Understanding the Sales Force
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Are You Using This New Technology to Generate New Opportunities?
- November 13, 2019
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
Do you have Rainbow flatware? Biomagnetic ear stickers? A diamond-shaped ice cube tray? Baby feather wings? Yah, these things exist here. You don’t? Me neither.
Have you signed up to use a company that uses AI to generate leads for you? You haven’t? Me neither.
It seems to me that the only companies using AI to generate leads are the companies trying to sell you their services using AI to generate leads. How ironic!
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Video Conferencing for Salespeople – To Zoom or Not to Zoom?
- November 6, 2019
- Posted by: Kurlan & Associates, Inc.
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
No data or statistics today. No sales training or coaching either. This won’t be a lesson for sales managers or sales leaders. This is my rant of the day.
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Good Sales Recruiting is Like Selecting Movies and TV Shows
- November 5, 2019
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
Do you like movies and TV Shows? I love them!
How do you go about selecting the next movie or show you will watch? Do you look for a specific show, watch the trailer and if you like the trailer, watch it? Or, do you look at all of the new releases, or everything in a particular genre, narrow down the selections, watch several trailers, and finally choose one?
Most people use the second scenario which, by the way, is a very good approach for selecting and hiring salespeople. Unfortunately, that’s not how most companies go about it.
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New Data Reveals a Magical New Score for Sales Effectiveness
- October 31, 2019
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
Do you drive at the speed limit, the fastest speed you can get away with, the slowest speed you can get away with, or are you an 85th percentile driver? The 85th percentile driver travels at the speed that 85% of the cars on that road are traveling, regardless of the posted speed limit. Motorists.org has data, illustrated below, proving that the 85th percentile speed is the ideal speed for safe travel.
Thanks to a new finding soon to be included in Objective Management Group’s (OMG) evaluations and assessments, the sales equivalent of this data shows a correlation between spoken words per minute and sales effectiveness, identifying the safest speed or pace to deliver sales messaging.
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Squirrels Explain the Differences Between Top and Bottom Salespeople
- October 28, 2019
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
This morning I was watching 3 squirrels each doing their thing.
Squirrel #1, who I named Ernest, was finding lots of nuts and burying them. His nest was full and he will reap the benefits of his hard work over the winter.
Squirrels #2 and #3, who I named MT and LayZ, were playing. They were running up and down tree trunks, jumping from limb to limb, running in circles and generally chasing their tails. They don’t yet have nests and unless they make a commitment, become disciplined, and get to work, they will starve to death this winter.
Ernest, MT and LayZ are no different than their human counterparts who find themselves in sales roles. The top salespeople are like Ernest and the bottom salespeople are like MT and LayZ. For evidence of that claim, take a look at the table below with a sprinkling of data from Objective Management Group (OMG) which has evaluated 1,910,915 salespeople from companies.
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How Sales Coaching Utilizes a Quid Pro Quo
- October 24, 2019
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
Quid pro quo is all the rage. The news networks are pointing to and from quid pro quo and arguing whether it was or wasn’t implied. Regardless of which side of the political spectrum you’re on, you’ve probably heard it plenty more than you need to.
Could there be a sales coaching lesson here?
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Sales Process and Why So Many Salespeople Lose Their Way
- October 17, 2019
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
Last night I was on Interstate 90, the MassPike, driving home from the airport in a wind-driven rainstorm. It was so bad I couldn’t see the white lines that divide the three lanes nor could I see the Jersey barriers dividing the eastbound from the westbound traffic. It was almost as scary as the plane’s rocky decent from 30,000 feet in gale-force winds last night or driving in a blizzard!
The inability to see where I was and where I was going is what most salespeople experience when they sell. Most salespeople don’t have a formal, structured, milestone-centric sales process to follow so they can’t possibly know where they are, and where they need to go.
Consider the following alarming statistics from Objective Management Group’s evaluations and assessments of 1,908,143 salespeople with regard to sales process:
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What is the Sales Stack and Do You Need it?
- October 2, 2019
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
You bought a really nice, new, laptop computer and you thought to yourself, “Now I’m all set!” But are you? You needed a case to carry it around, a thumb drive for quickly moving files from your laptop to another, and a printer and if you have a Mac notebook, a port that will serve as adapters to your various cables. These are your accessories.
You’ll also need cloud storage, a broadband connection, email, a browser and 20 or so software applications so your computer can help you do the things you purchased it to do. This is your technology stack.
But now there is a sales stack too. What is the sales stack, and should you have one for your salespeople?
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Elements of an Effective Elevator Pitch
- September 24, 2019
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
Why is your favorite sports team better than my favorite team?
Why do you like your political party instead of mine?
Why are you so loyal to the make of car you drive instead of the make of car that I drive?
I bet you can make a passionate pitch for all three, and probably have them come out better than an elevator pitch or your unique value proposition.
At Objective Management Group (OMG), we ask salespeople to record their elevator pitches and value propositions as part of our sales force evaluation. Some are OK, most are not, and for most companies, there are tremendous inconsistencies between each salesperson’s messages.
Elevator pitches and UVP’s are usually so poorly constructed that it makes me wonder if anyone in sales leadership puts any time at all into formalizing these messages.
That said, I thought it might be helpful to discuss the elements of a good elevator pitch and/or value proposition.
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New Data Shows That Top Salespeople are 2800% Better at Disrupting the Flow
- September 18, 2019
- Posted by: Dave Kurlan
- Category: Understanding the Sales Force
Fish, rafts, kayaks, canoes, sailboats and swimmers all find much more success when they are moving with the wind or the current rather than going against it.
Unfortunately, the same isn’t necessarily true in sales.