

Wie man es auch nennen mag, ob Remote Work, Mobiles Arbeiten oder Telearbeit. Dahinter steckt: ein oder mehrere Mitarbeiter, die räumlich und ggf. zeitlich ungebunden sind und in einem Team zusammenarbeiten (sollen). Der Klebstoff, der das zusammenhält ist Kommunikation.
Wir bei my-vpa sind ein 100% Remote Team und deswegen haben meine Kollegen*innen mal ein paar Best Practice Regeln in einem Guide für Remote Work Kommunikation aufgeschrieben. Finde ich lesenswert und echt hilfreich. Wer seine Email Adresse hinterlässt, kann sich das Whitepaper hier herunterladen und bekommt im Anschluss noch ein paar weitere Tips. Macht mal!
Disclaimer: ich bin Mitgründer von my-vpa.
Photo by Jason Rosewell on Unsplash
When it comes to company building, core questions to be answered are:
During my research for impulses to these questions, I found progression.fyi a valubale source of inspiration to different, yet transparent apporoaches.
Most notably, all represented companies offer an open-approach to your career path. I find that a smart move to show potential new colleagues their way through the companies „hierarchy“ even before they actually start.
For us I can imagine a kind of career matrix:
So this approach mainly values the contributions each collegaue adds to the company, being it as a simple contributor, but highly skilled, or being it at managing an integrated team, but on another technical skill level.
Meaning: a collegau ebeing pisitoined in square C3 adds a similar value to the company as a collegaue in square A3 and thus is being compensated in the same way.
„Technicial“ in this context can mean all disciplines, being it marekting, HR, finance or sales.
This is still work in progress and not yet implemented at my-vpa.
Who: Max Altschuler, one of the first hires of udemy, now CEO of Sales Hacker. Sales hacker is, well, a „Sales community“.
About the book: If it comes to explain the word „pragmatic“, take the book. Its packed with handy tips and tricks around online sales. Maybe it’s the larges link-list around online sales 🙂 It’s though structured around a very high-level sales process:
Quite a big portion of the book is around defining your total addressable market and where to find your target groups. It’s very good explained how to scrape platforms and sites to build mailing lists. I am not so sure though, if that will work so well here in Europe given the GDPR issues, nevertheless, with advanced segmentinng (and thus personalization) Altschuler argues, mails might be not seen as spam.
The book mainly covers outbound sales, and that is fine. I think its really good for building your sales muscle and to put in in the mix of your overall sales strategy.
Top ten notes and quotes from the book:
1. The main things that matter when you are managing a pipeline are the following: Total number of deals in the pipeline Average deal size Percent of deals that move from stage to stage until they are closed Average time a deal stays in the pipeline
2. Targeted leads at the top of the pipeline will provide better, faster results. These targeted leads are also known as your “low-hanging fruit.
3. There are “Seeds,” “Nets,” and “Spears.”
5. Put virtual assistants in the mix and let them do the heavy lifting. (that was a good one, given we at my-vpa offer pre-trained native speaking virtual assistants for online and outbound sales.)
6. Industry and vertical are interdependent (you can be in the tech industry, but you are in different verticals, e.g. Box is in the cloud storage vertical within the technology industry)
7. Examples for triggers to reach out for prospects: Employee head count New employees recently hired Job titles and new titles added Company headquarters Public relations (PR) announcements, new product launches, funding, key hires, or partnerships Legal filings Growth rate (revenue, funding, head count)
8. Start by targeting a few junior employees and selling them on the fact that they can be champions for the product. (A good one, though I think there are different approaches: depends on your product that the top down way might be better – maybe at more expensive, long sales cycle products)
9. „Become a hero maker“, meaning make the internal champion a hero by being the guy who brings on the amazing new product and proves it out for the team.
10. Make your message simple enough for an eight-year-old to understand.
Looking for an easy „share link to twitter“ Safari-Extension I came along old friend buffer. Installing the Safari extension its aks me to:
As from a technical perspectrive I somehow can understand it – but nowadays I think more intelligent solutions need to be in place:
Solution: using the official twitter app, and then use the „Share button“.
Who: Mark Roberge, former Hubspot Advisor, teaches Sales and marketing at Harvard Business school. Has a technical background as mechanical engineer. Works as investor, too.
About the book: The book circles around “Scalable, predictable revenue growth.” Its good to read because of many practical tips from Marks experience, especially from Hubspot, where he still is an advisor to. I like his handsdown approach to (online) sales. Especially the way how to create a lead generation inbound marekitng and sales organization seemed clear and obvious as it is „metrics-driven, process-oriented“.
Top 10 Notes and Quotes from the book:
I am a vivid kindle user sind ages and like to make notes/underlines in the books I read. What I did not know (yet) is that under read.amazon.com/notebook you can find all notes from all books you ever purchased. From there you can also go back to the places the note was taken from. Nice.
Who: From Mike Weinberg, he’s a passionate, well, „sales-consultant“, and sells himself quite good.
About what: Sales. And Sales Management. If you want to build a sales team, this might be a source of inspiration.
Top 10 Notes and Quotes from the book:
You Can Manage, You Can Sell, but You Can’t Do Both at Once