|
For many of us,
amateur commentary and critique of ‘professional’ football is a national
pastime. It’s a shame we don’t pay such close attention to our business.
Take a moment to ponder this…….
-
How would you feel about
investing £millions in a new player for your team without having seen him
play beforehand?
-
Once the player joined your
team, how regularly would you want to see him play in order to assess his
ability, strengths and weaknesses ?
-
How personalised would his
ongoing coaching be to ensure his fitness and skills continue to improve?
I can take a fairly accurate
educated guess on your answers. So I’m wondering why we don’t apply the
same principal to our sales professionals?
-
Why is it that companies
continue to invest millions in a sales team in order to grow their
business without ever really seeing the sales people in action?
-
Why are salespeople are rarely
assessed and coached in the field to improve their performance and thus
maximise the organisation’s return on investment?
-
Why is it that there is little
emphasis on improving the skill and knowledge levels of salespeople other
than, perhaps, a little ‘product’ training?
I saw an advertisement last week,
which read ‘Sales Director wanted £28 million’. Although this
appeared to be the salary, it was of course, the estimated cost to the
company were they to make the wrong selection.
-
Why are many senior management
teams so cavalier about measuring the real return on investment
achieved by their sales team other than tracking revenue?
-
Why don’t they understand
where, and what added-value help is necessary to increase sales
performance?
What do you know about the
standards of performance of your salespeople and will this be enough to
achieve your corporate goals? Surely it is sheer madness to ignore the part
of your business that is potentially capable of generating such massive
growth and profit both now and in the future?
And so back to
football
Before purchasing a player you
would study his track record. You would assess both his fitness and his,
skills (such as passing, shooting, heading the ball and his ability to
accurately position and read the game). Scouts and management would observe
the person playing prior to making such a huge investment. Judgements in
relation to their ability to blend into the team would be considered
seriously, a thorough medical would take place and a contract negotiated.
Now let’s see what often happens
in many UK organisations when it comes to selecting, managing and growing a
successful sales team…….
New salespeople are often
recruited from a steady stream of (often irrelevant) c.v’s from selected
organisations which have a vested interest in placing their candidate. The
interview process is often informal and based on ‘gut feel’ because the
sales managers performing interviews are unprepared, under time pressure and
inadequately experienced in selecting top sales performers. A manager often
interviews a candidate without the ability (or recognition that it’s
necessary) to match the Knowledge, Attitudes, Skills and Habits of the
candidate with the requirements of the job. In addition, the candidate is
rarely evaluated in a real life situation – we don’t get to see the ’player’
on the ‘pitch’. Joint interviews of candidates are decreasing due to time
pressures. Proof of previous sales performance, P60 supporting evidence of
past earnings and, perhaps most surprising, references, are seldom
requested.
Very often, the end result is the
selection of the wrong candidate which then takes many months to become
apparent. By which time of course, you’re stuck with the problem of
reversing your expensive decision with employment law and numerous other
ramifications to consider.
The
lynch-Pin Point
In this age of the internet isn’t
it more cost effective to invest less cash on finding the candidate while
investing more in the correct selection process?
Recruiting the wrong salespeople
is extremely expensive, time consuming and unproductive so why do we not
insist on a professional selection process in the same way that football
managers do?
Your new
salesperson joins the team………….
Once on board, our football
manager would insist on continued meticulous screening in training and
during match play whilst an on-going personal programme of coaching and
improvement was agreed.
But our Managing Director………..
Gives the new sales person a territory and a
sales target based on the organisation’s requirements (i.e. top down quota).
The person may be given an induction programme and perhaps even some product
training if he’s lucky. However, he seldom receives ongoing job assessment
and coaching and 6 months later has, in all likelihood, still not benefited
from a visit with his manager. The company management adds to this folly by
implicitly supporting the lack of standards of performance, systems and
methodologies required to measure the necessary quality and quantity of
sales effort.
The boards of directors usually
ignore these issues when markets are buoyant and business is going well.
The reality is that in fact, they are missing £millions in lost
opportunities. They then react in ‘panic mode’ when sales are decreasing
which often results in new management appointments to allow the same
problems to occur once more -- only dressed in a different wrapper.
This is not the way to plan for
success and it is certainly not the way you would run a football team!
We call this ‘management by
hope’.
So why is the sales function not
producing the return on the investment required?
We couldn’t attempt to address
all the reasons but listed below are some snapshots of what we have seen
over recent years.
-
The detail of
the sales function is seldom understood at board level. The belief that if
you simply ‘do more’ you’ll get the result is frighteningly common. No
attention is paid to the ‘doing more’ of ‘what’, or to ‘whom’.
-
The direct sales
plan is not integrated into the marketing and business plan and the
disconnect is apparent.
-
The sales
management team is usually rewarded for achieving short-term revenue and
profit goals with little measurement of the qualitative and quantitive
parts of the job.
-
Structured up-skilling
and ‘leader & coaching’ programmes seldom exist.
-
Apathy and low
work rate within the sales organisation. (The drumbeat is too slow.) “If
Bill hits his targets and only works 4 days per week, why do I care if he
plays golf every Friday?” No thought is given to how much more
Bill could achieve, how this would effect his motivation and indeed, how
his targets were set!
-
Lack of a ‘sales
culture’ and excitement
-
Lack of
recognition of true professional selling
-
The introduction
of the internet and e-mail has given salespeople another excuse not to
make contact with customers and cultivate their network
We are in danger of seeing
standards of sales performance reduce year by year unless we take action
now.
So what are our
choices?
It’s very simple really……………Organisations
can continue in the same vein and leave sales results to chance, just hoping
things improve……. or they can take action.
How to change?
It is not
possible to cover the whole spectrum of sales issues regularly facing
Managing Directors but here are a few checklist items that you could take
action on now.
-
Ensure your sales propositions
are articulated and clearly understood by the salespeople and your
customers. Your customers must really understand the
business deliverables of your products and services and the implications
of choosing an alternative.
-
Ensure you have a leader of
sales who really understands the sales function and allocates time to
managing it properly. Forbid them to be in the office for more than a
small portion of the working week.
-
Prepare open questions that
establish the needs and wants of your customer and then relate their needs
and wants back to your products and services.
-
Prepare a ‘person
specification’ template to ensure the standards for existing and new
people are met.
-
Be sure you know how you want
the salespeople to spend their time.
-
Introduce a professional
selection and retention programme for all new and existing salespeople.
-
Use outside expert resources
where appropriate to plug the skill, knowledge and experience gaps within
your own organisation.
-
Plan, manage and measure the
quality and quantity of sales effort taking place and compare this with
the pre-agreed required activity to achieve the result.
-
Immediately introduce ‘bottom
up / top down’ planning to check the credibility of your revenue plan
-
Link forecasting systems to the
quantity, direction and quality of activity required rather than just to
historical sales results
-
Know and understand how your
sales team stacks up against the competition
So where do you start?
-
Start with a
thorough review of your sales organisation. The people, procedures,
processes and current performance and highlight the areas for immediate,
medium and long-term improvement. This can be done very quickly and at
quite low cost
-
Build a
programme to manage change and improvement by introducing standards and
key performance indicators and ensure salespeople and management ‘walk the
talk’
-
Where necessary,
for fast, expert advice, appoint an external organisation that has a
proven track record of implementing change and improving sales
performance.
Do not think you can fix these
issues by sending your people on a training course. You’d be better off
taking your team for a ‘fun day’ and you’ll change no more. Remember the
football manager who works with his team, shares his experience and improves
their skills at the coaching ground? While training might be helpful in the
short term, there is no substitute for getting ‘on the pitch’ to play and
being observed in real live situations.
It takes a brave executive, especially a Sales
Director to admit they need outside help -- but all sportspeople have a
coach who is continually improving performance so why should it be different
for your sales professionals?
Conclusion
A 10% improvement in sales performance will
make a vast improvement to the profitability of a company and in most
companies this is very achievable. However, it does require an investment
of time, and some money. It requires people to stop some of the unproductive
things they are doing now, and, instead, spend their time focused on what
is truly effective and productive.
“The definition of insanity is
doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results”.
Benjamin Franklin
At some point, whether you’re
ready or not - things must change.
Mike O’Riordan of Quantum
www.quantum-sales.com |