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Posts Tagged ‘Sales management’

Eight Reasons Why Salespeople Fail

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Btb Guest Author

Jonathan Farrington

The responsibility for ensuring that every member of the sales team is successful and performing at optimum levels lies entirely with management and below are the eight reasons why sales people fail. In fact, I usually ask just three very straightforward questions, in order to identify why a salesperson is underachieving i.e.,

• Are they visiting/talking to enough clients/prospects? In other words are they pro-active and are their activity levels high?

• Are they talking to the right people within those client/prospect organizations? Are they able to penetrate the formal DMU (Decision Making Unit) and get to the MAN?

• Are they saying/doing the right things? This really means – how strong are their selling skills?

However this list, whilst not exhaustive, remains extremely accurate and as I said earlier, management has total control over each of these, including the last one!

1. Wrong or no selection process - The wrong person for the position

2. Wrong or no training - Insufficiently developed

3. Wrong or no planning - Expected to do all of their own planning

4. Wrong or no supervision – Left without competent supervision

5. Wrong or no motivation - Not properly motivated to meet objectives

6. Wrong or no stimulation – Not stimulated by appropriate incentives

7. Wrong or no evaluation – Not regularly appraised against a set of agreed objectives

8. Wrong or no executive action – Not adequately supported by a competent manager

If you are a sales manager, consider your part in this equation. According to these criteria, do you feel your current team poised for success? Hopefully you can say yes! If not, this list will hopefully draw attention to how you can help your team exercise their potential. Your wallet will also thank you!

Jonathan Farrington is a globally recognized business coach, mentor, author, and consultant, who has guided hundreds of companies and tens of thousands of individuals around the world towards optimum performance levels.  He has authored in excess of three hundred skills development programmes, designed a range of unique and innovative process tools and has been published extensively on a wide range of business topics including organizational and sales team development, leadership and the customer imperative.  Jonathan’s first book, “Tougher At The Top” will be published early in 2009.  Visit his website @ www.jonathanfarrington.com

In the News

It was my great pleasure to have dinner with Dave Stein, while he was over here as part of his work with DIT’s and Enterprise Ireland’s International Selling Programme. I am a big fan of Dave’s work and an avid reader of his blog. In a recent post “Ireland Knows How To Support Growing Companies“, Dave compliments Enterprise Ireland on the support they provide for start-ups and high-potential Irish companies - saying that the rest of the world can learn from Ireland in this regard.

I have spoken about Dave Brock on here before. Dave is the founder and CEO of Partners in EXCELLENCE, a leading international business consulting company. In my opinion, he is one of the most clued in consultants you will come across. He recently started a blog, and the quality of his posts has been exceptional. It came as no surprise, when he was named “Blogger of the Week” over at www.socialmediatoday.com

Over at TSE

I joined the other Top Sales Experts team for an conference call last Tuesday, there are some really great initiatives planned for 09 - WATCH THIS SPACE

Panic and the Rise of Micro Management - Killing Sales From Within

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

Btb Guest Author

Paul McCord

I’m hearing more and more frustration from both salespeople and sales leaders as the slow economy increases the panic on the part of senior management. Sales are slowing dramatically, profits are down or have completely evaporated, and the pressure is increasing on all levels to produce, produce, produce.

Along with the pressure to produce comes the micro managing of the sales team and its leadership. Managers are having daily pipeline meetings with the members of their team. Increasingly these meetings are getting uglier and uglier with increased threats if sales don’t increase.

Middle managers are having daily calls–in some instances two or more calls per day–with the managers under them as they want an accounting for each team member’s activities, including reviewing the sales status of each and every prospect.

Management is demanding detailed reports for each prospect. If a salesperson deems a contact to be a non-prospect, managers are demanding the salesperson continue to pursue the contact in hopes of turning them into a prospect.

Each minute of the day must be accounted for. Management is accepting no excuses for not closing a sale–bad credit, not a reason, get them pay cash; no need, not a reason, create a need for them; want to wait to see what the market will do, not a reason, convince them that now’s the time to buy; cash flow issues, not a reason, get them to factor their receivables to get the cash to make the purchase.

As salespeople get bombarded with threats and each second of their day is micro managed, they resort to discounting and trying to include as many incentives to purchase as they can in an effort to get sales to get management off their back.

They quickly discover that even if that creates a sale, it creates a new set of problems as they get a lecture about how the company doesn’t discount and their job is to maintain gross and if they can’t, the company will find someone who will. Many managers resort to writing all proposals for their sales team to insure that they control every aspect of the sale.

As morale declines and sales lag even further, senior management gives more and more directives, demanding greater control and more ‘accountability’ on each employee’s part.

When today’s demands don’t create the desired result, they’re added to or changed tomorrow, spiraling in a seemingly never-ending series of demands and threats, each more ominous than the last.

And sales plunge even faster than before.

Once management panics it seems impossible to stop the downhill flow of negative consequences. The more pressure management feels, the more they try to spread the pressure downward, believing they can demand production via force.

The process inevitably produces nothing other than a bigger hole from which the company must emerge.

If micro managing is such a negative force, why do managers resort to it? The root cause may be panic, but the belief they need to micro manage their team is based squarely in a distrust of their employees–a belief that their salespeople and managers aren’t working hard enough, that the sales team doesn’t care enough, that their team is intrinsically lazy and is only looking for the low hanging fruit, not willing to get dirty and dig for the hard to find business.

If sheer force and threats don’t work, what can the management team do to stabilize–or maybe even increase–sales during this time of economic stress?

1. Don’t panic.
Of course, this is easier said than done. But panic leads to overreacting and bad decisions.  We need look no further than the US government over the past 6 months to see the consequences of panic–squandered opportunities, a diarrhea of ineffective spending in an effort to ‘do something now’ with little regard to the future, and a massive list of decisions that upon reflection many–even those involved in the initial decision making process–wish had never been made.

2. Make an honest evaluation of the situation and communicate it to the entire team.
Employees are not stupid. They are aware of the economic situation and they not only wonder what impact it has on the company, they speculate–and most often their speculation is far worse than the truth of the actual situation.

Employees–and in particular the sales team–perform best when they know and understand the company’s goals and objectives and the obstacles standing in the way of reaching those goals and objectives.

The more clearly each sales team member understands the company’s needs and concerns, the more clearly they can not only understand where they fit in, but what they can–what they must –do to help address those needs and concerns. If team members sense that the company isn’t communicating honestly with them, they begin to retreat into themselves, resisting the company’s entreaties and even the most dire threat falls on deaf ears.

3. Formulate a comprehensive and workable plan that includes participation by all parties to address market conditions.
History is replete with examples of monarchs and generals who when faced with tough opposition retreat into a bunker mentality. They become increasingly overwhelmed with circumstances, they become delusional, they begin to distrust even their closest friends and companions. In short order they are totally isolated. Their plans and orders have little to do with reality.

This same phenomenon happens in the executive suite. When faced with potential crisis, senior management will often retreat to their own mental concrete bunker.  Rather than seeking the wisdom and cooperation of their employees, they barricade themselves in, shouting orders through the barred door.

In our current economy where quality prospects are difficult to find and sales must be fought for, gaining the cooperation and commitment from staff is critical.  Senior management cannot survive on their own.

If they and the company are to survive, it will take the active participation of all the work force.  Consequently, the more ownership in the solution to overcoming the company’s obstacles each member of the team feels, the more committed to the solution–and to their individual contributions to the solution–each will be.

4.  Commit the company to giving the needed support to accomplish the goals and overcome the obstacles.
When panic sets in, the cost cutting butcher knife comes out.  Management looks at every expense as a waste.  Can we use a shorter, less expensive screw here; can we make that piece of metal a little thinner?  Do we really need that much money in our marketing budget?  Slash sales training, it’s never done any good anyway.

As the butcher of the executive office is in the midst of a budget-cutting orgy, critical resources for sales stability–much less sales growth–are apt to be gutted also.  While belt tightening is necessary when business slows, a finely honed scalpel is necessary, not a meat clever.

Creating sales takes money. Salespeople need the same resources in slow times to create sales as they do during hot markets. Certainly gratuitous expenses such as client dinners and games of golf may be legitimate areas for trimming, but training, travel, clerical support, and other expenses that lead directly to or support the closing of business are not to be cut indiscriminately. In fact, when it comes to training, prospecting, lead generation, and client retention expenses, the slower the economy, the more funds should be directed to those areas.

Times are tough. That doesn’t mean that it is time for a management meltdown.

There are solutions to slowing sales.

Resorting to micro management and threats won’t produce anything other than disgruntled employees and slower sales.

However, gaining the trust, cooperation, and commitment of your team to address the issues facing the company–and by extension, themselves–can give your company the coordinated effort by all to weather this economic downturn.

Paul McCord is a leading authority on prospecting, referral selling, and personal marketing.  He is president of McCord Training, a Midland, Texas based sales training, coaching, and consulting company.  His first book, Creating a Million Dollar a Year Sales Income: Sales Success through Client Referrals (John Wiley and Sons, 2007), is an Amazon and Barnes and Noble best-seller and is quickly becoming recognized as the authoritative work on referral selling. His second book, SuperStar Selling: 12 Keys to Becoming a Sales SuperStar has just been released.  He may be reached at pmccord@mccordandassociates.com or visit his sales training website at www.mccordtraining.com or his highly popular blog www.salesandmanagementblog.com

I first came across this super article from Paul through Jill Konrath’s blog

This is timely advice for us all, micro management is a really easy trap to fall into and something we have all got to wary of.

Over at Top Sales Experts

I have always thought that PowerPoint is a limiting sales tool.

Here is a recent TSE daily interview with Mark Hunter on this very subject.

Maureen Blandford in interview with Mark Hunter

Listen as Mark tells us why PowerPoint is not nearly as important as we might like to think.

Has Sales Management become just Another Bonus?

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

Dave Brock poses a very interesting question on his blog “Do Great Sales People Make Good Sales Managers?” In this excellent post, Dave identifies and talks about some of the core leadership skills that are required in making the transition to sales management.

There is no easy answer to this question, or as Dave points out “Great sales people are sometimes the worst sales managers. Likewise, some mediocre sales people end up being stellar sales managers”

I think Dave would agree with me however, that the reality is that most sales managers were at first, top sales people.

Companies continue to consider:

Achievement in sales to be the most deserving route into sales management and thus by default;It has in turn become the natural route.

Perhaps, this is not such a good thing. On reading Dave’s post, I found myself asking.

Should sales management opportunities continue to be tied so closely with sales performance?

Do we run the risk of devaluing the role of sales manager to the point that it is merely another form of bonus?

Will top sales performance always translate into effective sales management?

I don’t believe it always will. Many of the skills that served us well as salespeople are actually counter-productive when applied to sales management. I would suggest that sales management actually requires an altogether different skill set than what is required to be a top sales person.

If you also factor that top salespeople come from a background of continued over-performance, where as managers they will spend the majority of their time dealing with issues related to under-performance. This too must make for a difficult adjustment.

It this why then when faced with challenges, newly promoted sales managers often revert to what worked when they were selling. And if this approach fails, they may continue to persevere, seeing no reason to change and choosing instead to blame the skill levels or activities of the team.

I am not saying here, that top sales people don’t make good sales managers, of course they do. Rather that, we have to be very careful to promote based on management potential and skills rather than solely on the person’s track record in sales.

Companies can be guilty of devaluing the sales manager’s role by using it to reward sales performance rather than hiring the best person for the job. Of course there may be risks, such as upsetting an expectant big hitter, even to the point where he or she may leave to join the competition. That being said, the role of manager should be treated with enough significance, that these are risks worth taking?

Published by Niall Devitt, Btb Business Training

Making the Number; Putting the Science In Selling

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Review

“Our conversion rate of prospects doubled from 20% to 40% and the average time-to-convert shrunk from 6 to 3 months. Netting it out — sales benchmarking has single-handedly improved our revenue by 5% this year alone.”

That’s what Geoff Smart; CEO of ghSMART has to say about “Making The Number” a new book by Greg Alexander, Aaron Bartels and Mike Drapeau of Sales Benchmark Index.

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CRM for a Small Business

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008

Published by Niall Devitt, Btb Business Training

A client of mine called me the other day looking for some advice. He owns and operates a small distribution business and as he put it is considering investing in CRM technology, with the aim of helping his business through automating his sales and customer reporting.

The catalyst event for this call was that one member of his sales team had recently left the company taking with him a long list of contacts, and presumably with time customers.

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Sales People Spending less than 10% of their Time SELLING

Monday, July 7th, 2008

Published by Niall Devitt, Btb Business Training

I got talking to a senior salesperson recently, and was literally gob smacked when he told me about the amount of admin work that he is expected to produce on top of his sales target. He was having to spend roughly half his working week doing paperwork.

It got me to thinking that when you consider other unavoidable tasks such as travelling to and from sales meetings , the amount of time that he could possibly be spending in front of prospective clients actually selling must be tiny.

Wanting to see if there was any available information on the web, I came across an international productivity study from Proudfoot Consulting, which made for quite astonishing reading.

This 2002 study revealed that sales people on average spend just seven percent of their time actively selling.

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Using Psychological Profiling to its full Potential

Friday, May 30th, 2008

Published by Niall Devitt, Btb Business Training

I remember working for a company a few years back where the senior management were really big fans of using psychological profiling for the selection of new sales staff. They had hired a profiling company to create a psychological template for their ideal new hire and always tried to employ sales people that matched up closely.

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Referral Partners

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Guest Author: C.J. Hayden

Seeking out other professionals who will act on your behalf as referral partners is an excellent and production way of securing high quality leads.

Here’s an article on the subject by C.J. Hayden. C.J. is the best-selling author of “Get Clients NOW! (AMACOM, 1999)”, “Get Hired NOW!” and “The One-Person Marketing Plan Workbook”. C.J. is a career and business coach who teaches people to make a better living doing what they love. She is a former corporate productivity consultant with over 25 years experience in business and management. C.J. has been speaking and training professionally since 1978, and coaching since 1992. She has been featured in numerous books and magazines, and widely profiled internationally by newspapers, radio, and TV. For more information, visit www.getclientsnow.com.

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9 Management Philosophies

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

Btb Guest Author: Martice E Nicks

Here is a fab article on the management of high performing teams from Martice E Nicks Jr. Martice is a Partner at Applied Concepts Institute, LLC, A Professional Speaker, Master Sales Productivity Consultant, Coach and Trainer. You can join the sales productivity discussion at his blog

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Stop Chasing Sales

Friday, April 4th, 2008

Published by Niall Devitt, Btb Business Training

We all been there, spend hours attending the meetings, given the presentations, prepared the proposal and then after all this personal investment, what appeared to be a certain big deal now starts to look increasingly shaky. It’s happened to every salesperson I know and it’s an emotional roller coaster that we could all do without. Coming to terms with the fact that what looked like the best bit of business you’ve done in months is now a dead duck is one of the hardest asks in the sales game.

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