Opportunity
Previous Platform Fails to Standardize Global Sales Performance
With more than 6,000 sellers operating across its global market, L&W Gaming’s enablement team struggled to govern the wealth of critical content tailored to its expanding teams, international regions, and markets. Up against such a high content volume — and operating in a heavily regulated industry that demands precise documentation — the team knew spring cleaning was in order. “We had too many places where you could find content,” explained Conrad Walsh, director of global product marketing at L&W Gaming. “We were spending so much of our day trying to chase something that shouldn’t be hard to find.”
The struggle with content chaos highlighted an overarching theme: L&W Gaming’s portfolio was simply too large to manage without the right enablement support. Adding to the challenge, L&W Gaming aims to send its many product lines into new markets and new regions. For reps old and new, the content and competence required to approach this ever-changing portfolio of products, markets, and regions was overwhelming.
To help sellers familiarize themselves with this wealth of context, the team sought to help sellers quickly and easily surface content. But that was only an early goal — although the team’s first priority was content governance, their long-term goal was to standardize execution across every team, region, and market. “Part of what I’m still on the journey of trying to bring about is how to operationalize our go-to-market approach,” added Walsh. As L&W Gaming’s enablement team put pen to paper and began designing a global go-to-market strategy that would push the envelope on new market and region expansion, they saw that switching to Highspot would be a key lever to do so.