I may be already too late, but hopefully you aren't. I often  say that it's the salesperson's responsibility -- not the sales  managers -- to make quota. It is your responsibility to hire, train and put the salesperson in a  position to win and exceed quota. Sales leadership means looking ahead 90 days or  more to ensure you have the programs in place for success.
As we finish April, be conscious of pipeline  values, business opportunities and activity levels to ensure you will exceed  your July and August numbers. Summertime is what many sales leaders  are always worried about, when salespeople and prospects take  vacations, enjoy summer's more casual atmosphere (especially in the North), and   pipelines, sales and sales activities dwindle. These months can impact  your ability to exceed your quotas and revenues for those periods, as well as  your September and October goals. What  to do? Here are some ideas:
  - Beef up your sales activity focus to  ensure summer pipelines are "more than full."
 
 
- Plan sales contests for May and June that  are based on volume and activity.
 
 
- Develop a July and August mentality  and environment. I.e., say that you are not taking off those months and that  you expect your salespeople to attain their quotas.
 
 
- Create a "Customer Appreciation"  summer event and offer special packages or discounts during a three-week  period.
 
 
- Develop a companywide summer contest that  is focused on both current customer sales and new prospect leads. Hint: Let  your sales team serve a picnic lunch to your support and administrative teams  for a kickoff event.
What other ideas do you have? Leave a comment so everyone can  benefit and we can all enjoy a restful Labor Day. I have my plans already in  shape for that day -- do you? 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on April 22, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		After speaking at a recent sales conference -- my title was "Gourmet Living, Creating a Menu for Life" -- an attendee asked me a great question: "You spoke about creating  a vision for your life and a passion for impacting the lives of others. I don't  have a vision for what my life should be like. How do I develop one?"
While somewhat surprised, I realized that many people have  led   lives that were somewhat easy, with everything  provided to them. Meanwhile, there are others  who have lived in  very difficult environments, with limited options and  resources; many such people never consider that they could have a better future. While  there are expectations for each situation, I've met individuals of many different  ages and positions that have "stalled out" or  peaked. They're simply living, but not living life!
In my keynote, I help  participants  create a "menu" for their  life; I blend  cooking metaphors and stories of personal  experiences to challenge them to  create a philosophy and purpose for their personal and professional lives. If you wish to do more with your life, here are five ideas to get you started:
  - Like a Boy Scout that leaves the campsite in better shape  than when he found it, make a commitment to leave earth a better place than  when you arrived. No matter your age or situation, determine what you can  do to make this a better world. This  will make you feel better  and proud.
 
 
- Create a list of both small and large dreams and then create a  Dream Poster, with pictures of your dreams. This will keep your dreams active  in your mind and direct your personal actions toward achieving them. The Dream Poster can include anything, from travel destinations to toys to  even lifestyle changes.
 
 
- Create a list of what you physically must do to actually achieve  No. 2. This step is where many individuals fail. Everyone wants to succeed, but few understand that there is price you pay for success.
 
 
- Associate with people that are succeeding. People say you should  not compare yourself to others, but I think you should. Compare your common  characteristics; compare what they are doing that you are not. Work to improve  yourself by focusing on your strengths.
 
 
- If you have reached a plateau in your life, or are in a rut, or  have lost your vision for your life, start over at No. 1.
While these five steps may seem simplistic, they  will begin to  create the excitement and passion that will propel you to the next  level. If you want copy of our "menu for life," send me an e-mail at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on April 08, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Last week, it  was all about golf and putting. Now, after indulging in some men's and women's NCAA  games all weekend, it's about strategy.
In my view,  there are several levels of strategy sales teams should consider. First, putting the right  players on the floor to match up against the competition's players is key (and  the  reason my first book, Hiring  High Performance Sales Teams, was written). Without talent, you have no chance of winning.  Good basketball teams are deep with talent. They can go large, or they  can go small and fast. They can focus on defense as well as offense.
Assessing and developing talent is what coaching is all about. As you watch the Final  Four next week, evaluate your team and its ability to win. Are your  players weak, or can your team push through the tough stretches and score?  To this end, I believe recruiting is the most important job for sales management. Build  a continuous hiring program to find top talent.
As for the second level of strategy, game-time execution must be brilliant! From a sales perspective, game-time is when your value proposition must sold, your prospect  relationship developed and you must out-maneuver the competition. If the competition comes out with man-to-man or  zone defense, can your salespeople adapt? If a full-court press stresses out your team, can they break it with quick passes and  move down the court for an easy layup? Are your players trained to  react well and not simply lose the sale or give up a turnover? 
During  this phase, sales managers  must coach. This is when your experience and  creativity must take over by providing advice, insights and, hopefully, the right  tactics to assist your sales team. Acumen's  four-page "Sales Strategy Guide" can help you with this; if you'd like a copy, send me an e-mail. We use it with our clients during their pipeline reviews and sales  strategy meetings.
The third level of strategy is all about the last two minutes. In the sales process, this critical period could  occur during the last week or two, when everything is on the line. The prospect  could be confused, undecided or leaning toward your competition. What play  would you call? Would you camp out at the prospect's office? Have your president  call their president? Drop your price? 
The best coaches in the NCAA would call  a timeout to make sure the next two plays are drawn out, ensure everyone  understands whom to foul, how many timeouts are still available, and who should  take the last shot. Those situations are actually rehearsed during normal  practice times; nothing is left for chance when the game is on the line. Do you  have your sales training plans designed for a rolling 90 days with all aspects  of sales strategies built in? The best sales managers do!
No sports analogies next week, I promise. But for now, remember:  Teamwork, practice,  selection and development will win the 2011 NCAA Final Four...and the sales race.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on April 01, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		I happened to be in Florida recently, visiting relatives, playing golf and enjoying the  weather. I played 36 holes over two  days, my first real golf of the season; before I came down from Knoxville, I went to the  driving range at home and hit two buckets of balls to attempt to regain some  form of respectability. Prior to my first round, I hit another half-bucket of balls  and a few casual strokes on the putting green, and boom -- off to the No.  1 tee box. Amazingly, my first drive was  right down fairway, but as I worked through the 18 holes, I  struggled with a few bogeys and a few double bogeys.
In your role as a sales manager, are you taking your personal  and professional development as casually as a few practice swings on the driving  range? Recently, in a six-week series of  sales management training programs for a major client, I had several participants  who didn't complete a variety of reading assignments because they were too busy "closing out the quarter." For some reason, they could not find two hours  over six weeks to read 15 pages of content. 
Successful sales leaders would have. They would have committed to reading, attending workshops and  attending vendor-sponsored workshops on sales management topics. If you consider yourself a professional, every week you would spend  hours on the driving range enhancing your abilities with each club in your bag.  You would practice hitting out of the sand and chipping off the green. 
What are you doing to increase your  professional skill levels?  There are a  variety of resources you can find to improve your sales management expertise. Here are a couple of ideas: 
  - Check out the LinkedIn groups on sales  leadership. 
- Commit to reading two new books a year. 
- Visit at least two other sales  organizations that are similar to yours and benchmark  your organizations against theirs. 
In our new book Leading  High Performance Sales Teams, I review a variety of ideas to enhance  your sales team's abilities, improve your leadership style and  increase the effectiveness of your management systems. On the Acumen Management Web site is a free sales  management and sales compensation assessment where you can compare your  existing programs, watch several free videos on hiring and training salespeople  and read our whitepaper on the job of sales management.
What's  your plan to make more pars versus bogeys? Let me know at [email protected]. I left at least six putts inches short -- I am off to the putting green!
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on March 25, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		In preparing to speak at a sales award banquet this week, I  was thinking about what kind of message I wanted to give  the audience. Eventually, I arrived at a concept that all sales leaders must reinforce  to their teams: Whether it's for a January kickoff event, a Monday morning sales  meeting or a quarterly salesperson review session, sales managers must sell the  need to plan for success.
Planning for success means  building a sales organization  that is not opportunistic in account  management, prospecting, et cetera, but is focused on a methodology to ensure success.  It also means that there is an expectation or attitude from management that is  transmitted to the team that we will be successful, we are winners, we are  better and we work together. This is part of what creates  an atmosphere that separates the average-performing organizations from top-performing sales teams.
What do you need to create this environment? A sales  management system that reinforces what you expect and a leadership and  management style that is focused only on accepting high performance -- in all  aspects of life. This means every salesperson must have:
  - a yearly salesperson business plan
- a top 15 accounts plan, if appropriate
- a rolling 90-day sales training plan
- formal monthly/quarterly salesperson reviews
- sales contests that drive fun, recognition and  teamwork
- measurement systems that promote success and  show effectiveness
Every salesperson wants to be successful, as does every sales manager.  Everyone has good ideas, but execution becomes the key differentiator in success. You have to work on the methodology,  but you also have to focus on the emotional aspects of success. In summary, the difference in  success is three simple words: "and then some." As in:
Top performers do what is  expected...and then some. They meet their  obligations fairly and squarely, and then some.   They are good  friends and helpful neighbors, and then some.   They are  thoughtful of others, they are considerate and kind...and then some. They can be  counted on in an emergency, and then some.
As you go about your week, make sure you do what is expected...and then  some.
In my new book, Leading High Performance Sales Teams, we discuss these  ideas and others in greater detail. You can listen to a podcast on the books  also in our store here. 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on March 07, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    						Last week  in my blog, I wrote about the importance for sales leaders to focus on building their sales teams' level of emotional commitment to and belief in their companies' products and services. On Tuesday, I spoke on the first day of a  three-day national sales kickoff conference for a firm in Raleigh, NC.  Even though I was leading off the afternoon with a keynote, I wanted to sit in  on the first two hours in the morning to get a feel for the audience and theme  of the event. 
The first  item on the agenda included a welcome by the VP of sales who created the  perfect atmosphere by randomly asking 10 salespeople about their 2010 success stories. They had not been prompted. It was great  to feel the mood in the room change from one of simply interest in the  meeting to one of warmth, pride, teamwork and excitement about 2011!
In our sales management workshops, we speak about the  need for sales leaders to create an annual "drive  statement," which is a phrase that sets the tone or theme for the new year. This company's was "Soaring  to New Heights." Doesn't that really make the point? This is a sales-driven organization that is  adding salespeople, increasing sales, winning market share and is one that many  competitive salespeople want to work for. It was a great experience for me to  share my time and ideas on driving personal and professional success with this  sales organization. The VP of sales for this firm possessed the personality aspects  of a good leader and the professional requirements of a great team builder.
After that conference, I  spent Friday through Sunday in Atlanta at the winter conference of the National Speakers Association (NSA). The NSA normally holds two events a year, and as a member I truly  enjoy these conferences. The experience is also very strange; normally, I'm speaking at  conferences or leading breakout sessions for my clients. But at this event, I was  looking at schedules trying to determine what events I felt I needed to attend,  taking notes, holding hallway and lunch networking events, and absorbing a ton  of information. People like Brian Tracy attended along with so many other great people  who were willing to share information to enhance the industry's level of professionalism. I attended a full-day session on thought leadership presented  by Matt Church; he flew in from Australia  to share his insights into the consulting, writing and professional-speaking  businesses. Throughout the weekend, I met and listened to a variety of individuals  with a vast array of experience and expertise, including Alan Weiss, Sam  Horn and Mark Sanborn. Sitting at a table in the last morning, just two hours before the conference  ended, I chatted with a woman who asked me a question about my business. I shared some information and  she gave me a "breakthrough thought" for my keynote that was the highlight of my time at the conference, even thought I came away with  two pages of to-do notes. 
My point in mentioning this entire conference  is to reinforce that you must always work to get better, read more and invest in  yourself. You never know who will give you that gem of an idea that will help you win the next sale or even change your  life. 
Just a  note: Our three new books on sales management and our Success Simplified book on my keynote  are available on Acumen's Web site.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on February 22, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		This week's blog is an  excerpt from my latest book Your  Sales Management Guru's Guide to: Leading High Performance Sales Teams. 
Are your sales inconsistent? 
Are you losing more opportunities than ever before? Does your sales team seem  weak compared to those of your competitors?
 Any number of reasons -- from  rapid growth to hiring mistakes -- could be responsible for a "yes"  answer to any of those questions. But in working with our clients, we often  find that the underlying problem is actually an emotional one: lack of passion.  Individual team members or the entire sales organizations (or both) simply  don't have the combination of enthusiasm and belief that's essential for success. 
 Salespeople have to be  emotionally invested in their work with a burning desire to achieve. They must  also believe that the company they represent is the best and the solutions or  services they sell are of the highest quality. That belief must be genuine.  It's not just a marketing message, and it's not something that they can fake. 
 With all the new products many  vendors have launched in recent months (and will continue to release this  year), that type of authentic belief is more important than ever for partners.  Most sales organizations don't do any belief-building activities, though. Or if  they do, they only do so occasionally. Our experience shows that the most  successful sales teams constantly undertake belief-building initiatives.  Examples include:
 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 Microsoft. 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 or 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.
 In our business, it's all too  easy to get bogged down with lost sales, missed project dates 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 February 08, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		  One of tenets we teach in our sales management workshops is  the importance to develop a personal philosophy of leadership. Having a  personal philosophy helps you set a course for your personal life as well as  your professional career. 
 For the past 13 years with Acumen, I have attempted to  address the issues that separated the poor to average sales managers with those  that lead their sales teams to greatness. In my workshops, my new books, other  programs and in my columns I have always spoken about the need for Discipline,  Accountability and Control. I have stressed the power of motivation and need to  have vision, belief, to provide coaching and to demand and expect success.
 Today, I will let Vince Lombardi tell you in  his own words.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on February 07, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		This past week I had opportunity to work with a great client  at a worldwide sales conference in Miami.  During the two days, I spent several hours with the client's sales management  team and four hours with the salespeople. They have 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/Time Management" and 3) the  fact that an individual's creativity can be learned or enhanced.  Past blogs and our monthly newsletters have  covered personality styles and time management so this week I thought I would  address creativity.
 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 they 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 huge levels of a creativity quotient.
 The good news? You can enhance your creativity by "working  on it." In my Keynote, No Regret's,  the Do Over Factor, I share three tenets for personal and professional  success -- creativity is one of those three foundations.  I have listed nine actions you can work on to  develop mind patterns that will enhance your creativity power:
  - 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, increase your levels of interest.
- Learn about different things: study  a language, read a book, take a course, 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, 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 adrenalin will cause a positive impact on your brain.
I would like your comments and  thoughts about how you enhance your creativity. What was the most creative  sales tactic you have used? What were the results?
 THANK YOU   to  everyone that has already purchased our new book, we announced it last week; Your Sales Management  Guru's Guide to: Hiring High Performance Sales Teams. 
 
  Learn about different things: study  a language, read a book, take a course, 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, 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 adrenalin will cause a positive impact on your brain.I would like your comments and  thoughts about how you enhance your creativity. What was the most creative  sales tactic you have used? What were the results?
 THANK YOU   to  everyone that has already purchased our new book, we announced it last week; Your Sales Management  Guru's Guide to: Hiring High Performance Sales Teams. 
 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on January 18, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		 In magazine columns and other blog postings I have written  about being a proactive strategic sales manager rather than a reactive,  fire-drill crazy, un-organized sales manager. As we close down 2010 and your  thoughts about January are nestled in your head, its March that you should be  considering.
 If you have already built your first quarter sales training  programs, have your management systems in place to analyze pipeline values and  your recruiting plans are activated then you have some of the systems in place.  Just to check, you might like to take a few minutes and take the Sales  Management Assessment on our website: www.AcumenManagement.com.
 One of the concepts that I truly believe in is developing "leading  indicator" analysis. These statistics are activities that can assist you  in either forecasting pipeline values or sales opportunities well in advance of the current month.  This view is why you now should be considering March’s sales potential. If you  have created these key indicators, you may have the time to adjust your  forecasts or sales/marketing activities to counteract negative potentials or, more  importantly, if they are showing all "green" light indications, you  can focus on improving your operations and closing sales opportunities.
 I was reading the WSJ the other day and came across an article titled "New Ways to Read the  Economy." It described how economists read leading indicators.  Here are just a just a few examples: 1)  Broadway ticket sales=future tourist revenue, 2) diesel-fuel sales=industrial  production, and 3) subway-passenger traffic near Union Station in San Francisco=sales tax  revenue. These kinds of related activity that can predict future results are  the kinds of analysis you must determine for your sales organization.
 Depending upon your sales/marketing environment you need to  consider several pre-sales activities and measure them for a minimum of six  months before considering them reliable.   These kinds of activities should be the same for each salesperson and  your entire sales organization. What else? You need to know the length of your  sales cycle and the correlations of activity to results.  In a typical B2B sales environment, consider  1) the number of monthly sales calls that require a pre-sale technical  Engineer=future number of proposals/quotes, 2) the number of  opportunities/pipeline values in Stage two as compared to Stage  seven (assuming seven is your final stage) or  3) the number of new prospect face-to-face sales calls/month.
 What kinds of leading indicator activities make sense for  your firm? Leave a comment and let me know.
 As a strategic sales manager with a good perspective or view  on managing what is  happening today and  knowing its correlation to future   results or revenues you will not only produce greater results but you will  sleep better too!
  Ken Thoreson, president of Acumen provides Keynotes,  consulting services and products designed to improve business performance.          
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on December 21, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
				How to do a Successful  To-Do List
		
  - Get  in the habit of doing a To Do list  every day
- Be  realistic and aware of your limitations
- Don't  over schedule events
- Allow  for time cushions
- Review  your list every morning
- Ask  yourself, "Why me?" Is there someone else that can do this?
- Group  related activities: Am I prepared to lead the event?
How to Analyze Your To-Do  List
Necessity: Scrutinize each task to be sure it is  necessary. All to often we hold items past their usefulness.
Appropriateness: Who should perform the task,  reassignment to work beneath your skill level helps you and the organization.
Effectiveness: Once satisfied you are doing necessary,  appropriate, and effective work, ask yourself, "Is there a better way?"
Special Tips
  - Set  life foals: Limit activities that  contribute to those goals
- Plan  your day: One hour of planning saves you  three
- Use  your prime energy time for priority tasks
- Don't  schedule a meeting without starting or ending times
- Work  expands to fill time -- Parkinson's Law
- Skip  useless meetings
- Continually  ask yourself, "What is the best use of my time?"
- Know  your hourly billing rate
Be Greedy about your time.
Calculate what  your time is worth. If you waste time or are not being productive, this is what  it could cost you. Guru Hint: This exercise is worth doing at your next  sales meeting to impress your salespeople as to their need to be efficient and  more productive.
  - (A)What  is your Hourly Rate?
- (B)  How many Management or Sales Hours in year
    - Number  of hours/week/month 
- Number  months per year?(10.5 Months)
- (C)Yearly  Income Goal
A=C/B
If you manage to save one hour every  business day, you've created 245 new hours for yourself in one year. This is  six 40 hour work weeks. How much more money can you make with six more weeks  added to your year??
One last Guru  Hint: Set a "weekly goal" for completing a major project.
Ken provides Keynotes, consulting  services and products designed to improve business performance. To contact Ken,  write to      [email protected]  
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on November 30, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Several of my recent blogs have begun to discuss the  business and sales management aspects of being prepared for 2011. The blog this  week discusses the need to also focus on your 2011 plan for your personal life
 During a recent keynote program I held with a group of  individuals from an association I discussed the need to build both a successful  personal and professional life to truly succeed. As some of you know, I enjoy  cooking and collect cookbooks (over 150 in my library). During the session I  discussed how pizza can be an analogy for life. Now everyone can relate to  pizza, right? Thin or thick crust? Cheese or loaded with mushrooms, pepperoni,  onions, sausage, etc.  I like to suggest  that everyone's life, both personal and professional, is made up of multiple "slices"  with many ingredients. 
 Your personal life  includes: family/friends, fitness/health, net worth, fun/recreation,  physical/home environment, commitment to personal/spiritual growth, career and  romance/significant other. Your professional life includes: fulfillment, productivity, teamwork, leadership, time  management, commitment to personal/professional growth, focus/discipline and  communication skills. I like to ask the audience to rate themselves on each  slice on a scale of 1-7 (7 being high) to determine which areas are out of  balance. 
  Take this short self assessment and evaluate what slices are  working for you and what you need to work on as you move into 2011. Send me an  email if you want my keynote handout that we use during the program. [email protected] You might also like to  review our blog from October 12, 2010 for more insights on creating a "No  Regret's Life."
I also covered the three components for creating a  successful Menu of Life, which include:
  - Understand the power of impact: To increase  your personal/professional success, you must increase your impact on the lives  of others. As a sales management consultant it occurred to me that sales  managers not only impact the professional success of their individual  salespeople and teams, they also must focus on the impacting their personal  lives as well.
 
 
- Develop Creativity and Break-Out: The  best sales managers are creative; in looking at how to strategize and win more  opportunities, in creating a winning sales culture and in solving the day to day  problems that arise in every organization. The good news? Creativity can be  learned -- make it a goal to read a book on creativity or take a workshop.
 
 
- Be Real, Be Warm, Be More: As sales  leaders or as individuals it's about caring, understanding, listening and  assisting others in their life. Take time for conversation; build on the  conversation to truly understand the person. In my keynotes I like to say,  "My goal is to enhance our mutual  relationship, ensure our time together is profitable (not necessary in financial  terms) and have fun!"
As you work on your  organizations business & sales plan for 2011, work on your personal life  plan as well. If you would like us to speak at your sales kick off meetings or  other groups-just let me know!
Ken provides keynotes, consulting  services and products designed to improve business performance.  Contact him by e-mail at  [email protected].  
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on November 16, 20100 comments