



(7 ratings)
If you’re not satisfied with your sales status looks to the coach of your team – your sales managers. Here’s a way to check how good they are.
First, does your sales manager know where his/her sales will come from by account, by product / service for 2008? Or is it about, "Here is my number, let’s go out there and sell, sell, sell." Ask each one to explain where the sales for 2008 will come from.
Second, does your sales manager know how to motivate each of his/her sales people? Yes, the key is money, but money goes to the family. Money is about survival but, what really gets the sales person going? See if your sales manager can answer this question about his sales people.
Third, does your sales manager coach and mentor. Coaching is telling his people what to do, i.e. get to the ultimate decision maker. Mentoring is showing them how to do it, i.e. show how to use your main contact to network you to the ultimate decision maker.
This requires discussing sales call plans and pursuit strategies. Then making sales calls together – not for the sales manager to sell, but to observe, give feedback and lay-out a behavior modification plan. How often does your manager do this with each sales person?
Fourth, does your sales manager turn-over and recruit effectively and timely? In other words does he purge the bottom 10% each year and constantly seek new recruits. Most managers are reactive. When someone leaves, they then seek a replacement.
Unfortunately, because of 1-3 above, the better people (maybe not the best) leave and then the manager starts recruiting. This leaves you with the poorer performers and the new hire becomes whatever was available.
Like a college football coach, your sales manager must be good at recruiting good talent and then showing this raw talent what to do and how to do it. Don’t ever get sucked into the "experienced sales person". Experience only means someone has been doing it before.
It says nothing about how good one is, especially selling your products and services. That‘s where the coaching and mentoring becomes critical. As in football and all sports, coaching and practice is critical and ongoing.
Finally, does your sales manager hold your sales people accountable? That is when a forecasted sale isn’t made, is there a discussion that holds the sales person’s feet to the fire?
Are there consequences as well as rewards? As my old football coach uses to say, "I don’t want excuses, I want results or else you don’t start."
Now it’s your call. Is the person responsible for the most important element of your business – sales –capable and doing what it takes to get you where you want to be?
Or do you need to step up and take actions of training your managers or hiring new ones – and then training them. If professionals like Tiger Woods and every other athlete needs coaching, your sales managers do as well.
20 Random Tutorials from the same category :
Benefits of Credit Card Debt Relief And Credit Card Debt Management
Tips on Debt Prevention and Management
How to Hire the “Right” Employee
Contact Management Databases: A Top Asset for Systems Integrators
Risk Management - 8 steps To Avoid Litigation
Small Business Manager Tips
The Manager as Coach
The Difference between Sales Leaders and Sales Managers
Five Of The Worst Mistakes Managers Can Make And How To Avoid Them
The Difference Between Management and Leadership
Time Management Skills and Tips For Handling Interruptions Professionally
Practice Management Software-The Future of Every Medical Practice
Dealing with Conflict in the Workforce
Investment Management Strategy: Seven Principles for Success
Your Risk Management Process - a Practical and Effective Approach
Get the Most from Your New Order Management System
C-Level Relationship Selling Requires Differentiating Your Company to Your Customers’ C-Level Managers
Business Debt Management - Business Debt Management Restores Focus
Interim Management - Women Get Ahead
Back to School Time Management













