychology and customer behavior, and 5) creating a culture of engagement and proactive excellence. Ready to turn your sales team into your greatest growth engine? Let’s dive in.
So, the unfortunate reality is that even though sales teams are meant to drive company revenue, many of them fail. This can be due to several reasons such as poor hiring decisions, not enough training, and/or inspired leadership. The result? Stalled pipelines, missed quotas, and frustrated team members.
“Only 28% of salespeople say marketing is their best source of leads, and just 22% say they’re very confident in their sales process.”
— HubSpot, State of Sales Report.
The cost to your company of a underperforming sales team is astonishing. You have poor morale among employees, loss of deals, and potentially high turnover. This can also significantly impact your company culture as well. One underperforming sales employee can bring down your whole team.
Here is something I have witnessed personally: a mid-sized tech company I consulted for had good products and a strong founder. However, it had a ragtag sales process and a team that was not aligned. With restructuring, a newfound focus on leadership, and training, their sales closes improved by 35% within just six months. The shift was real, so it could definitely be done.
So don’t settle for just average when it comes to your sales team. With the right foundation, they can become your most consistent and profitable growth engine.
There is a five pillar framework that will help you transform your average sales team into a high performing revenue driving force. Here is a clear strategic structure that delivers:
These strategic pillars are built from real world success not just a theory. Companies that implemented this framework have seen measurable gains, from 30% increases in quota attainment to drastic improvements in team retention and morale.
Now each of the following sections will unpack each pillar in detail. You will have practical steps and examples along with strategies that you can implement immediately.
So, hiring the most charismatic candidates to join your sales team isn’t enough and it’s not a strategy. You need to be able to identify candidates that are resilient, driven, and adaptable to be able to thrive in your sales team. Effective recruitment is strategic, systematic, and far from generic.
Here is an example of 3 phase interview process that will show you true sales potential.
You should ask the candidate questions such as “Tell me about a deal you lost — what did you learn?” or “Describe how you handle rejection during a tough quarter.”
As a recruiter you want to look for emotional intelligence, coachability, and reflection.
Ask the candidate to pitch your product back to you after a 15-minute research period. This reveals their preparation habits, thinking speed, and communication style.
During this time you can ask questions such as:
“How do you stay sharp between quotas?” or “What feedback have you received that changed how you sell?”
This way you can assess their long-term fit and hunger for development.
In my experience, here are essential personality traits that every member of your sales team should have, to ensure success:
You can use this checklist during interviews and post-call debriefs to separate high-potential candidates from smooth talkers.
Now, let’s look at some signs that a candidate may not be suited for a sales role, even if they appear polish, posed and professional.
I once helped with a hire that went bad. A job seeker did great in the talk, but couldn’t show how they got leads before. In two months, they did not do well — and the firm had to begin again. Stop that big loss by looking for real skills, not just good looks.

Unfortunately, too many sales teams don’t get the proper onboarding and training that they need, before they are asked to hit aggressive targets. An elite sales team knows that training shouldn’t be a one-time event, but rather an ongoing marathon. A structured, evolving training program ensures your reps are sharp, confident, and consistently improving.
The first 90 days define long-term performance. Here’s a proven onboarding structure that ramps up new hires quickly and effectively:
Week 1–2: Foundations
Week 3–6: Skills Building
Week 7–12: Live Selling & Coaching
“The best onboarding programs combine structure, mentorship, and practice — not just information dumps.”
— Trish Bertuzzi, The Bridge Group
The top sales teams train continuously to stay ahead and have a competitive edge. Here’s how to keep your reps evolving:
Ongoing practice isn’t just good company culture, but it will give an advantage.
Your sales team needs to have deep product knowledge, this will help them build trust with clients and buyers. There is a 3-layer foundation that you can build, like a baker would for a cake.
Sales representatives should be able to confidently demo, answer technical questions, and adapt messaging to any persona.
You need to teach your sales reps to go beyond the script and into high-level influence. Some essential modules include:
When you pair these skills with real world scenarios, you will watch your win rates drastically increase.
To scale your team’s capabilities even faster, consider enrolling them in a professional sales training program like the one offered by KEMP Center — known for blending tactical coaching with behavioral science.
A great sales team is built by intentional and consistent leadership; it is not something that just happens. The best team leaders know how to energize their sales teams, drive accountability, and turn average reps into consistent top performers. In this case leadership isn’t so much about managing, its about multiplying performance.
If you are a strong leader, chances are you show up with rhythm and purpose. Your daily and weekly habits often build trust, consistency, and results.
Some of your daily habits may include:
Some weekly activities that may part of your pipeline includes:
Have you wondered why your team is underperforming? Chances are it’s not because the goal is too ambition. Rather many goals are vague, irrelevant, or imposed without buy-in.
If you want to create motivational sales goals, try these tips:
So if you are coaching your sales team, you want to avoid the trap of trying to tell them what to do. Great coaches, help them discover how to improve, by:
Before & After Coaching Impact
Metric | Before Coaching | After 90 Days of Coaching |
Win Rate | 21% | 34% |
Avg. Deal Size | $5,200 | $7,100 |
Rep Self-Rated Confidence | 3.2/5 | 4.6/5 |
Team Turnover (6-month rate) | 22% | 9% |
Alright, let’s cut the corporate fluff and get to the real stuff.
If you want to actually sell something (and not just annoy people), you gotta ditch the robotic pitch and get inside your buyer’s head. I’m talking about knowing what makes people tick. The best salespeople? They’re not just smooth talkers—they’re basically mind readers with a killer sense of timing.

Look, there’s science behind why people reach for their wallets. Here’s the lowdown:
Fun fact: Harvard Business Review dug into all this and found top sellers aren’t here listing features. They’re flipping the script, challenging the buyer’s thinking, and making it personal.
Honestly, logic is overrated. People buy on feelings, then make up reasons after. The real pros? They catch the awkward pause, the nervous laugh, and the weirdly specific question about pricing.
Stuff to watch for:
So, what do you do? Try:
Call out the elephant in the room. People respect honesty, and it keeps things moving.
Trust isn’t built with coffee mugs and LinkedIn endorsements. You need to show up as real and authentic.
Once, I asked a buyer what “winning” looked like for them personally. They ended up spilling about their career dreams for 20 minutes. We’ve been working together for four years now.
Sales psychology isn’t about tricking people. It’s about actually understanding where they’re coming from, what they care about, and helping them get there.
Now, to have truly elite sales team you need more than just skills. You need to combine skills with employee engagement, accountability, and a constant eagerness to learn.
Recognition and incentive programs in the workplace fuel motivation in employees. The best programs are tied to behavior not necessarily results.
Some ideas that you could implement for your sales team include:
Here is a table that shows various rewards and incentives and when to use them:
Incentive Type | When to Use | Example |
Spot Bonuses | Short-term motivation | $250 for fastest pipeline cleanup |
Tiered Commission | Driving sustained growth | Higher % for exceeding quota |
Non-Monetary Incentives | Culture & morale | VIP lunch, extra PTO, learning credits |
The best companies have found the magic sauce that gives employees a sense of ownership but avoids micromanagement. They have created a system that promotes self direction:
When I replaced daily status checks with weekly coaching check-ins, both morale and pipeline quality improved in under 30 days.
When you create a growth culture within your organization or within your sales team, you then can reward curiosity and experimentation. You can host monthly “Sales Labs” to test new tactics. Also, encourage cross-functional idea sharing. Finally create safe spaces for failure and learning.
Building and maintain excellence does not happen overnight. However, the right systems trust, and feedback loops make greatness the default.
Explore our KEMP Center training programs can help you embed this culture company-wide.
You need to measure the right metrics to scale the strategies that are indeed working. Any successful sales team will tell you they track performance through a balance of leading and lagging indicators.
Leading indicators include qualified meetings booked, response times, and pipeline coverage help predict future results. On the other hand you have lagging indicators which typically measure win rates, deal size, and quota attainment. This will help you assess how well your strategy is actually performing. When you combine all these KPIs you have a full view of performance and where to improve.
Review Type | Frequency | Purpose |
Weekly Dashboards | Weekly | Spot coaching opportunities |
KPI Deep Dives | Monthly | Uncover trends, bottlenecks |
Strategic Reviews | Quarterly | Align goals, forecast performance |
According to Salesforce sales metrics research, high-performing teams are 33% more likely to use performance dashboards daily.
Even the highest performing and top earning sales teams can experience a faceplant, if they are not careful. Here are some top traps to know and avoid sinking your team.
Someone may be fantastic on paper, but big names don’t always mean big results. Prioritize grit, coachability, and culture fit over past logos.
Giving someone a slideshow with logos and providing login credentials is not onboarding. You want to build a 90-day ramp that includes shadowing, roleplay, and performance checkpoints.
Many managers and leaders try to use dashboards to motivate people. Instead of connecting daily tasks to personal and team-level goals.
You need to focus on quality conversations and pipeline movement, not just volume. Someone can send 1000 emails, or make 100 calls, it doesn’t mean anything if there is no impact or result behind it.
Do not wait for someone to struggle and fail before you start to coach them. At that points its too late. Coaching and training should be part of the routine and not just used as a remedy.
Avoid these common landmines, and you’ll save time, morale, and likely a few gray hairs.
In order to build an effective sales team you need about 3 to 6 months. This is with structured onboarding, KPIs and consistent coaching, you’ll see meaningful results by the end of the second quarter.
The ideal size for a sales team depends on a few factors. But ideally a ratio of 1 manager per 6–8 reps ensures effective oversight without micromanagement.
In order to fix a problem you need to know the reason for it’s existence. Is your team underperforming due to skill, will, or fit? Then tailor coaching, reset goals, and use micro-incentives to rebuild momentum.
The average cost of training a sales team will depend on the size and the location. Typically this can range from $1,000–$5,000 per rep annually, depending on program depth. But treat employee training as an investment not a cost.
So there a three times during the year that you should evaluate sales team performance:
Here are some popular tools and technologies that many high performing sales teams use, CRMs, sales engagement tools, call recording & coaching platforms. Finally, they also use performance dashboards along with forecasting tools.

A mediocre sales team usually happens by accident. Where a high performing sales team isn’t magic but the strategic use of a blueprint. Here are five steps that you need to incorporate into your organization for sales team success:
When you put these steps into motion expect results in 8 to 12 weeks. It’s no longer someday or in the future. It’s attainable, reachable, and at your fingertips. Remember success doesn’t mean doing everything right, it means being consistent.
Ready to transform your sales team with proven strategies? Our comprehensive Sales Leadership Mastery course takes everything covered in this article and provides hands-on implementation support to help you achieve measurable results within 90 days.