Showing posts with label goals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label goals. Show all posts

Friday, September 17, 2010

CONSISTENT PERFORMANCE


By Hank Trisler

Terry Buchanan is the sales manager for B&H Australia, a purveyor of computer projection equipment in the state of Victoria, Australia. He runs a five-person sales team and wrote in an e-mail: "The biggest problem I have is keeping everyone focused on achieving consistent results. Too often a person has a great start to the month and, for some reason, seems to start spinning his wheels."

Well, Terry, don't feel like the Lone Ranger. Anyone who has managed a sales team for more than forty-five days has experienced exactly what you're going through. 

The selling profession, by its very nature, is a "fowl or feathers" existence. The only managers I have seen who have achieved truly consistent performance have screwed their teams up to the point that no one was selling anything, and you sure don't want that kind of consistency.

The process of long-term strategic planning and the setting of long-term goals are actually counterproductive to sales consistency. Our minds don't seem to comprehend "I will," but only really hook up with "I am." Learning to talk to and program the unconscious mind is, therefore, the key to getting the best out of our people.

Manage activity, not results. The manager counsels with his salesperson and says, "We need to have you sell two million dollars worth of product this year to help us meet our company goals. Two million is your bogie."

The salesperson looks blankly at the manager and nods. He is not thinking about the company goals. He's thinking about his bills, he's thinking about a new car, a suit of clothes and the fact that his wife's washing machine has been making that funny noise again. It is clearly impossible to comprehend precisely what he must do to sell two million dollars worth of product and, frankly, that goal is fairly low on his list of priorities.

Enlightened managers find out what the salesperson wants to accomplish and finds a way to tie that into the company goals. We need be able to convert results (which we cannot control) into activities (which we can influence, if not control). A Sales Activity Calculator appears on page 172 of NO BULL SALES MANAGEMENT and is a fine tool to help you convert results into actions.
If the salesperson clearly understands and believes that when his feet hit the floor in the morning, he needs to make X calls, which will result in Y presentations, which will result in Z sales, the activities necessary to achieve the results are clear, both at the conscious and unconscious levels.

If you don't have a copy of NO BULL SALES MANAGEMENT, you can get one through our website www.nobullselling.com or call, write or e-mail me and I'll send you a copy of the Sales Activity Calculator.

Keep Goals and Contests short. Long-term goals only become real to us during the final days of the period. If you set a contest wherein the person who sells the most product this year will receive an all-expense-paid vacation, most of the work will be done during the first couple of weeks, when the excitement is high, and during the last couple of weeks when the deadline is looming. Worse yet, someone may run off and hide early on and the rest of the team will quit trying as the deed has already been done.

We can learn a lot from General Motors accounting. Each month consists of three ten-day periods. All contests, reports, and incentives are based on these ten-day periods. If you have a good ten days, you get to start all over again to make the next ten even better. Rather like the Mess Sergeant's last meal. If you have a crappy ten days, it is in the past and you get to start all over, fresh and clean.

A variation of Murphy's Law states that, "Any task will expand to completely consume the time allocated for its completion." Keep the time frames short and you'll get the most consistency possible in this inherently inconsistent business.

Friday, March 27, 2009

TEN COMMON ENEMIES (8)

By Hank Trisler

A major enemy of any salesperson is:

A LACK OF WELL DEFINED GOALS AND OBJECTIVES

If you don’t know where you’re going, any road will take you there.

If you don’t know where you’re going, how will you know when you’ve arrived?


So much has already been promulgated about the necessity of writing down your annual goals that it would be a waste of your time and mine to further discuss it here. What has not been overly discussed is a method of assuring you will never again lose on a sales call.

The old folks used to say, "Have a good positive attitude and go out there just knowing they’re going to buy." The problem with this is that most people don’t buy. Sales is a business of hearing lots of "nos," until you hear a "yes." Your unconscious mind is not so easy to con and will know that you’re going to fail more than you succeed. If you try to delude yourself that you will make every sale, you’ll soon become disillusioned and depressed.


To battle this, I bring you a concept known as "The retention of a positive mental attitude through the assumption of a negative result." We realize that we will not make all our sales, so our expectations are congruent with reality. We build in additional opportunities for success in every sale.

Many top sales professionals make a list of objectives for each call, descending in order of importance. They might look like this:

  • Sell a particular product/service (or home, or car, or policy, etc.) Yes, write down what you want to sell on the appointment. I've had wonderful sales interviews which ended with no order because I got so busy selling I forgot to ask for the order. Will I always get the deal? Not in the real world, so my fall-back position is:
  • Sell another product/service.O.K., you don't want to buy what I want to sell you, how 'bout buying something else? Long as I'm in the neighborhood, you might as well buy something. Oh, can't find a way to buy anything at all? Well, let's
  • Get another appointment. Let me get some more information, or answers to problems, or whatever and let's get together again at a specific date and time? Oh, you don't think you want to make an appointment today? (Does this sound like any customers you've ever had?)
  • Get permission to drop by again.I'll just pop in when I'm next in town. Oh, you'd rather I just mail my picture?
  • Get permission to call on the telephone. Surely they'll let you call them back. But not all of them will. We're not dead yet.
  • Get more information about the customer’s needs.We're going to switch this over from a sales interview to a fact-finding session. Any time we're getting information about the customer is time well-spent.
  • Fish for a referral.Even if she doesn't want to buy today, she may well know of someone else who would be a better prospect. She might just fink them out to get rid of you.
  • Make a friend. If all else fails, be sure you left with a better relationship than you had going in.
Rather than facing a win or a loss on every call, we now can win on nearly every call. Sometimes big and sometimes smaller, but always a win. If you know you will never again lose on a sales call, doesn't that make going out there a bit easier? You're welcome.

Let me know what you do to be sure you stay on track.