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How Can Anyone Spend That Much Time on Sales Coaching?

Guest post by: Dave Kurlan

Article Overview: If you aren't the low price leader or one of the two or three best-known brands in your industry, and if buying from you does NOT represent the safe choice for your customers, then you are an underdog. And if you are an underdog, you had better be providing comprehensive sales and sales management training and coaching because you can't compete on price or reputation.

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How Can Anyone Spend That Much Time on Sales Coaching?

According to Objective Management Group's considerable data, only 15% of all sales managers spend as much as 25% of their time on coaching and the time they do spend on coaching is generally ineffective. Two more statistics from OMG reveal that 18% of them shouldn't even be in sales management, and 34% of them aren't trainable because they lack the incentive to change. And one last statistic, a whopping 84% of sales managers just plain suck! If you're a sales manager and you're reading this, I can be quite certain of my next statement. You are not one of the 84% that suck, you are not one of the 34% that isn't trainable, and you are not one of the 18% that shouldn't be in sales management. However, you could be one of the sales managers who are generally ineffective at coaching.

With that said, it shouldn't come as a surprise when I tell you how much time we spent on sales coaching in a 3-Day Sales Leadership Intensive that I just completed yesterday. The plan was to spend day 3 on Sales Recruiting Process. The plan was to spend days 1 and 2 on shaping the sales environment, infrastructure (systems, processes, pipeline, metrics and tools), motivation and incentives, accountability and daily huddles, development and coaching. The coaching portion was slotted for about 3-4 hours depending on our progress. We spent nearly two full days on coaching! We started discussing coaching an hour into the first day, spent the rest of day 1, all but the last 30 minutes of day 2, and the first 30 minutes of day 3 on coaching! And in addition, the participants had to schedule and conduct real coaching calls later on both days.

Why so much time? It is simply that important and sales managers, regional sales managers, sales VP's, worldwide sales VP's, sales directors, and even Presidents and CEO's need to improve at coaching. One of the factors that made the time allotment possible was that this was private training for a client so the participants can catch up on the subjects we covered lightly or didn't cover at all. And this company, like so many clients, is an underdog in their space and that's the point of this post.

If you aren't the low price leader or one of the two or three best-known brands in your industry, and if buying from you does NOT represent the safe choice for your customers, then you are an underdog. And if you are an underdog, you had better be providing comprehensive sales and sales management training and coaching because you can't compete on price or reputation. The only way you'll be able to consistently win is to outsell your competition and you can't do that by making presentations, generating quotes and proposals and chasing the business.

So what could we have spent so much time on in discussing how to effectively coach salespeople? It was the format, structure, nuances, resistance lowering, timing, frequency, special effects, tactics, strategies, lessons and applications. There were real examples that we studied, as well as coaching assignments, debriefs, revelations and transformations. Typical coaching does not go beyond the "what" where you suggest what a salesperson should have done or should do next. But that isn't coaching. These coaches realized that to be effective at coaching they must be coaches first and always, and help their salespeople get to the "how" of selling - the dialog that must occur - in order to succeed. They also learned that behind every mistake, there is a need to differentiate between a skill gap which can be taught, and a weakness which must be identified and overcome over time.

Finally, they learned that coaching is not something you provide passively on demand, rather proactively, to each salesperson, every day. It is time for you to become a full-time sales coach! Just think of the impact it will have on your revenue and profit.

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Article Tags: accountability, environment infrastructure, first 30 minutes, incentives, infrastructure systems, management group, metrics, objective management, pipeline, presidents, regional sales managers, s sales, sales directors, sales environment, sales management, statistic, target, time allotment, vp, worldwide sales

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).

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Re: Online Sales and Marketing vs Traditional Re: Online Sales and Marketing vs Traditional - [quote="ltrahan":31w9r2iz]Hi Evan, I am noticing that many of the posts in the Sales/Marketing section deal with online marketing, SEM and and SEO and Affiliates. I was wondering if it might be a good idea to separate that section into two; 1) Online Sales and Marketing; 2) Traditional Sales and Marketing[/quote:31w9r2iz] I second the request...
Re: Keep going! Re: Keep going! - Thanks GT, my pleasure - reminds me of the post "Don't Spend more money that You have got!
Re: UPDATES: New Campaign! New Layout! New Ideas! Re: UPDATES: New Campaign! New Layout! New Ideas! - We've also expanded the list for Contest and All-Time Leaders. It's great to now see David and Yinka on the All Time list and recognize the contributions they've made to the forums!
No B.S. Time Management No B.S. Time Management - A great book I read on Time Management is No B.S. Time Management for Entrepreneurs by Dan Kennedy.


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