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8 Question Sales Quiz - Malpractice?

Written by: Dave Kurlan

Article Overview: First, there aren't 8 questions in the world where the answers would allow us to make that determination. Even if we tried, we couldn't identify even 15 of our 100+ questions that would allow us to answer that question accurately! But I was curious and clicked on through. 8 Questions and if you get 3 strikes or wrong answers, you're out and shouldn't be in sales. This free test shouldn't even be available for entertainment purposes!

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8 Question Sales Quiz - Malpractice?

One of the many sales newsletters I get each day had a ridiculous sales test. It asked "Is a Sales Career Right for You?" and had an 8 question test. First, there aren't 8 questions in the world where the answers would allow us to make that determination. Even if we tried, we couldn't identify even 15 of our 100+ questions that would allow us to answer that question accurately! But I was curious and clicked on through. 8 Questions and if you get 3 strikes or wrong answers, you're out and shouldn't be in sales. This free test shouldn't even be available for entertainment purposes!

How accurate, predictive or relevant could an 8 question test be? My problem was that only one, maybe two if I stretch it, of the eight questions were relevant to one's suitability for selling. The rest examined (if you could call it that) beliefs (2 questions), aptitude (2 questions) and strength/weaknesses (3 questions).

I read some of the comments that follow the article and they fell into 2 categories. The first was "I don't agree" and the second was "thanks for helping me understand why I am struggling". People just shouldn't have any expectations from an 8 question test of any kind.

Aptitude, or what someone knows about selling, has no bearing on WHETHER an individual should sell. Skills, strategies, tactics and process can be taught. When people first enter sales, none have the prerequisite skills. And many who have been selling and have developed the skills shouldn't be in sales because they AREN'T suitable for sales.

Beliefs, while important, can predict outcomes and the likelihood of success, but not suitability. Beliefs can be changed too.

Strengths and weaknesses help us understand whether skills, tactics, strategies and process will be executed. Too many weaknesses and you have a very weak salesperson at which point you could call it DNA.

But ultimately, Selling DNA has more to do with sales motivation and attitude, which this pretend test forgot to ask about.

Why did I waste an article about this little 8 question fraud of a test? Because there are many reputable assessments which, when they try to use them for sales, become just as irrelevant.

Speaking of assessments, and more specifically Objective Management Group's sales candidate assessment, Al Strauss, my guest on this week's edition of Meet the Sales Experts, talked about tips, case histories and results from an effective sales recruiting process. He also discussed motivation, resistance, commitment and change.

Click here to listen to the show. Click here to contact Al.

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Home > Sales > Dave Kurlan > 8 Question Sales Quiz Malpractice
Article Tags: 3 strikes, amp, aptitude, bearing, dna, entertainment purposes, free test, likelihood, prerequisite skills, question test, sales career, salesperson, strengths and weaknesses, suitability, target

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
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