Understanding the Sales Force
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Change for Change’s Sake
- August 17, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
It’s important to assess your candidates but it’s equally important to surround that assessment with a proven, effective process that assures a flow of quality candidates and a successful hand-off to sales management.
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Excuse Making
- August 16, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
Sales Managers often don’t recognize the excuses but they are aware of the reasons why performance or results fail to meet expectations. In some cases, those very managers are the ones providing the ‘reasons’ for this month’s numbers. Reasons are essentially rationalizations and therefore, one in the same with excuses, and until we recognize that, excuses will continue to mount.
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Deja vu All Over Again
- August 12, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
The single issue that seems to occur most often is the company which, early on in their use of our sales specific, pre-employment assessment (Express Screen) learns that the lion share of their candidates are not recommended for hiring. For some reason, rather than being thankful for avoiding another hiring mistake, they become angry, at the assessment, for discounting their candidates.
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Delay the Inevitable
- August 9, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
A new sales manager, without the benefit of our insight, could take 8 months to a year to figure out what’s going on and, in all likelihood, still won’t come up with the answers. In most of the companies we evaluate, the managers have been in place for quite some time and don’t have the answers because they aren’t looking in the right places.
There are three more components to this puzzle.
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The Sales Hires Couldn’t All Be Bad, Could They?
- July 21, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
I spoke with a manager who was attempting to solve a huge turnover problem – more than 100% annually.
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Sometime’s You Feel Like a Nut
- July 18, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
You always know when salespeople aren’t prospecting. Their pipeline becomes stale – not empty mind you, just old. And finally, they aren’t closing enough business. You know it. You may or may not do anything about it. Some managers fire these people. Others ignore it. A few actually know how to provide coaching and motivation in such a way that they can fix the problem. But what happens when you know they’re aren’t getting it done and you aren’t able to say anything or do anything because you’re so uncomfortable with confrontation?
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What’s the Difference Between Mentoring and Coaching Salespeople?
- July 14, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
Today I was asked the difference between sales coaching and mentoring salespeople and I think this is a great topic that all sales managers, from field level up through the executive team must understand. This is only my opinion and I feel very strongly about this. Ask someone else and they might tell you that coaching and mentoring are the same.
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Where are All the Hunters and Farmers?
- June 24, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
92% of all candidates will have fewer than 23% of the attributes in the closer skill set and 36% of all candidates will have fewer than 53% of the attributes of the hunter skill set.
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I Don’t Believe in This Stuff
- June 23, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
In the last 5 years he had hired 20 salespeople and 18 of them failed. It makes you wonder what would have happened if he believed in assessments and training.
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My Turnover’s Bigger Than Your Turnover
- June 21, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
They both share the same belief in the importance of a consultative approach to selling, have a sales process, and not being order takers. They both have capable sales management. They both pay well, above the industry norm. PM turned over only 2 of 16 salespeople last year while GP turned over 5 of 12. Why such a difference?