Successful new technology onboarding depends on team input and commitment to your final go/no-go decision.
As a security integrator today, onboarding emerging technology is challenging.
We previously covered some of the departmental impact issues that can arise, as well as suggestions for management to ensure they have a concise, strategic plan that has been communicated so that everyone is rowing their boat in the same direction.
Successful technology onboarding depends on team input and commitment to your final go/no-go decision. If your people know they have an initial input â positive or negative â and they have been heard, they will commit.
Make sure these bases are covered before moving forward; otherwise, the new technology may go prematurely overboard.
So, who or what did I miss last month?
Your Service Team
Donât make the mistake of not including your service team when youâre considering new technologies. Although your teams may be able to sell and install the technology you onboard, who is going to fix it when it breaks in six months? That would be your very valuable troubleshooting service department.
You will have a hard time gaining referrals if your technology is unreliable and you canât maintain the solutions you deploy. Senior service team members are unique individuals who must have knowledge of many legacy systems. Want to add a new one? It should pass their sniff test before you deploy it!
So, who else has a stake in your success?
New Technology with Your Customerâs Team
To effectively engage your customerâs team, you must act early in a professional selling process. A well-defined âpilot programâ openly shares the risks and qualifies the mutual reward targets. Often, hard data on ROI is not available with emerging technology; therefore, itâs wise to establish a mutually agreed upon target range that youâre shooting for.
Be overly conservative in what you promise. Why? Because you are a hero when you exceed limited expectations; however, you have diminished your credibility if you miss those targets!
I strongly encourage the senior management team selling with salespeople to close a new technology deal. Your salesperson should also schedule that meeting with their contactâs immediate manager.
Mutual commitment and support for new technology implementation targets can mitigate possible challenges that might follow. This ensures good communication and productive conflict resolution, while also instilling greater confidence in and among your sales team. Walk your talk, along with your customerâs management team.
The Supplier (Manufacturer) Team
A key element of any new technology being onboarded is to qualify the supplier closely and thoroughly. Collect the entire team and make sure that they outline questions of concern before you take the next step.
Key questions should include the following:
- Where is this technology currently being deployed (i.e., which vertical markets)?
- How many solutions have been deployed?
- How long has this version been successfully working?
- How long will this solution be supported in its current version?
- How would we migrate this solution in the future?
You get the idea. Good questions mitigate the risk inherent to decision-making.
Key Elements of a New Technology Pilot Program
What makes for a good pilot program? There are five steps that will help your customer and you to put skin in the game.
- Clarify what business (security) problem needs to be solved and why.
- Establish target ROI (only a range); donât promise unknown returns!
- Gain senior management support for estimated business results.
- Share and expect specific data points to gauge progress and results.
- Put timelines on your pilot program to create urgency.
Emerging technologies can be both exciting and terrifying. Theyâre exciting if you are prepared to leverage new opportunities for growth and if youâre a thought leader with your customers. Donât let competitors scoop you! Theyâre terrifying if you are not prepared with a vision and a plan.
Remember: It is always challenging when you donât keep your customer updated on emerging technologies â because your competition will. You will dislike playing defense in that scenario!
If you need help with pilot programs, please reach out to me via e-mail. I would be happy to talk with you.
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