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Should Special Effects Determine If You Have the Right Salespeople?
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| Guest post by: Dave Kurlan |
Article Overview: One of the answers we usually provide when we evaluate a sales force is whether or not a company has the right salespeople. Of course we must know, right for what?
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Should Special Effects Determine If You Have the Right Salespeople?
One of the answers we usually provide when we evaluate a sales force is whether or not a company has the right salespeople. Of course we must know, right for what?
* Roles - most often this involves looking at the people who are currently expected to hunt, farm, or manage accounts
* Capabilities - Are they A players, B's, C's or worse?
* Potential - Can they be developed, and if so, how much better can they become, and what will it take to get them there?
* Strategies - Can they execute your strategies for going forward?
Before those questions can be answered though, there are some variables that must be clarified:
* Sustainability - is the business sustainable at the current revenue run-rate? If it can't, the first variable is urgency and a very limited time line for improvement. (Thanks to Chris Mott - The Sales Expediter for this angle)
* Scalability - has the business reached a point where the business or unit must scale or return profits immediately? If it has, then there is urgency to have a core foundation of solid salespeople in place before expansion begins.
* Sales Management - is sales management capable of supporting a sales training & development initiative today? Capable means that existing sales management can coach to and hold salespeople accountable to the new sales process, measurables, strategies and tactics. In most companies, sales management needs a head start to develop those capabilities.
* Practicality - who are the trainable salespeople that will also be able to respond to training in the given time frame, and with the existing sales management? When there is urgency, the time frame is short and only some of the trainable salespeople can be developed that quickly. With less urgency, sales management's capabilities and the current limitations of the trainable salespeople are not factors and long-term development can be pursued.
* Sales Cycle - The longer your sales cycle, the longer it will take to generate results from any initiative.
Many data points must be analyzed in order to answer questions like these. We use science to get to the bottom of this issue, but it boggles my mind that so many executives simply sit behind their desk and and answer these questions without anything other than observations and recent sales history. There's a big problem with that: observation and sales history are not relevant sources of data.
Sales history is not even a measure of past performance and can't be used to predict future performance. We see examples of this on every sales force we evaluate. The salespeople with the most revenue are simply beneficiaries of either the best territory, an A-list of accounts, or a single unrepeatable large account that a sales manager helped them close.
Observation is nothing more than anecdotal special effects. You know how you can use the computer to color a photo and add effects? Well, our like or dislike, hopes, pride and ego color our opinions of our salespeople.
So if you have to make important business decisions about your company's ability to grow, which should you rely on? Consistent, accurate, data-driven recommendations or special effects?
Article Tags: amp, capabilities, core foundation, development initiative, head start, limited time, long term development, practicality, profits, sales management, salespeople, scalability, sustainability, time frame, time line, urgency, variables
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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 Predict Sales Turnover Salesperson Selection Visual Pipeline |
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