A good friend  of mine always said  that success was earned, and that it's important to  accept the fact that success normally carries a price. 
		When I work with my clients' sales teams I  always inquire about their goals, actions and commitments that are aimed at achieving their  objectives. What doesn't surprises me anymore is their inability to fully  understand that there is a "price to pay." I am not  suggesting that our lives should be so consumed with achieving success that all other  facets of life are out of balance. Those of you who have taken my "Personal and Professional Pizza" assessment  understand my focus on life balance; if you haven't take the assessment yet, view  my "Gourmet Life" video here.
		However, if  you are leading a sales organization or are a professional salesperson, you must understand and accept that  there is a price to be paid to achieve success. Instead, I see salespeople showing up on Monday  simply   to work. Sales leadership and sales roles demand more.
		First, it's  creative time. Taking the time on a quiet evening or on a Saturday to review  each active sales opportunity and thinking through your sales  tactics/strategies demands extra time. What else can you do to win?
		Second, it's  professional. Are you actively taking the extra time to review LinkedIn  groups within your market to better understand what issues are being discussed?  The Sales Association group in LinkedIn and its VP Sales Group are good  groups to join. I am actually leading a series of monthly sales leadership webcasts for the VP Sales Group. 
		Third, it's  your network. Paying the price to develop, nurture and expand your network  pays results. This means taking the time to find the right individuals and making an effort to  create an active campaign to build the network. As a professional, this effort  will bring you additional levels of revenue -- at unexpected times.
		Fourth, it's  mental toughness. Just last week, a salesperson said he was 90 percent confident he was  closing an opportunity -- and then he got hit with an objection and was flattened.  He wasn't strong enough to counter-sell the objection, but at least he was  strong enough to ask his fellow sales team members for advice. We will now see  if he and his manager go in to win.
		I always enjoy  the comments everyone makes on my various blogs, but reading your thoughts on  this particular post would be important. What are the actions or efforts you believe are  necessary to achieve success? Leave a comment below. 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on April 21, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		This past week  I had the opportunity to participate in what is called a "speakers showcase." Ten  professional speakers had an opportunity to stand up in front of over 100  association managers and give a 15-minute program based upon their desired  topic. My topic was "Gourmet Living: Building a Menu for Your  Life!"
		The real  opportunity for me was being able to sit back and observe other speakers -- not only to  hear their messages, but more importantly to see:
		  - how they opened their presentations,
- their energy levels,
- their body language,
- their vocal tones and 
- how they closed.  
I also asked  several of the other speakers to provide feedback on my session. I know every  year when I attend the National Speakers Association conference, I pick up so  many great ideas to build my professionalism. 
		So what does this  have to do with sales leadership?
		In many  situations, the sales manager is the key coach, mentor and trainer of their sales  teams, whether it's in the field or in sales training environments. It is the second-most important aspect of  your job. (Hiring correctly is No. 1.) Too  many times, when meeting with sales managers in  peer groups or in one-on-one coaching, I have found that many sales managers have a challenge keeping  their mouths closed during an onsite sales call with one of their team members.
		Certainly, there are occasions when the manager should talk, and those should  be defined during the pre-calling planning process. However, during any sales call, the manager  must be acutely aware of the five items listed above when observing their  salesperson.  Hint: You might keep that list and rank each  one from 1 to 5 (with 5 being great) for each salesperson. Prepare a short  report card after the call and then share it with the salesperson. Keep every scorecard on each salesperson and,  during your twice yearly review, share all of them and hopefully you will see  an improved performance. Remember: Inspect what you expect!
		During the past few months, in this blog I  have from time to time provided "free" sales management tools to  improve your sales management structure. If you have not visited our Web site lately, you will find the Sales  Management Tool Kit -- a resource that includes over  40 sales management guides, tools, best and practices. It is an online library  where you can download a variety of tools, all for only $175.00. I do add to this toolbox from time to  time, so it is a living value. For all orders in the second quarter, I am including three free books:
		  - Developing a Business Plan
- Building a Marketing Plan
- Creating a Winning Sales Strategy
Have an awesome April! Let me hear about your success. 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on April 08, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		The first  quarter is over and sales leaders are capturing forecasts for the next two  months -- and hopefully celebrating the achievement of their first-quarter  results. 
		I am sure not everything has  been smooth. After the last 90 days of working with a variety of clients and  speaking at a variety of conferences, I've found that the odds of some "uneven" achievements  and unexpected events are real. In  one client's case, we didn't hire the salesperson we wanted. In another, a salesperson  left without management knowing it would happen. And in another, the marketing  campaigns didn't launch on time.
		Just like my lawn.
		As I drove  into my garage last week, I realized it was finally time to mow my lawn. For the first  time this year, my lawn looked uneven in growth. Leaves had nestled into the  grass, some weeds had extended themselves and it resembled something far  different than what I had hoped to enjoy. There is work to be done. I am sure after this afternoon, when I hope to  mow, that the results of a fresh cut will level off the growth, the leaves will  be mulched and generally it will begin to represent a well-groomed lawn. The next treatment of fertilizer will  stimulate better growth.
		You should consider having the same view  of your sales team: Evaluate your team, determine who  needs to be "groomed" or "cut," and find out what treatments  you  must begin to accelerate your growth during the second quarter. This is necessary in  order for your summer sales to generate the necessary look and feel that you  desire. 
		In past blogs, we  discussed how to create your quarterly sales  training programs and coaching sessions with each salesperson. Hint: Now is a  great time  to hold one-on-one salesperson review meetings. What worked? What didn't work? What new  steps and actions need to be implemented to increase performance? Develop a  mutual action plan where both you and your individual salespeople agree on  those actions and use that  to coach and manage for the next 90 days.
		Enjoy the spring  and position your team to truly enjoy a wonderful summer season of selling.  What are you plans?
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on April 01, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		As a sales  manager, one of your responsibilities is to develop your  sales team's professionalism. After reading Doug Lipp's Disney U: How the Disney University Develops the World's  Most Engaged, Loyal, and Customer Centric Employees, you will come away with a notebook filled  with ideas to improve your employee development. Lipp lived the Disney U experience and gives us the inside stories that  back up the results.
		The book  provides you insights into the genius of Walt Disney, but also the other people  in the organization who brought their vision and dedication to make Disney U an exciting and valuable part  of the Disney organization. Each chapter breaks down various subjects with  excellent summaries that you can turn into action steps for your own organization.  While reading the book I picked up the various "mantras" that drove  the development of Disney U. For example:
		  - "Management must be diligent or the show [customer experience] will deteriorate."
- "Management must be diligent or the cast [employees] will deteriorate."
The interesting aspect  is the impact  Disney U had on the entire organization; it is looked upon by management not as  a training department but an element of the organization that impacts the  culture, operations and performance. The chapter "Capture Hearts and Minds" mentioned  four questions that relate to a focus on the entire organization:
		  - Is innovation encouraged?
- Is organizational support found at every level?
- Is employee education valued and non-negotiable?
- Is entertainment incorporated into training and  education initiatives?
"My basic  story is about the two men laying bricks," says Van Johnson, the person responsible for  building and leading Disney U, in the opening of the chapter titled "The Language of Success." 
		"When asked what he is doing, one man  says, 'I'm laying bricks.' The other man performing the same task says, 'I'm building a  cathedral.'"
		 Johnson went on: "I have found that most people want to  be involved in something greater than just being paid for a job."
		The question is, what are you doing to not only  train people on your products/services but to truly build a team that excels in  all aspects of representing your firm? Ask me for a copy of "Building Belief" for a few ideas.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on March 24, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Recently,  during several coaching calls, I heard a common theme among comments -- either the prospective client was asking for  some kind of discount or the salespeople were asking for some sort of  promotional discount so "I can close the deal."
		These comments always pop up during the last month of each quarter. Generally, this  occurs because:
		  - You have conditioned your  customers or prospects to expect these kinds of end-of-quarter promotions.
 
 
- Your vendors want to achieve  their numbers (public companies) and they have conditioned your salespeople to  expect their deals or coupons.
 
 
- Your sales team has not been  trained to effectively sell the value of your firm or the value of the impact  of your products/services on your prospects' businesses. Hint: This needs to be  done early and continually through the sales process.
 If you hear the word "deal"   spoken by one of your salespeople, then you have failed -- either by hiring that kind of  salesperson or your training program has failed to set the standards. Doing deals  is simply a bad mindset for professional salespeople and leads to discounts,  coupons and lower margins. We work "opportunities," not deals.
		What can you do to reset  this mindset? You need to build the  mental toughness of your sales team. I recommended that each  salesperson  watch two episodes of "Pawn Stars," a popular show on the  History Channel. They then need to discuss at the next sales meeting what they  observed. If you have not watched it, the show covers the daily issues in a  pawn store in Las Vegas. People bring in items to sell to the store and the  store buys them to hopefully resell for a profit. There are four characters the  reality show follows. 
		What I want  the salespeople to see is the owner, Rick, review the items people are bringing  in, determine their real value to him, set a price in his mind that he will  pay, and then begin to negotiate with the person selling the item to the store. 
		In some cases  he brings in an "expert" to help  set that value. Rick then asks the  seller how much they want for the item. He proposes a price and  banters with the seller until they settle on a  price. In almost every case, the seller caves in because Rick knows how to negotiate  better, knows his business, and  holds firm on his price. In some situations, the seller walks away for  another opportunity, feeling they did not get their price.
		In our world, the salesperson must be the "expert" and understand the value  they are bringing to the buyer (Rick). They should be mentally tough enough to handle  the negotiation discussions and reinforce the value they bring.  
		With too few  opportunities in a closing mode, salespeople become weak-minded. Your hiring  must focus on testing that attitude -- your activity management must be focused,  your sales training must include skill-building and your sales management  coaching must help build this facet of their professionalism.
		There is  always something to learn from any life experience -- even from the "Pawn Stars."
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on March 17, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		It seems that  every client I have worked with over the past 14 years has had a challenge   creating enough leads driven through their sales teams. Does that sound  familiar?
		Last week, I  was fortunate to read The Sales  Winner's Handbook by Wendy Weiss, self-professed "queen of cold-calling." The book is subtitled "Essential  Scripts and Strategies to Skyrocket Sales Performance." It delivers on that  statement.
		Weiss broke  the book into four segments:
		  - cold-calling in the 21st century 
- gatekeepers, voicemail and e-mail
- introductory appointment-setting scripts
- selling entirely over the phone
If you have  your sales teams attempting to "dial for dollars" or even  communicating over the phone, this book should be in your library. If you have a tele-sales team, the content in  the book should be included in your ongoing sales training program. Use the  book-club idea -- during  your weekly sales  meetings, discuss a chapter -- and tailor the techniques and scripts to your  product/services. 
		Chapter 10, titled "Words to  Use and Words to Avoid," is a must-read for any salesperson -- it's worth the price  of the book! 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on March 09, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		I recently presented a webcast to a number of people on the topic of how to  partner or work with other organizations that are non-competitive but sell  to your existing  market. I call these "business ecosystem partners." It is a tactic that executives can use to leverage  expertise, resources and ability to grow their businesses. 
		During the  program, I stated that if successfully implemented, the partnering program would  bring in the equal of one salesperson's revenue/quota per year without the cost  of hiring another salesperson. If you  would like additional information on this topic send me an e-mail at [email protected].
		While  that program was aimed at executives, I like to address in this blog what  salespeople need to do to leverage themselves. As a sales manager, you must not only educate your team on this, but  monitor your team's actual activity. Salespeople  must find ways to leverage themselves as well and the good news is it won't  cost selling time. Here are a few ideas and I would encourage all the  readers to contribute their thoughts.
		  - Create  a spreadsheet listing all of the "circles  of influence" within your market and assign someone to connect with  each person on a regular basis.  These  people are individuals that can influence decisions; they differ based on  your product/service but could include commercial bankers, architects, CPAs and consultants. If you want a sample Excel  spreadsheet to help you track these individuals, send me an e-mail.  
 
 
- Develop your list of five to 10 networking sources. These  may be local associations, networking groups or social events where potential  networking contacts may attend. Rule of thumb: Every salesperson should attend at least one networking group event  per month.  
 
 
- If you have individual  salespeople that you are networking with, be in touch every month. Out of sight is  out of mind. Send them interesting sales ideas you have picked up via e-mail  (hint: this blog), send them a  sales book, and work to find a lead for them. It must be a win-win situation. Arrange a lunch or breakfast meeting. Invite  them to your office to see your solutions and meet your team.  
 
 
- Make it both ways -- another way  to say this is, "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you." If  you want to have your phone calls returned, return phone calls. If you want  help with your sales career, you must be willing to help others. When I started  my business, I tried to make two networking calls a week. While my objectives  have changed, I still return the phone calls.  
 
 
- As a salesperson or sales manager you will need to track  activity. Networking is a lot like  flossing your teeth -- for it to do you any good, you have to do it regularly.  Include networking activity as a metric.  If you pay attention to certain actions, your salespeople will also.   
 
 
- Can you use the referral's name? Yesterday, I was meeting with a meeting  planner and provided her two sources. During the conversation I suggested she  should use my name. If your networking source does not offer that, ask! You need to be totally clear as to their  relationship and how to use the referral.  
 
 
- Find the right people.  Look for active, energetic and creative people that are hungry to build  their business. Are they already active? How would you judge their existing  market relationships? What is their  profile within your market? Obviously,  LinkedIn is a great tool to find the individuals you wish to work with. 
Building a network of relationships is a lifetime objective. Make it part of  your sales business plan if you are fighting for leads and trying to increase  your pipeline.
		Eighteen months ago,  I reached out to someone who had crossed my radar. I placed a call, shared  some thoughts and explored a few ideas. What has it led to? Four  consulting agreements with major vendors, a variety of industry-speaking  opportunities and increased market awareness! We have actually done all of this  together -- both have added value and expertise to our new mutual clients. And we have had fun doing it.
		If you have not  signed up for my monthly newsletter, "Why Sales Managers Succeed,"  you can sign up here.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on March 06, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		One  of the main jobs of sales management is to help their salespeople see where they are in the sales opportunity.  Are they early? Do they know what they  need to know? Do they have an excellent strategy to close? 
		I like to think that a salesperson is a  juggler, tossing x-number of opportunities in the air and the sales manager's  job is to assist the salesperson on judging what opportunities to keep and which  ones to toss away, and to providing ideas on how to work the selected ones. During  a few recent client/consulting meetings, I realized that this remains an  extremely important aspect of any salesperson's life -- as well as any sales  manager's or president of any firm. Exceeding monthly sales objectives are the  goals of the sales organization, especially the sales manager. What to do?
		First,  if you have not subscribed to the "Sales Manager's Tool Kit" at www.AcumenManagement.com, you can get a  free copy of the Sales Strategy Guide by sending me an e-mail at [email protected].  The Tool Kit contains 40 tools/guides for any sales manager. The  Sales Strategy Guide is meant to be used by each salesperson and the  sales manager to discuss and strategize on individual sales opportunities and  uncover what you know, what you don't know and develop tactical steps to move  the account to conclusion.
		Second,  the salesperson must know what the impact  of your product or services will have on the prospect's business. The  salesperson must fully understand this question and its answer. You will use it  during critical aspects of closing the opportunity. You close for the prospect's benefit -- not the salesperson's.
		Third,  depending on the products/services that you offer and vendor relationships,  knowing when the prospect wants to be fully utilizing your offering is  critical. It is not about when a decision will be made -- it's about  understanding timing and any issues surrounding that timeframe.
		Fourth, knowing early on during the sales process the reason the client will make the  decision, the impact of your solution on their company and timing, allows the  salesperson to begin to set the hook early. Now, I am not suggesting unethical sales tactics -- but just make sure early in  any sales cycle that you fully understand the prospect's key issues allows you  control the sales process. 
		The  key element to remember is individuals are always challenged to make a  decision. Your job as a trusted advisor is to assist the individual in making  the right decision that will impact their business and to help them make it on  your timeline. This is selling versus order-taking.  
		Being  mentally creative and tough and moving your role from simply presenting  products/services to providing business guidance moves the role to the next  level. It is the job of sales management to assist the salesperson to move  forward professionally.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on March 03, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Last week in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., I provided a closing keynote  for an  international association's annual conference. The program was based on a topic  that has proven to be very popular: "Gourmet  Living: Building a Menu for Life." During the same week, I spoke to a group  in New York at its 2013 kick-off meeting -- that topic was: "Changing Environment Means Changing: A Plan for Success." In both cases,  with different programs and certainly different audiences, the after-program conversations were identical.
		It is normal for members of the audience to come up to me  and make a few comments after a keynote. After both keynotes, everyone commented that they had been needing an uplift, new thoughts or simply a reminder of something they knew. These words hit me on the plane  from Fort Lauderdale to Destin, Fla., where I have been taking some time off as  well. At Destin, I monitored  e-mail, attended a few conference calls and did some limited management  coaching. I have also walked the beach, played golf, enjoyed friends and I am almost  halfway through a fun book I am reading.
		I've written about the fact that  sales leaders face "sales fatigue" within their sales teams  and perhaps within themselves. I offered a few ideas as to how to  counter that attitude. 
		On Thursday I  will be driving back to my home -- nine hours of windshield time. Today, though, I am heading  to the spa for a massage and few other treats. Why am I telling you this? I am firmly convinced that you must "treat yourself" to maintain  a freshness. My wife had to teach me this, but as hard as everyone works I have  come to accept that these opportunities to relax,  treat yourself and   enjoy friends are unique. Serious sales leadership requires high  levels of energy, creativity and the ability to relate to your team members and certainly to prospects. If you are dull because of not  taking the time to refresh, your organization will sense this and feed off of  your lack of energy and robotic behavior -- and your sales will suffer, as well. 
		During   keynotes, I normally hand out a Personal Pizza and a Professional Pizza (not  real -- only on paper) in which each of the eight slices for each pizza are described by  one or two words. We ask each attendee to score themselves from 1 to 7 (7 being "great")  based on how they feel about themselves in relation to the word. They then connect  the circled numbers and draw a line connecting the dots. The representation  will show if you are in balance personally and/or professionally. We then have  instructions as to how to fix their lives if they need balance. If you want a copy  of our Pizza Test, send me an e-mail at [email protected]
		The  message: Find time each day to refresh. In my keynote I speak about creating "extreme  self-care" by creating daily rituals that relax (yoga/mediation), are fun,  exercise (walking or something more strenuous), and focused on eating  better. Focus on getting mentally and physically refreshed, and your sales results will  improve as well. Off to the spa.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on February 06, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		On Sunday, I  was reflecting on what might be a good topic for this week's sales management  blog, when I realized the idea was right there in front of me. On Friday  afternoon, one of my client's two new salespeople called me individually to  practice making a telephone sales call and performing a sales discovery call.  My client and I wanted to make sure the salespeople knew what questions to ask a prospective customer  and if they could roleplay effectively. The salespeople have been going through our three-week new-hire training program, which is a prescriptive approach to  ensuring new salespeople know everything from how to sell their company and their company's products/services,  to how to use the copier and telephone system.
		Next, on  Monday morning, I led a client's sales meeting, where we discussed the concept  of account planning and learned how to "cross-sell and up-sell" to  increase their sales revenues. Each salesperson will create 10 Accounts Plans  in the next two weeks. Tuesday, I am speaking at a sales kick-off meeting on the  topic of "Changing Times Means  changing Tactics."
		Because of other commitments, I couldn't attend  one of my other clients' sales meetings, where the all the salespeople (and  management) are reading a sales-related book and discussing one chapter a week -- a kind  of book-club approach to sales training. 
		How are all of these actions related? They are  helping drive a higher level of professionalism within their sales  organizations. 
		  - They are focused on sales  training. While Acumen Management is not a sales training firm, it is focused on ensuring our clients  execute on  holding a minimum of two hours of sales training a month. We have a quarterly objective that each  client creates an entire quarter plan for training sales on skills,  operations, and product/service knowledge. This includes dates/times, topics  and what each salesperson is responsible for. If  you want a copy of the outline, send me an e-mail at [email protected].
 
 
- Roleplaying is a must.  Connecting the brain and the  tongue is the essence of ensuring your salespeople can communicate effectively.  During the new-hire training program, the salespeople have to "sell"  their company to other salespeople -- the sales manager as well as the president  of the organization -- before they can hit the street.
 
 
- New ideas are important to stay fresh. Creating a learning  environment and building training programs to introduce new ideas will  re-invigorate the sales atmosphere. Even  when old ideas are reviewed or  new concepts are introduced, the brain cells  will kick in. I have heard it a hundred times: "I remember that from a long time ago. I had forgotten about that  [sales skill] but I will start using that again." I like to suggest  your team read at least two books a year and discuss one chapter a week. If your sales team is following the sales  process it has used for the past five years, it is time to shake it up -- it will be  good for them, your prospects and your revenues.
 
 
- Increase your  professionalism. This is the ultimate  sales/marketing differentiator. Ensuring your sales team presents themselves in  front of a prospect at a higher level than your competition will impact your  revenues faster than anything else you can do. Record them making tele-sales  calls, video record them selling your company/products/services, and inspect what you expect. Keep a record of how many sales calls you make  each month with each of your salespeople and watch them make new calls, discovery calls  and proposal calls -- even if they are top  performers (you might learn something) or if they have worked for you for 10  years!
Bottom line: Develop an attitude of  high performance and high expectations but increase your commitment to training. 
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on January 29, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		During the past few months, I have been consulting  with several clients on a variety of issues and coaching others via our new "Acumen  Project" (more on that later). In both environments I have begun to  revert to a similar sales management technique to achieve the desired results. For this week's blog, I thought I should share this  fundamental concept with you. If you are  attempting to bring an increase in focus on weekly sales and activity and on exceeding  your monthly sales goals, this idea will help you.
		
				First,  you should be using Acumen's Sales Meeting Template. When you get to the sales forecast section and opportunity  discussion, note your monthly sales objective (for example, $250,000). You can either go to the "white board" or via Excel and a  PC projector to do this.
		
				Second,  ask each salesperson to forecast each account and dollar value on all  sales opportunities with greater than 75 percent probability of closure. Write each entry  underneath your sales goal.
		
				Third,  total the overall sales to see if they exceed your sales goal. If they don't, list all additional opportunities  with greater than 50 percent probability of closure. If you still don't  have enough opportunities and potential sales to exceed your quota, you are in  trouble.
		
				Fourth,  discuss each opportunity as a team to ensure the salesperson has the next TWO  sales steps planned to close the opportunity for this month. 
		
				Fifth,  perform this exercise each week in the month (save the list) and as certain  opportunities closed or are postponed, work to move other sales opportunities to  the close list. The "50 percent" list becomes  your "upside" list.
		
				Six,  track what your individual salespeople forecasted at the first of each month  and what they actually ended up selling. This is called the "forecast accuracy ratio," a great way  to better understand your team's ability to forecast and understand their  prospects' buying reality. You will be in a great position not only to forecast  pipeline values to your management team with this historical view, but be a  better coach for your sales team.
		
				Seven,  each week, each salesperson should be prepared to report on specific weekly  activities. While this will vary by type of sales organization, by having a  weekly reporting function, salespeople will have to be accountable. As a rule, we ask each salesperson to rate  their previous week on a scale of 1-5 at the beginning of each sales meeting.  In other teams, each salesperson must earn 25 points a week by performing  a certain level of variety of activity. If you would like to see a sample  of the 25-point list, send me an e-mail at [email protected].
		What's the bottom line? It's fundamentals and back-to-basics. Salespeople pay attention to what sales  management pays attention to. Discipline  of focus is always the payoff to success. What is your commitment to  success?  Let me know your ideas to  drive performance.
		As for Acumen Project... 
		I  was watching the Golf Channel several months ago -- specifically, a show called "The Haney Project," where a golf coach would take a well-known celebrity  for six weeks and provide customized coaching to improve their game. While it was  somewhat a reality show, it had positive results. I thought about that program and have now  created the Acumen Project. Using  our online Interactive Sales Management  Tool Kit, my books, DVDs and 12  hours a month of consulting services over five months, we will turn executives or  sales managers into leaders of sales teams. We cover the strategies and tactics of successful sales management:  recruiting, compensation, reporting and coaching and much, much more. For more  details, e-mail [email protected]
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on January 21, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		I woke up in rural Wisconsin on Christmas morning. When I peeked out  the window of my mother-in-law's home it was seven-below on the thermometer. I  grew up in rural Wisconsin -- that is how it is supposed to be on Christmas  morning.
		What do I mean by rural? Well,  driving the last seven miles on a twisting county road during a blizzard means no  plowing, drifting snow and no actual idea  where the road was. Rural also means no cell phone coverage or  e-mail connections unless I drove 15 miles to a McDonalds to find a wireless  connection.
		But what rural really means is  making time to talk to my 89-year-old mother-in-law recovering from knee replacement  surgery. Every morning, I would wake and the coffee would be ready, a Danish would be on  a plate and we would sit in our chairs and watch TV. Or she would read a daily  devotional and we would talk -- just good conversation -- until she dozed off. In the afternoon I might nap or   drive to the local small-town (population 268) bar and order  pizza or sandwiches for dinner. While I waited, I would sip a beer and chat with  the one or two folks at the bar about the upcoming Packers game. 
		On two days, I  went for a walk. It had gotten up to 20 degrees and the snow was still crunchy  but the air was crisp, clear, almost light. If you have not felt that  kind of Wisconsin fresh air, you are missing out. I had  forgotten what it does to your nose and lungs -- it is a cleansing experience. 
		As  I trudged down the street the people in the few cars that went by waved as if  they knew me. It is what you do in small towns. One day, I walked into  the Pigeon Falls, Wisc. meat market to buy meatball mix and lefse (Norwegian  tortillas) and the owner came up to me and said, "You're Thoreson,  right? I saw you on Facebook!" Amazing.
		It was a quiet few days to reflect, reunite with family and friends,  share laughs and stories, and end with warm hugs and big smiles. It is where I come  from.
		There were other experiences, as well, but what I returned with is a  continued reinforcement of the blessings we have, knowing that many others  in this world don't have them. I have a continued commitment to do what I can to help  others improve their lives and inspire them to succeed. In a  recent speech, I talked about the impact others had on my life -- but the reality  is the more you impact the lives of others, the more personally  successful you will be.
 
	Posted by Ken Thoreson on December 28, 20120 comments