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10 Sales Personalities and How to Manage Them
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| Guest post by: Dave Kurlan |
Article Overview: manage and they aren't really personalities as much as they are characteristics. You might call them one or two word descriptions of people instead of characterizing them as personalities. Following are 10 Sales Characters and how you can manage them more effectively.
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Free Download - Sales Courage and Resilience By Dave Kurlan |
10 Sales Personalities and How to Manage Them
My
regular readers know that when it comes to evaluating the sales force
or assessing sales candidates, I have no use for personality
assessments. If you're a first time or new reader, look no further than
here for documentation and proof.
Regulars also know that I sometimes reprint emails received from sales
candidates who have been offended by a potential employer's request to
take an assessment. Many of these uninformed, unprepared, emotional
candidates refer to the assessment as a personality test - the
assessment it least resembles. There are personalities
in sales, but the various traits do not predict performance and there
isn't a personality trait that translates into sales because the traits
are discovered in social contexts, not business or selling contexts.
That said, there are diverse individuals that you will have to manage
and they aren't really personalities as much as they are
characteristics. You might call them one or two word descriptions of
people instead of characterizing them as personalities. Following are
10 Sales Characters and how you can manage them more effectively.
PETE THE PERFECTIONIST -
Pete won't begin anything until he is sure he can do it perfectly.
Symptoms are procrastination, failure to implement your suggestions and
ferocious rewriting of his notes (because the first set wasn't perfect).
Your job, should you decide to accept it, is to provide Pete with
permission to fail. Assign a goal that you both know he can achieve.
Tell him to get some "no's" and it's not only OK to bring back some
"no's" but you would prefer it to a "think it over" or a "maybe". Read more
NICK THE KNOW IT ALL
- Nick is easy to spot because he drives you nuts. He knows everything,
as evidenced by his willingness to say, "I know!" You can't tell him
anything new and he will always defend the way in which he has always
done things. His lack of flexibility and resistance to change is his
downfall. Your job, and in this case, it's too much fun to call it a
job, is to challenge or dare Nick. Tell him what needs to be
accomplished, but tell him you don't think he can do it. Tell him you'll
have to get someone else to do it. Enough said.
ORSON THE OVER ACHIEVER
- Orson is always busy, always striving to break the record, out-earn
his latest paycheck, set the new company record for most miles driven in
one day, etc. While you may have the urge to take some of the burden
off Orson's shoulders, he actually functions best when over burdened so
leave him completely alone. He doesn't need to be managed with a heavy
hand. Just tell him what you expect and he'll get it done. It never
occurred to him that he could find a way not to do it! Read More
LOIS THE LOYALIST -
Lois is like a puppy dog, always following you around, sucking up to
you, learning from you and even idolizing you. In fact, she'd love to
have your job if it meant you would be getting a better one! The only
thing you have to do with Lois is tell her what to say, who to say it
to, when to say it, what will happen then and what to do after that.
Make sure she has it down exactly and then have all the confidence in
the world that your own personal groupie will get the job done exactly
as you would have done yourself.
CONTENT CARL - Carl has
sales know how but isn't using it as aggressively as he once
did. His sales are probably flat and his calls for new business are
dropping every year. He has a good existing customer base and services
it well but you still want him to be more than a $100,000+ service man.
Have a very serious, extremely strong meeting with Carl, in which you
tell him how terribly unhappy you are with his performance. Tell him
exactly what you expect from him, by when, and what will happen if he
doesn't perform. Read More
NEED FOR APPROVAL ALICE
- More than anything, Alice needs for you to like her. Her need for
approval will cost you both a fortune in lost business in the field but
you can play her like a fiddle in the office. Just tell her you are
losing respect for her. Tell her she isn't measuring up to the others in
the office. Tell her that she is disappointing you. She'll do whatever
it takes to get back in your good graces. Read More
UNSTABLE URSULA -
Ursula needs to get her head on straight, might come from a
dysfunctional family and is used to being yelled at. In fact, it's the
only thing to which she seems to respond. Ask her nicely to do something
and she blows it off. Lose your cool with her and it's done in a New
York minute.
MIKE THE MAVERICK -
Mike plays by his own rules, is difficult to manage, won't take
direction and drives you nuts. The only reason he still works for you is
that he outperforms everyone else on the sales force including you!
Managing Mike is easy. Tell him you respect his need for independence
and his desire to do it his way. Tell him to stay away from the office
as much as he likes, avoiding sales meetings and keeping away from the
other salespeople. You'll continue to let him write his own rules as
long as he continues to out-produce everyone else. If his production
ever drops below a certain level, then he will have to follow the same
rules as everyone else.
MISERABLE MARVIN -
Marvin complains a lot. He has more excuses than hooky playing
high school renegades. His performance is always below acceptable levels
and despite that, everyone thinks he has potential - except that he's
never approached it. Marvin is the easiest of the bunch. Create an exit
plan that fires him for non-performance and a lousy attitude. Read More
Article Tags: descriptions of people, failure, images, job, personalities, personality assessments, personality test, personality trait, procrastination, proof, regulars, social contexts, word descriptions
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About the Author: Dave Kurlan RSS for Dave's articles - Visit Dave's website Dave Kurlan is a best-selling author, top-rated speaker and thought leader on sales development. He is the founder and CEO of Objective Management Group, Inc., the industry leader in sales assessments and sales force evaluations, and the CEO of David Kurlan & Associates, Inc., a consulting firm specializing in sales force development. Dave has been a top rated speaker at Inc. Magazine's Conference on Growing the Company, the Sales & Marketing Management Conference and the Gazelles Sales & Marketing Summit. He has been featured on radio and TV, including World Business Review with General Norman Schwarzkopf, in Inc. Magazine, Selling Power Magazine, Sales & Marketing Management Magazine and Incentive Magazine. He is the author of Mindless Selling and Baseline Selling – How to Become a Sales Superstar by Using What You Already Know about the Game of Baseball. He created and wrote STAR, a proprietary recruiting process for hiring great salespeople, and he writes Understanding the Sales Force, a popular business Blog and is a contributing author to The Death of 20th Century Selling (Dan Seidman), Stepping Stones (Deepak Chopra and Brian Tracey) and 101 Great Ways to Improve Your Life, Volume 2 (David Riklan). Click here to visit Dave's website Visual Pipeline Salesperson Selection Predict Sales Turnover |
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