That  is a question most executives worry about and often have to ask their direct  reports. This is especially true when thinking about sales management. In some situations, the president of the  company may be responsible for managing the sales team or maybe they are attempting  to manage a sales manager(s). In either case, attaining revenue objectives  becomes a critical success factor -- to the point where it might be distracting from  achieving other responsibilities of sales management.
However,  the job of sales leadership demands more than revenue focus. In fact, in my  training programs and client consulting engagements, I tell my clients that it  is not sales management's job to achieve quota -- that is the salesperson's  job! It is the job of sales leadership  to hire, train and manage the team properly and position them for success. That  is why "Did it get done?" becomes a critical question. Ensuring that the necessary basic foundations are  being achieved becomes important. 
If  the issue of not "getting it done"  seems to be occurring with a client, we implement the following process to  train and keep everything in focus. On Friday afternoons, each field sales  manager submits a weekly report and, at the end of the month, a simple standard form or  checklist that was created to ensure that all the bases are touched. Here are a few examples from a typical  checklist:
  - Attended on-site sales calls  with reps to observe sales behaviors and to coach?
- Listened to phone calls to observe sales behaviors and to coach?
- Scheduled a well-planned weekly sales team meeting to discuss results,  new plans and build excitement?
- Reviewed new salesperson applications and executed interviewing plans?
- Randomly inspected CRM updates by salespeople to ensure they are  updating it correctly?
- Scheduled monthly sales training meetings and topics that are planned  with specific dates/times?
- Scheduled monthly one on one meeting with each direct report?
- Confirmed future marketing programs
The key  element is not to make the checklist exhaustive  but detailed enough that the fundamental aspects of the job are accomplished. I have seen many growing organizations begin  to fail simply because the basics were being overlooked. Without a foundation,  the system begins to fall apart.
Our clients have  also taken this approach to each department within the organization. Building a  prescriptive approach and holding direct reports accountable will almost always  propel the organization to the next level.
What other  items should be on your sales manager's monthly checklist?   
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on October 27, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    In recent years, organizations have gotten better at analyzing financial  statements, refining manufacturing procedures, re-engineering business systems  and improving marketing effectiveness. CEOs have strengthened their balance  sheets with better asset management, reduced their inventory and cost levels  with just-in-time methodologies, and increased direct mail and advertising  effectiveness through thorough testing and reporting methods. But one area  where additional improvements still can be made is the sales organization. 
Smart companies are scrutinizing their strategic sales management plans, taking a closer look at everything  from their pipelines to their  forecasts. They are also taking a  closer look at lifetime values, cost of sales, market share, sales processes  and salesperson effectiveness. The reason is simple: All organizations,  regardless of whether their sales are shrinking or growing,  are under pressure to create a sales distribution organization that generates  predictable, consistent, profitable results. 
We believe most organizations can improve their  profitability by increasing their discipline, accountability and control. Many times we hear, "Our company is too small to do these  management systems that you show us, Ken." My answer is simple: "It's more  critical to begin  building management systems and  tools when you are small because revenue and profitability are considered more critical in an organization. Start with a few simple tools  and you will be amazed how you can leverage your time more effectively and begin to achieve revenue and profit growth in your firm."
Interestingly,  I see many VAR organizations that are struggling.  They often lack both a strategic and tactical sales plan. Before you get too  deep into your 2016 strategic plan,  ask yourself what kind of  sales-management plan you have in  place. Such a plan must include an  amalgamation of the organization's goals, individual  salespeople's desires and objectives, and a common set of measurement factors  that ensures all parties are focused on the right activities for generating success. 
Planning
The first step is to plan your revenue plan. This exercise will begin to  build your framework for allocation of sales and marketing  dollars, marketing plans and the beginnings  to create a dashboard to track your effectiveness.
Focus on creating business  plans for individual salespeople  that define and bring together their goals with those of the  corporation, and that coordinate  activities with planned marketing  programs. We recommend that in  a salesperson's business plan you  should make the salesperson define  their weekly activity goals, setting sales goals that reflect their best,  most likely and minimum revenue or  profit expectation levels. In addition, we like to see them forecast by  suspect/client by product or practice area three times their quota. Also, each salesperson should set their networking  goals and their own marketing plans.  Each plan should be created every six months. 
If your sales team is focused on certain accounts, where you have defined five or 10 named accounts or you have certain accounts targeted for your firm to "open,"  then salesperson account plans should include  a specific strategy for each named account and five tactical sales actions to  move deeper into the account, sell  additional products or services into  the account, and increase the overall  sales into that account. These  account plans should be prepared every 90 days.
Sales-management planning systems dramatically  refocus a sales manager to future business instead of past results. While most  SFA/CRM or manual sales-management systems can enhance the effectiveness of a  sales organization, they generally measure past activities and current sales  funnel values. While this information is a must for all sales teams, the  systems fall short by providing a rear-view mirror methodology to management. 
A properly designed sales-management planning system changes all of that. With a sales-planning tool, a sales manager or executive can monitor  expected performance; coach, mentor and provide a viewpoint  of past performance; and measure results against  the salesperson's desired objectives. In addition, such a tool helps a  salesperson and sales manager, who are looking  at planned activities far enough ahead,  ensure that consistent activities  are in place to build pipeline values that will provide enough prospect  opportunity to exceed individual  quotas or personal goals.   
I like to say that it is the salesperson's  responsibility to achieve their monthly quota and  management's  responsibility to ensure the proper mix of marketing  and sales activities are in place  so that the 90-day pipeline is full enough  to ensure quota can be made each and every month. This type of salesperson business plan can take the load off an executive and  place it on the people accountable for sales.
Like any new organizational change, the rollout of  such a system must be carefully planned and explained  to all salespeople. Ideally, salespeople should attend a group meeting with all members of their team, along with key  members of the management team, including a controller/CFO and any vice presidents of  marketing and delivery. Last, it's  wise for each salesperson to present a business  plan and account plans to his/her peer group and management team. 
We recommend that these meetings  be serious events that incorporate  some aspect of fun. The power of these personalized plans is actually realized  when the plan is measured against  actual performance. This is when salespeople get it. They recognize what it  takes to achieve their personal and professional goals, and they see how creating better planning  impacts performance. 
Training  and Development
The next step is create a sales training and  development plan each quarter for you and your sales teams.
In our work  with many partners, we find four  essential elements failing. 
  - When  new employee' are hired, there is a limited-at-best new-employee training  program.
- Ongoing sales training  programs are sporadic and not focused on the key elements required to compete.
- Ineffective or nonexistent roleplay scenarios are being run in sales meetings. 
- Sales management is not coaching  or mentoring in  the field or during routine sales calls. 
The result is uneven knowledge  levels and a lack or discipline by  sales management to reinforce MSS or  other training  programs.
It is  critical that companies of  all  sizes focus on the need to train employees continuously.  In most partner organizations, there has been a focus on ensuring that the "certification levels" of the  technical team are current, yet little investment  is made to "certify"  sales teams. Training  programs do not have to consist of an expensive, sophisticated program -- just keep  it to the basics.
To ensure  success, several basic components need to be in  place: 
  - A plan that defines  the goals and components of a training program 
- A defined  ongoing process 
- Most  importantly, proper execution  
The Plan
  The plan  should contain an outline for initial  employee training  on job functional requirements, company product/service offerings, benefits and recurring  plans for training existing  employees. One element that most  organizations miss in their training  plans is the belief aspect of employee training. While it's important to train on new skill development and product/service  knowledge, maintaining  an employee's interest and motivation  levels is critical in today's  competitive economy. This focus on  developing an employee's mental  commitment and aligning their  personal motivational interests is  called "re-recruiting." As new employees enter into  your company, it is the perfect opportunity to set the tone. If you have letters of reference, they should  read them. If you have awards, make sure they look at them and understand how  you earned them. Next, make sure all new employees have a lunch or a meeting with the highest-level position in their division or in  smaller organizations with the president. It is at these sessions that commitment, attitude and loyalty can begin to be developed.   
We believe in creating  a detailed three-week new-hire training plan. The format is simple yet complete. Each  week is broken down into specific  training  and knowledge-transfer components -- with homework! Everything  must be covered: legal documents, marketing  case studies, how to use the phone/fax/CRM, lunch meetings,  as well as learning to sell/present  your organization via the use of your company's   brochures/PPT. It is critical that each aspect of your new-hire training  program is defined. As the  salesperson completes each section, the person responsible for the area signs  off that the new person has "passed".
The  Process: It's Ongoing
  The process  again can be a simple program. In  designing a training  plan take into consideration the  following elements: 
  - Sales skills
- Product/services knowledge
- Company  operations
- Industry awareness  
- Vertical industry  awareness (if appropriate) 
We recommend that once a quarter you plan each sales meeting and sales training event. By preplanning  in advance, you can incorporate each of the five items into a comprehensive plan.  In addition, each salesperson should have a  six-month personal program that allows them to set their personal goals. This document begins  the process of ensuring each person's  goals are aligned with the overall corporate goal. Hint: Monthly company meetings or semi-annual employee gatherings should also be utilized to reinforce employee development. Rather than simply "getting together," use these sessions to bring in  customers to tell of your success stories, speakers to work on team concepts or  industry awareness programs.
Execution
How do you start? Develop the written three-month sales training  plan. A predefined schedule will end  individuals having conflicting  appointments or not being prepared for the training. Assign salespeople for  most of topical training, (this will ensure they know it if they have to  train on it) and schedule outside  resources at least once a quarter. The benefits of a short-term plan and agenda  are that current issues can be addressed and continuous  training  and employee focus is a company goal.
Employees  are a critical asset. Most software systems have regular maintenance check-ups and support agreements to keep  them at current levels -- do the same with your employee assets. Keeping  your employees' personal and professional objectives aligned with your corporate  goals by training and re-recruiting  will create huge dividends. 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on October 13, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Sound  investment portfolio-management advice ranges from "hold firm with your  existing stocks" to "take advantage of a great opportunity to buy at  today's basement prices." Holding firm assumes that your existing  portfolio contains quality securities, is properly diversified and has been  managed with an appropriate, long-term perspective. 
For our  sales management world, let's make the same positive assumptions -- our sales  team consists of quality people with good attitudes and successful track  records, and has been properly managed. However, there's one big difference. Sales leaders must continually keep their sales teams  focused on goals and activities that make their teams and companies  successful. Therefore, their perspective  must be short-term revenue  generation. 
Today's  tenuous political and economic situation is very distracting and may be having  a negative impact on your team's morale and drive.  Lousy economic headlines and layoffs may have  left staff suffering from survivor's guilt, lamenting about the loss of  comrades and security.  
Now is the  time to rally your troops. The nation's leaders are encouraging spending  and investing to boost our economy. This  also is an opportunity to build a better sales team that will increase your  market share as competitors lag.  The  following tactical program features 11 key sales and marketing management  actions that will help your sales management approach take advantage of the opportunity of a lifetime during the  lifetime of this opportunity:
1. Mobilize by  Motivating
Keep your team focused on  activity, and decrease distraction by tuning into the attitude and motivation  of your sales team. Build belief in your  company and boost your team's confidence in its products/services with visits  to your satisfied customers, reference letters, or customer visits and  presentations to your entire organization about their satisfaction. Make your  sales meetings fun. Create sales contests/games that are focused on achieving  activity levels that will increase your sales pipeline and sales opportunities.  Find out what is important to your sales team, and create rewards that will  reinforce these.
2. Review Your  Product/Service Packaging and Pricing
This is a  perfect time to review your existing profit margins and sales-cycle length by  product line, and make short-term adjustments to determine the elasticity of  your product that will increase revenues and margins. Create or amend the features or offerings in  your various packages or even create new packaged offerings. Confuse your competition with new offerings  and you may even find new added-value options that have been overlooked. Find ways to be different.
3. Analyze the Sales Team and Distribution Channels You Need
First, list the attributes  necessary to maximize sales of your product, and then determine if this is best  accomplished through a company sales organization or channels/partners or  both. Second, create a customer focus  group and ask them how to best serve them and what they are looking for in a  relationship. What levels of support do  they require? Third, make a decision on the five most essential attributes or  profiles for your sales employees and channel partners. 
Analyze your existing  strategy and each channel partner as to how they match up to your profile. You  may find new partners/alliances that will open up new accounts and even new  markets. If your No. 1 choices for partners aren't interested, pursue No. 2 choices  with the argument that you can help make them No. 1. You also may find it  advantageous to discontinue some relationships.
Your channel  partner strategy should complement the efforts of your team, not cannibalize  them. Look to your partners' business  model to determine how to capture "share of mind", and reward them  for their achievements. Quantify the results of each partner, and keep senior  channel management updated.
4. Muscle Up  Your Sales Team
With so many  very good salespeople available and looking for the right opportunity, it's the  perfect time to increase your recruiting and potential hiring. It is far better to hire the best person for  the job, and not the best available person. Create the ideal five attributes of successful salespeople and  establish a "tight" interview process that ensures you increase the  quality of your team. Spend  25 percent of your time interviewing.
5. Analyze and Strategize Each Sales  Opportunity
If your industry is facing fewer  opportunities and increased competition, each opportunity is even more  precious. Schedule time with  salespersons individually or in a team setting to think through each near-term  sales opportunity. Provide your team with effective tools that analyze the  status of each opportunity and develop the various tactics to increase your  probabilities. Specifically:
  - Pinpoint and develop ways to counter  objections.
- Determine buyer decision criteria.
- Establish client decision makers and  influencers.
- Initiate multi-level contact with multi-level  influencers in the prospect's company.
6. Seek Supporters
Analyze the type of organizations  or people that impact your client's decision process. These "influencers"  may be consultants that work in the same market or leverage the same prospect  base, accounting firms, bankers, industry analysts. Consider other sales organizations that would  benefit directly or indirectly from the sale of your product or service.  Develop a plan to establish who the decision makers at these organizations  are. Enlist your sales and management  teams in a campaign to present these influencers with advantages of your firm,  and secure a commitment from them to work with you. This ongoing action can  lead to the equivalent of a normal salesperson's quota value of sales!
 
7. Create New Leads with an Active  Target Marketing Campaign
Create a smart, targeted  campaign, not a blast or mass-appeal plan. First, establish profiles of current  clients and determine the five reasons they use your products/service. Second,  hit your market with a strong, clear message -- ROI and productivity gains --  through case studies in publications that your market reads and a customer  reference list. Third, establish a plan  of action for the next six months and make sure you have included a sales  follow-up contact.
8. Review Your Current Compensation Plan
Clearly document your current  plan and tabulate payments against results over time. Is the plan achieving  your original goals? Is the plan reinforcing desired sales activity behavior?  If not, develop a new plan and gain internal buy-in from your team. Focus on  shorter-term goals, and implement a new plan with commitment to keep it in  place for at least six months. Use the  existing market opportunity to focus on short-term achievements.
9.  Increase Investment in Training
In tighter times, your team must  perform more effectively. Review your past efforts and take an inventory of  training needs based on individual salesperson comparisons against your desired  profile. Schedule ongoing training programs. Develop your own internal programs  to ensure your salespeople fully understand and can sell your products/services  and then arrange for commercial sales skill training programs. You will  experience both short- and long-term benefits. Focus on increased levels of  training for six months.
10. Contact Every  Customer
This is a great time to establish a program to make contact with  each existing client to fully understand their situations and use of your  products/services,  offer new packages and seek references for new potential  clients. Make sure you are effectively  using your CRM or SFA programs, and update your database with each customer  contact. Verify that your sales team's recent contacts with every prospect and  client are appropriate. Develop,  execute and monitor a program of continuing contact with all targeted clients,  prospects, influencers and partners. Review your progress each week/month at  your sales meetings.
11. Build Better Planning into Your Sales  Organization
Failure to plan is the No. 1 obstacle to revenue generation. First, define the specific steps of your sales process and ensure that  each salesperson executes those steps effectively. Second, develop detailed  six-month individual salesperson business plans. Third, create specific named  account tactical sales plans for those key strategic accounts, and follow up on  your salespersons' actual actions.
You'll find  the word "execute" many times in this brief article, because action  is critical. Successful  sales managers plan, successfully focus and execute their programs. Take these 11 actions and you will enhance  your sales team, increase revenues and build a focus in your organization when  it is critically important -- now.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on October 06, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    There was an  interesting outcome at the end of a two-day sales management training  workshop last week. 
We discussed the role of sales management and what strategies  sales managers can take, and focused on the execution of sales management tactics. Ten people went through the program, all from one client but from five different  offices. While it was personalized to their specific requirements, we did cover  the following topics: 
  - Building a high-performance sales culture
 
- Recruiting and hiring sales teams
- Leading and managing your sales team
    - Seven styles of  leadership
- Five styles of  management
- Building predictable revenue using management systems
    - How to run a  sales meeting
- Developing  sales training meetings
- Developing  appropriate sales dashboards to analyze activity and pipeline levels
- Coaching and building salesperson development plans
Most  of the session was focused on creating standardized sales management systems  between the five offices and getting by-in. But when I went around the table  asking  each participant  what the most important thing they learned during both  days was, everyone seemed to focus around the need for "creating  a culture of belief." The  interesting thing is that area or responsibility is  often the most overlooked by sales leadership.
Sales teams  run on emotion -- personal emotion powered by belief in themselves, the products/services  they deliver (and their results for their clients), and the ability of the  company to execute effectively.  Therefore, successful sales management must build into their plan ideas  and methods to reinforce and build belief.
I like to  recommend a few ideas on building culture from my book on Leading High Performance Sales  Teams.
  - Storytelling: People from different cultures and generations pass  along stories about their ancestries, traditions and lore. Companies need to  take a similar approach to capturing and preserving their histories. To do so,  write down customer success stories when they occur. Put together detailed  descriptions of your company's role in helping customers implement new  technologies, launch or salvage important projects or earn recognition from your  vendors. Then share these stories at sales meetings and other employee events.  You can also use the best stories to recruit top performers and help orient new  employees.
 
 
- Monthly Meetings: When a company launches, its  first employees typically feel that they share a mission. Everyone knows  everything that's happening and what's needed to succeed. But when the staff  grows beyond about 15 people, that sense of mission -- along with clearly defined  expectations and common beliefs -- can be difficult to maintain.
 
 We  believe that monthly employee meetings are crucial for keeping everyone engaged  and informed. (Larger organizations and those with remote offices may want to  opt for quarterly day-long events instead.) Such gatherings give you a chance  to remind your staff about your business philosophies, plans and expectations.  You can also use them to recognize outstanding employees, perhaps honoring a  Most Valuable Player chosen by the team at each session. Remember to make the  meetings fun, as well. Consider sponsoring games offering door prizes. One  company meeting I attended featured a surprise visit from an Elvis  impersonator, who sang several songs.
 
 
- Customer Visits: Each quarter, have your entire  sales team visit a customer company that's successfully implemented your  solutions. Ask the customer's executives to describe the impact your company  has had on their competitive position or to review the savings they've gained  from your products and services. You might also invite customers to share their  experiences at some of your monthly meetings.
 
 
- Reference Letters: Ask your best customers for  testimonials. While such letters are, of course, highly useful as tools for  future sales presentations, they're also valuable for building belief in-house.  Frame the letters and display them in your lobby or sales presentation area.  Have new employees read them as part of the orientation process.  Or try to record a testimonial using a quality  camera and replay them at your company meetings and post on your Web site.
In  our business, it's all too easy to get bogged down with lost sales, missed  project dates, data reports and other problems. Regularly reinforcing the  positives goes a long way toward keeping everyone's belief and passion strong  and moving in the right direction. 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on September 21, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Exceeding  quota is never easy. In fact, studies have shown that large percentages of  salespeople never achieve 100 percent of their assigned quotas. 
However, if you are in a  position of sales leadership, what can you do to improve your odds of success? 
Ideally, the first action is to read the last two weeks'  blogs on hiring high-performance sales teams (Part 1 and Part 2). However, the reality  is  it's the third quarter -- you have to work with the team that's already in  place and your sales goal has been set. 
What you can do is easy but, depending on the size of your sales  team or location, may require some creativity or logistics: Instead of burying your sales pipeline in a CRM  database, visually display the top 10 sales opportunities where they can  be seen by yourself and or your team. This  list normally is displayed in the sales manager's office and could be on a  whiteboard or on a paper flip-chart.
What is the  logic behind this recommendation?
  - Typically, winning a few of the larger opportunities each month/quarter almost always  ensures sales budgets are exceeded.
 
 
- Keeping the  list visual puts them top-of-mind and allows for a constant review of strategies, tactics and updates.
 
 
- The visual  list allows for the entire management team to be aware of those key  opportunities and increases the number of potential sales ideas and availability  of resources that could be used in closing the sale.
 
 
- The list  can be used in sales meetings to brainstorm ideas and to teach the sales team  the basics behind developing winning sales strategy ideas.
What  do have to lose? Try this idea for the  next 90 days and let me know your results. In the past 18 years of consulting  with organizations, whenever this idea was executed, we always saw revenues jump!
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on September 08, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    "If you can find good people, they can    always change the product/service. Nearly every mistake I've made has been in    picking the wrong people, not the wrong idea. Most entrepreneurs have no    problem coming up with a good strategy, but they usually need all the help    they can get in developing and implementing the tactics that will make them    successful in the long run." --Arthur    Rock,
    Harvard Business Review, 1987
Selecting sales personnel is one of the biggest,    if not the biggest, challenges of any organization. Failure to achieve    revenue targets, manage customer relations and deliver service can be traced    directly to hiring people unequipped to carry out their assigned roles.    Recruiting is a commitment; it should consume about a fifth of the sales    leader's time, and the process should be as well-organized as the company's    sales methodology and forecasting systems. 
      The following is taken from our    online video training program for sales managers.
      Define the Ideal Profile
The key to building a winning sales organization is understanding whom you    want to hire. Why? Because thorough development and analysis of the ideal    sales representative profile heightens your chances of recruiting the right    person. Here's how you start:
      
        - Make your own list of essential sales person    characteristics. As the hiring manager, start by writing down    your definition of a great sales representative.
 
 
- Ask company leaders to make a list. Ask    management and members of the sales team to identify desirable sales traits.
 
 
- Test your top sales representatives. Ask    your company's most successful sales representatives to complete a    personality profile or psychological test administered by an outside party.    Record the data and look for common denominators among your top sales people.
Reviewing the basic personality types often    encountered in sales can provide additional insight into hiring effective    sales representatives. "Hunter" (aggressive, accustomed to cold    calling and inured to rejection) and "farmer" (stable, oriented to    customer care) are common terms used to describe personalities in the sales    world.
Understanding an applicant's most typical    behavior style when interacting with others can reveal how that person solves    problems and makes decisions. And you may learn how flexible the applicant is    in dealing with contrasting personality styles. The types:
      
        - Dominant: A dominant individual    loves a challenge, and is always ready to take on the competition. Dominant    people are direct, positive and straightforward. They continually seek new    horizons and like to make decisions quickly. Some consider dominants    restless, because they become impatient and dissatisfied with the status quo.    They are generally resourceful and adapt readily to new situations.
 
 
- Cautious: Cautious people are    basically humble, loyal and non-aggressive. They are usually conservative,    slow to make decisions until they have absorbed all available information,    and sticklers for detail. Cautious individuals want to be appreciated, and    will go to extreme lengths to avoid stepping on someone's toes. They strive    for a stable, ordered life and tend to be more task- than people-oriented.
 
 
- Interactive: These individuals are    outgoing, persuasive, gregarious and generally optimistic. Interested in    people, they're poised in social situations; at an initial meeting they may    greet you warmly by your first name, as if you've been friends for life.    Interactives may act on emotional impulse, making decisions based on a    cursory analysis because of their trust and willing acceptance of people.
 
 
- Steady: Usually amiable,    supportive and relaxed, steady individuals appear contented, even laid back.    Patience and deliberateness are their defining characteristics. People high    in steadiness strive to maintain the status quo and avoid rocking the boat.    They value relationships that they have worked hard to establish, and operate    well in a team environment.
Matching the salesperson's personality to the    job -- or even to the type of client he or she sees -- makes sense. But remember    that people often display characteristics of two or more personality    profiles.
      Measure the Profile
Once you've compiled all your information on the sales position and the    applicant's desired personality profile, boil it all down to five or seven    objective, measurable characteristics. Why so few? Because you need to focus    on key responsibility areas that drive success. For example:
      
        - Hundred percent quota achievement in four         out of five sales jobs, for a minimum of five years 
- Bright, articulate 
- Experience in opening new territories 
- Regional sales experience 
- Specific industry expertise      
Create a measurement scale for each    characteristic, like this:
      
        - Ineffective: -5 -4 -3 -2 -1
- Effective: 1 2 3 4 5 
and use it to rate each candidate during the    interview session.
Don't be fooled by the profile's simplicity, or    the fact that it measures only five characteristics. This is the distillation    of sound input from numerous sources, a benchmark based on the personalities    and performance of your top sales representatives. Focusing your work in an    easy-to-understand, simple format places the emphasis on implementation and    results. It's important to make this profile document available to everyone    involved in the interviewing process, including recruiting firms.
      Critical Reminders
To derive the most benefit from your new recruiting tool, interview a minimum    of three candidates for each position, and make sure that every interviewer    in the process rates each candidate from -5 to +5. Continue to refine the    profile by gathering input from both internal and external sources.
      A highly motivated, successful sales organization    is critical to generating revenue and margin growth year after year. For a    company's sales leaders, searching for great sales people every day is a top    priority and never-ending challenge. Studies show that successful sales    managers spend 15 to 20 percent of their time on recruiting. Whether or not    there's an opening in your sales ranks, take the time to meet new candidates    or reacquaint yourself with candidates whom you have been courting. When you    least expect it, your top candidate may become available.
      Striving for Consistency
        Now that you have a plan to fill the pipeline with quality candidates, the    next step is to systemize the process for choosing and winning the right    candidate time after time. Communicating an established process to all    involved parties not only saves time, but sends a clear, unified message to    candidates that this company has its act together, increasing their desire to    join the sales team.
        
The following model has worked consistently in the past. Consider it as a    foundation for your sales recruitment process.
      
        -  Identify and document each stage in the    interview process, and who (at least three people) in your company will    participate.
 
 
- Perform personality testing on your top sales    reps. This provides a benchmark for evaluating candidates in one-on-one    interviews.
 
 
- Distribute to all participants:
          
            • Outline of interview process 
 • Ideal sales candidate profile
 • Interviewing scorecard
 • List of base questions to ask every         candidate
 • The candidate's resume
 
 
It takes effort to build a recruiting process,    and even more to ensure that everyone follows the plan. But the result -- the    creation of a winning sales team -- is guaranteed to make life less stressful    for any sales leader!
      Check out our online video training program for    sales managers here.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on September 01, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
     You've got sales    quotas, plans and deadlines. You can't reach your sales goals without a    complete staff, so when someone leaves, it's terribly tempting to hire the    first person available to fill the job. 
      Yet, a    helter-skelter, frantic approach leads to hiring the wrong person. That adds    expense, disrupts your sales team and, potentially, creates a customer    service disaster. As Harvey Mackay says, "The worst mistake a manager    can make, especially a sales manager, is to make a bad hire. You can't build    a business if you have a revolving door." 
      That's why I    recommend that sales leaders spend 15 to 20 percent of their time in "recruiting    mode." You must invest that necessary time and effort to increase the    odds of hiring the best. Hiring    top talent is the No. 1 challenge in the channel. (In my book Recruiting High Performance Sales Teams, I  provide a New Salesperson On-Boarding Training Plan.)
      As the sales    leader, you are the key contact for candidates and have the greatest impact    on whether they say "Yes!" to your offer. Here are a few tips to    help increase your odds of selecting the right candidate for the job and    building a winning sales team.
      Prepare Ahead of    Time 
Thorough preparation lets you:
      
        - Establish rapport with the candidate 
- Listen, instead of talk 
- Complete adequate interviews 
- Seek meaningful credibility rather than be         moved by surface characteristics such as appearance 
- Make thoughtful decisions not based on         personal preference or prejudice 
Therefore, plan    ahead. When scheduling, allow ample time to address your questions and those    of the candidate. Determine when you are most alert and "on top of your    game" and interview only during your best time of the day. Conduct    interviews in an environment (on-site or off-site) where you are free from    distractions. Turn off your cell phone.
      Before the    interview, decide on the five to seven most important characteristics that    will make a person successful in the job. If you're lucky enough to have two    great candidates available, use their "score" on these    characteristics as a tie-breaker.
Plan to make the    interview highly interactive so that you can truly gauge the candidates' competency    and commitment in a short time. What kinds of problems and obstacles might an    applicant experience in the job? Think of three or four scenarios for them to    address. Challenge the candidates with pertinent, applicable questions and    see how well they think on their feet -- just as they would in a sales    situation.
      Competency and    Commitment 
When recruiting, focus your thinking on two concepts: competency (sales    skills) and commitment (attitude and culture alignment). Remember that you    need the right combination of skills and attitude for this person to be both    productive and to assimilate into the company's chemistry and culture.
      If the current    opening is for a major executive sales position, the candidate must be a    competent sales expert. For the entry-level sales representative, on the    other hand, commitment and attitude become the most important ingredients.    This facet is as important as the skill level. Having the "right fit"    means skill and attitude.
Potential    employees usually fall into one of four types. Understand these and you can    more effectively choose the right person for the job and for your company.
        - High    competency, low commitment: This person has strong sales skills but needs an attitude adjustment.    Ask yourself: Is it the person or the previous company that caused past    concerns or problems? Will your culture provide a self-motivational    environment for this candidate to succeed? Do you have the time and energy to    help coach this candidate to success?
 
 
- Low    competency, high commitment: This person needs sales training but has a great attitude, a great    entry-level profile. You need to consider: Does your company offer education    and training for entry level-sales representatives? Do you have the time or    resources to train entry-level candidates? Is there a mentor program in    place?
 
 
- Low    competency, low commitment: End the interview and move on. It is one thing to need sales training.    It is a no-win situation if the candidate also has a poor attitude.
 
 
- High    competency, high commitment: Hire these people on the spot. Do everything in your power to create    an environment where they can "hit a home run." They have the sales    skills and attitude for success.
Critical Points    To Remember
Here is how to be sure you hire the best and leave the rest:
      
        - Design a consistent, systematic interview         process. 
- Define  the ideal sales representative         and write the job description. 
- Construct a list of base questions to ask of         all candidates. 
- Communicate to all internal participants the         job description, sales profile and your expectations.      
A good    recruiting program brings rewards beyond just a stellar array of candidates.    Interviewing is a valuable way to gain intelligence about the marketplace.    You can gather tips about unhappy accounts. You can learn about competitors'    strategic changes as well as their weaknesses in customer support and product    or service availability. Interviewees may even offer leads to sales people.
Hiring good    salespeople is one of most important tasks a manager faces. Few decisions are    more essential to the success of your company than who represents your    products and services. The time and money required for an organized    recruitment process pales in comparison to the payoff.
To view a free    video on hiring the best go here.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on August 25, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    I recently wrote a post titled "The Need for Creativity" that covered  why sales managers must develop their levels of creativity to solve the  multitude of problems they face and the need to assist their salespeople in developing better sales  strategies. In the blog, I also laid out  the 10 actions one can take to improve their personal creativity. 
In other posts, I have also discussed the need  for a variety of formal, structured systems that are reviewed and executed on a  regular cadence -- e.g., account plans,  training schedules and salesperson business planning. 
The topic of "structure versus creativity/flexibility"  hit  me over the weekend. I am reading a  terrific book called The Guns of August by Barbara Tuchman. It is about the first month of WWI, a  topic I had no real interest in. But the book came highly recommended by a  friend and it is a great read! So, what  does WWI have in common with sales leadership?  
In the book,  Tuchman describes how both the Germans and French began planning for WWI in  1870. Both countries had extensive strategies and tactics planned down to  the minutest details, from troop movement, roadmaps, train schedules and specific  plans on day-to-day operations. These  plans were ready to be executed based upon the right spark. Both countries expected the war to last just  a few months and both were led by strong-minded generals who were focused on  executing their plans.
The result?  During the first  month, everyone was focused on the wrong objectives and not on the right  objectives. The war lasted a very long time that was highly costly for every  country in Europe and also the United States. Why? In the beginning, the generals stuck to their structured  plans instead of using creativity, and did not adapt to changes in tactics by either  side. 
In the world  of sales management, we are tossed challenges on a daily basis and it is easy to  be distracted. It is common to lack the time or have difficulty maintaining a focus on achieving  the planned activities. As sales  managers we must have plans and tools for growing our organizations and  achieving our goals, but we must adapt to our changing environments. Sometimes, we lose a salesperson unexpectedly, or a major  opportunity starts to slide, or marketing fails to achieve its lead-generation  objectives. All of these or other disruptions could cause a sales manager  in a fixed mode to lose the battle. 
It is critical  we remain flexible and creative in our approach. But having a foundation,  systems or structure can help leverage the busy life of a sales manager. Don't get locked in and but use the necessary  tools to maintain direction and focus. 
One of the  reasons our Sales Manager  Tool Kit is popular is that its 40-plus tools can provide  the structure that is needed, but they are in a format where they can be  modified or changed by the user to fit their changing environments.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on June 15, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    I have heard  the phrase "trade shows don't work" and similar comments from people when discussing why they don't include trade  shows in their marketing programs. 
In reality, the reason many  organizations do not gain a payback from their trade show investment is that they  don't work the trade show. 
We discussed this topic in great detail last week  while working with a client.  When I  reviewed our Trade Show Planning tools from our Sales Management Tool Kit the client was amazed at what  they were not doing  at  events in terms of planning and executing. I speak at many trade shows and conferences. To  better understand the audience, I normally walk the exhibit hall to listen to  conversations and view the exhibits. I have always been amazed at what I find when I walk the  floor:
  - Most trade show booths are  either confusing or do not clearly show what the  company, product or service does or what benefit it provides an attendee. You only  have a few seconds as someone walks past your booth to capture their interest  or make an impression -- does your booth do that? Take the time to look at your booth with fresh eyes or simply ask your sales team to tell you what the booth  says to them.
 
 
- Most individuals working the  booth have never been trained on how to work the booth. There is an art and  science to capturing awareness. In most cases, several good, open-ended questions  should be asked as individuals are walking past your  booth. Too often I see individuals  sitting behind a table or looking embarrassed that they are even in a booth -- or worse,  they are reading their phones!
 
 
- Another sin I see often is  that pre-event work has not been performed -- no lead goals set, no booth appointments/meetings pre-arranged, and no  trade show specials created. This is obvious when there no traffic at the  booth.
 
 
- Just as we see No. 3 not  performed, many times post-trade show work is not performed or tracked. No mailings are sent out or every lead is not followed up  within three days of the event.
One of our  recommendations is that at the end of each day, everyone who worked the  booth should meet to discuss each lead, capturing the quality of the lead and  any insights they recall about the conversation with the prospect. This is done as soon as the trade show closes  for the day, not when everyone gets back to the office.
Trade shows can be expensive, what with exhibit fees, travel  expenses, time and marketing costs. Working a trade show effectively is a  must -- execution on all phases must be carefully managed and inspected. If you would like one of our Trade Show  checklists from our Sales Managers Tool Kit, send me an e-mail at [email protected].
What are you best tips for working a trade show? 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on June 01, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    This was a  musical weekend. On Friday evening, we went to the Knoxville Symphony, which was featuring the  final program by Lucas Richman, who has led the symphony for the past 12 years.   Sunday was Music Sunday at our church, with bell choirs, guest musicians,  the adult and children's choirs and many ensembles -- it was a festive morning. In  both situations, there was no doubt as to who was in charge and who knew the  details: the maestro.
As I listened  and felt the music, I was intrigued by how the maestros in both events led their respective teams. They  anticipated the next movement or group to contribute and kept the pace that was  required to succeed. They were always just ahead or anticipating the next phase. 
Obviously,  I am drawing the analogy back to you as the sales leader. In each concert, the  maestro/conductor had to assume the same role as those with sales responsibilities. I see many times  where the executive or sales manager is caught off guard by missed forecasts,  a team member leaving unexpectedly, unsuccessful marketing or  salespeople who cannot accurately sell their company's products/services.
The role of  sales leadership must incorporate levels of management, a strategic vision and  tactical programs, as well as the emotional aspect of creating an environment  for success. What can you do to become a better conductor  or even a maestro of your sales team? It is not easy -- that is why most sales  managers fail in the first 18 months. I have listed below a few of the actions  that we see missing when sales managers are struggling:
  - Taking time to ponder. Find your own private time to think about your team, the direction in which it  is heading, what's working, what's not and the next six-month plan. I used to do  this at least once a week or  whenever I was flying frequently. I would shut  down the work and simply take a blank tablet and write notes to myself  as issues popped into my mind. In the concerts, both conductors discussed why   they picked the music for each concert -- they had taken the time to make sure  that the music fit the event.
  
 
 
- Scheduling formal one-on-ones. These monthly meetings are not about the forecast;  they are designed for you to have a conversation with your team members about how everything is going. A good  leader has insights into the personal and professional lives of each person on  their team. They learn what motivates them and what doesn't. This meeting  allows for open communication and a building of trust. This level of trust is  crucial in high-performance sales teams when personalities and tensions  sometimes cause conflict. Learn to read your team. In an orchestra, each group  of musicians, from violins to horns, meets with the conductor to ensure they  understand the piece of music and what is expected.  
 
 
- Studying and learning accountability. In a research study we did several years ago, we  showed that most entrepreneurs failed at holding their direct reports  accountable. We see the same with most sales managers. Dashboard and CRM  reports are one thing, but does your team -- as individuals and together -- feel  accountable to achieving the organization's goals? This is not micro-management  regarding doing the numbers, but rather an understanding that the team must  achieve its goals as it is its responsibility to the rest of the members of  the organization who are not in sales. The sales leader must reinforce this  whenever possible, especially during the monthly company meetings with all the  employees. The maestro, I am sure, reinforced to each musician their individual  contributions and importance to the overall concert.  
 
 
- Focusing on continuous training in the field or in the office. The maestro congratulated  the No. 1 chair with a handshake but recognized the entire orchestra whenever the  audience responded. He made sure that everyone knew the music but set a  standard in recognizing those who had taken the time to master their craft. I  am sure there were many rehearsals before the main event! It is the sales manager's  job to evaluate each salesperson's talents and skill level and to develop team  and individual sales training programs. Increase the level of professionalism  at all times. In June we will be releasing a series of five online videos of sales  management training courses.  
 
 
- Putting systems in place. When we go onsite to consult with organizations, it  is not unusual to find no new-hire on-boarding programs in place, limited sales  training or sales meeting templates/agendas being used, and a lack of solid sales process  or interviewing/recruiting systems. Struggling organizations thrash  back and forth as if they were putting fingers into the dikes to stop the  flooding. It's a continuous circus of confusion and frustration -- nothing seems to  work. This breeds ineffective teams. Leadership must act on a continuous quest  for quality improvement. One of the reason our Sales Managers Tool Kit is one of our most popular resources  is there are over 40 tools/documents and best practices included. Take a look  at it before you consider re-inventing a process or sales management tool. Each  conductor had his or her music sheets ready, each musician knew when to change  chairs, the microphone worked and the lights went down and up at the  appropriate times. There was a system in place. Even the ushers knew when and  how to escort us to our seats!
These are just  five ideas. What ideas do you have to increase your level of success? I  encourage you to share them with our community. Have a fun time and dance to  the music. 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on May 19, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    This past week, I had opportunity to work with a great client  at its worldwide sales conference in Miami. During those two days, I spent  several hours with the client's sales management team and four hours with its salespeople. The company has  a great sales culture and you could feel the attitude in the room. 
In the post-meeting evaluations, several  reactions to the programs came out: 1) the importance of understanding the  various personality styles, 2) the need to be "greedy with your time" and time  management and 3) the fact that an individual's creativity can be learned or  enhanced. 
There is no question about it: Top  performers are more creative that your average salespeople. They seem to come  up with unique ideas to prospect, find ways to enhance client relationships and   close more effectively. Sales leadership requires creativity, as well.  Sales managers that are exceeding sales quotas, hiring and developing their  teams and building a sales culture require a high creativity  quotient.
The good news? You can enhance your  creativity by working on it. In my keynote, "No Regrets: The Do-Over Factor," I share three tenets for personal  and professional success. Creativity is one of those three foundations. Here are nine actions you can work on to develop mind patterns that will enhance  your creativity.
  - Track your ideas: Keep a notebook and write  down all your ideas about anything. It is amazing what happens when you build  an active list.
 
 
- Inquiring minds want to know: Be  inquisitive. Ask questions and increase your levels of interest.
 
 
- Learn about different things: Study a  language, read a book, take a course and get active.
 
 
- Avoid set patterns: Break your habits -- floss  your teeth differently, brush your teeth in different sequences, drive to work  on a new route.
 
 
- Be open: Listen to others and try to accept  new ideas.
 
 
- Be patient in observations: Take the  time to watch a bird fly, look at the woods more closely, look for new  patterns, watch the river flow. 
 
 
- Engage in hobbies: Your mind must disengage  from normal business stress. 
 
 
- Improve sense of humor: Learn to  laugh, even at yourself.
 
 
- Be a risk taker: Try something different. The  adrenaline will cause a positive impact on your brain.
I would like your comments and  thoughts about how you enhance your creativity. What were the most creative  sales tactics you have used? What were the results? 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on April 29, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Just last week, I  heard that very comment from the president of a new client. Frankly, it is a common phrase I  have often heard from CFOs, presidents and vice presidents of sales. So what's the  answer? 
Many consultants  would drag out their scorecards or methodology to fix the issue.  Instead, let's first learn to diagnose the signs and why the problem exists. This is what I generally see or hear when I  begin to poke at the problem: 
  - When you review the pipeline  report (in CRM or Excel), all the closing dates are listed as the end of the  month -- 6/30/15, as an example.
- Beyond your current monthly  pipeline values, future pipeline dollar values are not listed.
- The velocity of the sale or  the length of time it has been in the funnel is 90 days longer than the average  velocity for your business.
- Monthly forecasts by the  sales team are always off by a wide margin. When asked, the sales team has no  idea as to why they can't predict accurately.
- The salespeople do  not  have a defined closing plan for active opportunities.
- The salespeople are closing  on topics (e.g., price) instead of he compelling reason  the prospect has  for your product/service.
What's the Action Plan?
First, as the  sales leader, there are some obvious actions to take  and some not so  obvious. The first action is not to ask for a forecast. Remember that forecasts are like the weather  person on TV -- they have just so-so odds of being accurate. Instead, we suggest asking for a commitment. This is how we recommend  teaching this: During the first sales meeting  of the month, when each salesperson "forecasts" their sales for that  month (say, for example, $100,000), the sales leader  says, "Great! You hit $100,000 and I will give you  a $500 bonus. OK?" As expected, the salesperson gets excited.  The sales leader would then say the same phrase to each of the salespeople on  the team. After all the salespeople have forecasted the sales leader   says, "And if you don't hit your goal of  $100,000, each of you will owe me $500!" 
Now that you have their attention, you allow  them make a new "commitment" versus a forecast.
Second, we  recommend that you begin to track each month's commitment by salesperson. Do  this for at least four months without the sales team knowing you are tracking  their commitments. Then record their actual sales for each month. By comparing those two numbers, you can  determine the forecast accuracy of  each salesperson and  your entire team. When you have sufficient data, share this information with the entire  team and discuss that you will continue to measure this data and it will be  added to your sales dashboard -- assuming you have one!  
By tracking  this information, your sales team will know that you are paying attention to this  metric and they will begin to pay attention to the importance of the monthly  goal. In sales management, what you pay  attention to on an ongoing basis will begin to impact what your sales team pays  attention to.
Third, it  takes training. This happens during the  weekly sales meeting, in your monthly one-on-one business reviews and in all  coaching environments. This has to be an ongoing process and not simply  discussed from time to time.   What we  find is either the sales manager is not asking the salesperson the hard questions or the salesperson is not asking the prospect those pertinent  questions. We call them the "magic  questions." They are part of our Sales Management Online Tool Kit, but I want to share them  with you to improve your process. My  recommendation for the sales manager is to use these -- print them out -- during the weekly  sales meetings and then make sure each salesperson has their own copy for their  use. Each time that any  opportunity is discussed, it is critical the sales manager continues to use the  checklist of questions to drive their use into the salesperson's head!
By using these  questions and being tough-nosed on making sure your salespeople can answer  these questions, both you and the team will have more honest sales discussions.
  - What is  their decision process? (Do you know every step?)
- When do  they want to be implemented or have our  systems ready to go?
- Who is  involved in the overall decision?
- Do they  have a business need?
- Are they listening to you?
- Do they  have funding?
- What are  the next two steps?
- Who or what else are they considering?
- When is  the next board meeting or decision meeting?
- What are they doing for me?
- Do I  know my strengths? Do I know my  weaknesses?
- Do I  know their decision criteria?
- Do I  have an excellent closing strategy?
Make the  commitment to get the commitment and your sales forecast (ugh) will become more  predictable and accurate. 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on April 23, 20150 comments