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Business leaders are discovering that the traditional playbook for sales productivity is failing, and businesses need to shift their focus from raw output to genuine effectiveness.
To understand this evolution, SpiceWorks’ Head Brand Ambassador, Jeff Gretler, and Maria Groeschel, Global Head of Commercial Strategy and Operations at Dropbox, discussed the rising challenges and needs for innovation in sales today in a 30-minute Executive 1-on-1 video for SpiceWorks.
The problem with fragmentation
One of the top problems affecting sales reps today isn’t a lack of speed; it’s the fragmentation of their tools and information. Groeschel noted that the intense pressure for deep personalization and value-add engagement forces reps to consult numerous systems for a single customer view, often navigating ten or more different platforms.
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These disconnected systems compel sales reps to spend valuable time manually searching for information and trying to gain context from disparate sources, such as Slack, Salesforce, Google Docs, and Gong notes. This creates a significant time tax that pulls from high-value activities.
Grettler said, “Single system-itis used to be something that was actually worse. Now it’s business sprawl. There are tools and data everywhere. And we need ways to not only know where that data is, but a way to connect that and actually be able to use it efficiently.”
While traditional metrics, such as pipeline growth and deal velocity, are still important, many businesses are now focusing on rep effectiveness. This pivot to rep effectiveness is a strategic response to a market that no longer rewards speed over substance.
The modern buyer’s demand for deeper personalization necessitates a new approach to measuring what truly matters. As Groeschel puts it, the focus must be on impact. “We all know deals are not won in isolation. They are won when teams are actually moving together.”
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But cross-functional alignment across sales, customer success, marketing, product, and other teams frequently breaks down. This failure isn’t due to a lack of effort, but because teams are not working from the same context, as priorities move at different speeds in their respective areas.
Getting sales teams on the same page
The solution lies in creating a unified, shared space where all teams operate from the same up-to-date information. Tools like Dropbox Dash make it possible for reps to instantly see health signals from customer success or access the latest product positioning from marketing.
Instead of imposing a new process, these tools connect to the applications and platforms reps already use, improving their existing day-to-day environment. This approach removes friction and makes adoption feel natural, simplifying the path to better habits.
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Every sales organization has stories of deals saved at the last minute by the extraordinary efforts of a few individuals. While commendable, a business model that relies on these heroics is unsustainable and inefficient.
These last-ditch efforts are often a symptom of a broken process. As Grettler notes, this kind of effort is frequently a “herculean task just to get you to a baseline,” rather than achieving breakthrough success. Groeschel framed the core challenge by asking: “Does it get us to a point where we no longer have to rely on heroics in the final hour?”
The ultimate objective is to build scalable, repeatable systems that enable consistent success without the need for constant, last-minute firefighting.
Groeschel summarized this approach with a three-part framework: effectiveness over raw activity, productivity that creates value, and a commitment to intelligent, intentional efficiency. By connecting fragmented workflows and bringing context to sales tasks, businesses can transform wasted motion into meaningful progress.
Watch the full conversation
To hear the full discussion and gain deeper insights into improving sales effectiveness, watch the SpiceWorks Executive 1-on-1 video here.

