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Success, by Choice
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| Guest post by: Tibor Shanto |
Article Overview: Every month we diligently publish our newsletter presenting ideas, techniques, as a means helping sales professionals sell better. Add ours to the thousands of other fine newsletters appearing each month, hundreds of books published, webinars, blogs and multitudes of other sources of sales advice available. Yet despite this wealth of quality advice and techniques, consistent application and results continues to be an unattainable goal for many.
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Free Download - Question Testing By Tibor Shanto |
Success, by Choice
Every month we
diligently publish our newsletter presenting ideas, techniques, as a
means helping sales professionals sell better. Add ours to the thousands
of other fine newsletters appearing each month, hundreds of books
published, webinars, blogs and multitudes of other sources of sales
advice available. Yet despite this wealth of quality advice and
techniques, consistent application and results continues to be an
unattainable goal for many. Why is this and how does it reflect on the
whole sales training (coaching, consulting, enabling...) profession?
I
gained some interesting insight on this from an executive with the
Canadian subsidiary of a Fortune 10 company. They have been committed to
training in both up and down markets; have used a range of well known
and lesser known sales knowledge providers like ourselves. As we talked
about his experience, expectations, and results from sales training, he
presented an interesting view that helped reinforce a view we have had
for sometime. His view was that sales improvement and by extension
training, like most things in life, is a continuously evolving process
that brings with it complexity and accountability. Accountability for
all involved, the trainer, the company bringing in the trainer, but
mostly the reps. For sales training to fully pay off, the reps bear the
brunt of the responsibility for success.
Specifically, the view is that any process of improvement involves key interdependent parts. In no particular order these are:
Willingness
Skills
Action
Personal Responsibility and Commitment
Willingness:
Probably the most straight forward of the four: how willing and open
are you to learn and take on change that could deliver results. If as a
rep you are not willing then the rest is for not. This also extends to
the organization. I read that only 43% of companies in the USA provide,
so there is the question of the companies' willingness to invest in
continuous improvements and the ROI it delivers. But where the
organizational commitment is present, success depends on the rep's own
willingness.
Skills: Does the individual have the
requisite skills to not only complete their job, but a means of
continuously improving those skills to keep up or ahead of the market.
By engaging with organizations like Renbor and others, my client was
ensuring that his team had the resources and means of learning and
improving their skills. The onus here lays primarily with the company to
ensure access to improvement, but there was some need for the reps to
step up and fully embrace and utilize the resource. Not entirely but
partly evidenced by the Willingness discussed above.
Action: Once
the skills transfer is complete, it is now all down to the individual
rep. If they do not put things into practice, if there is no action on
their part, then it's all over. Reps do not like to be micro-managed,
nor should they be, so it would do little good to force them to
implement the learning. You can and should set expectations, then coach
and help them implement and improve their acquired skills. Assuming this
exists, it's all down to the rep, and if they do not act and put it
into practice, it becomes a different issue beyond the scope of this
discussion.
Personal Responsibility and Commitment: While
this underpins the other elements, it is nothing new, and nothing new
in the fact that too many reps lack the commitment to continuous
improvement. While they may seem willing, actively participating during
the workshops, they merely go through the motions when it comes to
adopting the skills. Putting them into practice in the most superficial
way, and when results do not instantly materialize, they quickly
conclude "this does not work" and revert back to their previous ways.
Now if they are in the 20% that usually delivers, one can live with it;
if they are one of the 80%, you have a challenge.
For example, we
recently trained a group of wireless sales reps. One fellow with eight
years experience, no pipeline to speak of, has failed to hit quota for
months, and in fact had not had a sale for a couple of months. Very
engaged in the workshop, proclaiming he can't wait to get back and try
"things out", he was ready to go. Three weeks later during one of the
follow-through sessions we conduct, he began to tell us why a program
that has delivered results for thousands of sales people across Canada,
"doesn't work!"
He tried it and he can categorically and
confidently report that it does not work. Turned out he made two cold
calls over two weeks using our techniques and it just does not work. No
willingness, no action, no commitment, despite the fact that his
employer provided the skills learning. Sadly this is very common,
usually not this bad, but many "veterans" stuck in their ways, and while
given repeated opportunity to expand and renew their skills, they pass
it up.
The reality is that improving in sales is not all that
different from improving other things in life. We have a choice; we can
continue doing things the same way or we can improve grow and prosper
through a commitment and action or blame others or other things. That is
why regardless of the fact that companies do step up and provide
training, the follow up and ongoing support, the management support to
help adoption and success, the fact is that most of the success in
change and improvement is very much dependent on the reps. After all,
they have to be willing, put in to practice and commit to ongoing
improvement.
My client continues to provide the skills improvement
piece as a means of avoiding one of Einstein's better known sayings:
"insanity is doing the same thing the same way and expecting different
results". His ongoing challenge is to establish and maintain a culture
and atmosphere that fosters acceptance of change and the accountability
it brings.
Article Tags: Accountability, execution, renbor, sales, sell better
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About the Author: Tibor Shanto RSS for Tibor's articles - Visit Tibor's website Tibor Shanto is a recognized speaker, award winning author Shift!: Harness The Trigger Events That Turn Prospects Into Customers, and sought after trainer. Tibor is a Director of and a contributor to Sales Bloggers Union, and his work has appeared in numerous of publications and leading sales websites. A 25-year veteran of B2B sales in information, content management, and financial sectors, Tibor has developed an insider’s perspective on how information can be used to, shorten sales cycles, increase close ratios, and create double digit growth. Called a brilliant sales tactician Tibor shows organizations how to execute their strategy by using the right information to create the perfect combination of what are the tactics to apply and when. Click here to visit Tibor's website Sales & Consequences |
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