Achieving Sales Success with AI
Sales performance improves when data, insights, and workflows come together. This infographic shows how next-generation AI connects CRM data, automates routine tasks, and provides real-time recommendations to support better decisions. Check out the infographic to see key skills like crafting prompts, iterating, and reviewing outputs to improve results.
How can AI practically improve day-to-day sales work?
Next-generation AI can help your sales team cut a lot of routine work so they can focus more on selling and building relationships.
Here are some concrete ways it helps in daily workflows:
1. Reduce manual tasks and context switching
- Generate email content that pulls in data from your CRM and past customer interactions, so reps don’t start from a blank page.
- Summarize meetings instantly, giving sellers quick recaps and action items instead of manual note-taking.
- Simplify updates to customer records, so information gets into the CRM with less effort.
2. Improve customer responsiveness
- Connect data from CRM, emails, and meetings so sellers can answer customer questions quickly and accurately.
- Provide relevant CRM insights during meetings, helping reps respond in real time with the right information.
3. Keep deals moving
- Send reminders and recommendations that help sellers maintain momentum with prospects.
- Auto-generate opportunity reports so reps can focus on high-quality leads instead of building reports from scratch.
4. Learn and improve continuously
- Analyze conversations and interactions in real time to highlight what’s working.
- Provide next-best-action recommendations so sellers can adjust their approach based on data, not guesswork.
This matters because, on average, sellers spend **32% of their time actually selling** and **68% on non–revenue-generating activities**. AI helps rebalance that mix by taking on more of the admin and research work, so your team can spend more time with customers.
What do sales teams really want from AI tools?
Sales teams are more likely to adopt AI tools when those tools address their most pressing day-to-day challenges instead of adding extra complexity.
Surveys show employees want AI to help them:
- **Save time** by automating repetitive, daily tasks.
- **Be more agile** in how they respond to customers and changing priorities.
- **Automate routine work** like data entry, follow-up emails, and basic research.
- **Make information more accessible**, for example by quickly searching content using natural language instead of digging through multiple systems.
- **Identify best practices and practical techniques** so they can learn from what top performers are doing.
The impact on employee experience is meaningful: **89% of workers with access to automation and AI-powered tools feel more fulfilled** because they can spend more time on work that truly matters.
In short, salespeople want AI that:
- Fits into the tools they already use.
- Removes friction from their workflow.
- Helps them focus on customers and high-value activities, not admin.
When AI is positioned this way, adoption tends to be higher and the value is easier to see across the team.
What skills and safeguards do we need to use AI in sales effectively?
To get strong results from AI in sales, you need both practical user skills and a clear approach to responsible use.
Three core skills to train your sales team on:
1. Crafting effective prompts
Many AI features respond to user input. Clear, specific, and detailed prompts usually deliver better results. For example, instead of “Write a follow-up email,” a better prompt might be: “Draft a concise follow-up email to a manufacturing prospect summarizing yesterday’s demo, highlighting integration with their existing ERP, and proposing a 30-minute technical review next week.”
2. Iteration
AI responds to subtle changes in how you ask for things. Encourage sellers to:
- Try several variations of a prompt.
- Refine outputs based on what worked or didn’t.
- Treat AI as a collaborative partner rather than a one-and-done generator.
3. Double-checking content
AI is powerful but not perfect. Reps should always:
- Review AI-generated content for accuracy and tone.
- Confirm that details (names, dates, numbers, commitments) are correct.
- Ensure the content is appropriate for the customer and the stage of the deal.
On the responsibility side, it’s important to choose AI solutions that follow clear principles. For example, Microsoft uses six responsible AI principles:
1. Fairness
2. Reliability and safety
3. Privacy and security
4. Inclusiveness
5. Transparency
6. Accountability
These principles matter because **84% of executives believe audits of AI models will be required within the next 1–4 years**. Building on tools that already align with these expectations can reduce risk and make governance easier.
Microsoft Sales Copilot is one example of a role-based AI copilot designed specifically for sellers and sales teams. It:
- Automates everyday tasks like email drafting and CRM updates.
- Helps deliver more personalized customer experiences efficiently.
- Surfaces the most valuable opportunities and tasks.
- Identifies best practices to help teams close more deals.
- Works within Microsoft Dynamics 365 Sales and Microsoft 365 apps such as Teams and Outlook, and also connects to other CRMs like Salesforce.
Combining these user skills with responsible, sales-focused tools helps you reimagine how your sales organization works—improving productivity while managing risk thoughtfully.