Understanding the Sales Force
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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?
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It’s a Misunderstanding
- June 20, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
A candidate that had been assessed for a sales management position wrote, “….Don’t you think your sales specific pre-employment assessments are inflexible and not a true indicator of future success? Such tests compartmentalize people, placing them in strict categories. People are not black and white, but colorful, each with a unique identity.”
This inaccurate comment is a great example of how widely people misunderstand assessments in general so I thought I’d take a moment to provide some education.
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The Latest and Greatest
- June 15, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
This particular President made a decision to hire 9 green salespeople because he could afford to pay them only $30,000. What he fails to realize is that it will take the better part of a year to develop 9 green salespeople to the point where they are closing business, other than by accident or luck, on a regular basis. So he invests $270,000 and sees very little revenue in return.
What would happen if he chose to hire 5 experienced salespeople instead?
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When Enough Isn’t Enough
- June 11, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
One client finally heeded some advice they hadn’t responded to for several years. They finally decided to replace 90% of their underperforming independent reps with direct salespeople. They certainly thought it through for a long enough time, considering the implications to the remaining reps, salespeople, customers and employees; programs, applications, legacy knowledge and costs. So on some magical day this year a transition will take place and the company will usher in the new era of performance and accountability. Or so it seems.
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Rejected
- June 8, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
One large company rejected our sales candidate assessment because…..it’s too accurate. That’s right. It’s accuracy would eliminate a significant percentage of candidates and, with their faulty thinking, prevent sales managers from meeting their quota for sales recruits.
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Slump Busters
- June 7, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
Lack of consistency causes salespeople to slump and consistency prevents slumps. It’s that simple. But what is the true nature of a slump?
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Contingencies
- June 7, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
It doesn’t matter what kind of business you’re in. Having an effective recruiting process that incorporates the use of an accurate sales assessment early in the process is as important as an accounting system that provides cash flow reports.
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In Order to Form a More Perfect Union
- June 4, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
This is worse than mediocrity, more evil than a salesperson violating his non-compete, more horrible than complete failure, more disturbing than complacency, more serious than ambivalence and more disastrous than excuse-making.
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The Crosswalk Law
- June 3, 2005
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
The sales version of the crosswalk law occurs when the growth strategy calls for recruiting new salespeople and management turns to headhunters. Instead of attracting, hiring and developing A-Players they decide to bring on salespeople with an existing book of business. Much like the crosswalk law, this works once in a while but more often it doesn’t.