Saturday, December 12, 2009

RECiRCULATING THE MEDIOCRITY

by Hank Trisler

Whenever you advertise for an "experienced salesperson," you run the risk of recirculating the mediocrity. The only people who read those ads are those who are looking for a job and those are the LAST people you want in your sales force. If they aren't happy and productive where they are, what makes you think they'll be happy and productive in your store?

Oh, I see. You're a better manager, offer better sales tools and a far more positive sales atmosphere. Of course they'll succeed where heretofore they have failed.

BULL!

If they haven't been making it before, you're not going to materially change them. You're just not that good. None of us are. Good sales critters will produce in any environment and bad sales critters will fail in any environment. Your efforts will affect the ultimate outcome only marginally, in that you can often help a good salesperson become truly excellent, while being unable to make a bad salesperson good.

When I was an automobile sales manager in San Francisco, back when the earth was still cooling, the union salesgrunts would come by and say something like, "I just thought I'd see what you guys have going on." A variation on the theme was the "Three Ds:" "Can I get a Draw? Where's my Demo? When's my Day off?" If you were silly enough to take one of these slugs, they would give you nothing but grief.

Many years ago I determined that I was far better off taking people with good people skills and teaching them how to sell, rather than take retreads from my competition.

The best time to recruit is when you don't need any salespeople. When you have all your desks full, you tend to be fussy and that's terrific. If half your cylinders have no pistons, your discrimination weakens as you're just tired of being alone. Halitosis is better than no breath at all.

Constantly look for good sales candidates among the people you do business with. People with big smiles, bright eyes and hustle will usually excel wherever they go.

What about your past customers? They're already sold on you and your company and your product. Why not convert them to paid ambassadors? A mother who has just hit the "empty nest" phase of life may be just the ticket for you.

Take a good look at the kids of your friends and the friends of your kids. Yeah, they're just snot-nose punks today, but they'll be blossoming into honest to goodness, full fledged adults before you know it. You needed good people five years ago, you need them today and you'll need them in five more years. Start sowing the seeds of your future sales team today.

How about sharing some of your recruiting secrets and thoughts with our group? Let's focus on new talent, rather than recirculate the mediocrity.


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