Stop Hiring Weak Sales People Now

EvernoteDiggStumbleUponShare

In just a few minutes I can remember over a dozen sales people that I have hired in the past 10 years.  There are probably more than that, but ones I remember at least tried hard to produce results for me.  I have two left that I work with that continue to produce amazing results for me.

Looking back at how I approached hiring sales people as a small business owner I’ve finally learned that it wasn’t the people I was hiring that failed, it was me.  Since I am the leader of my company I am responsible to give my sales people the tools they need to do their job well.  If I’m not doing my job well, how can they succeed at theirs?  After many years of trial and error, I’ve finally figured out a method that is working incredibly well for me.  The approach we’ll cover today should be a fit for any company that is doing under 10 million dollars a year gross.  When you surpass 10 million dollars a year you should modify the approach as needed.  The principles will still apply, but the methods will need to be updated some.  Put this approach in place today so you can stop hiring weak sales people and start seeing results.

Sales Failures

1. Why I Failed with My Former Sales People

  • I Didn’t Give Them Solid Leads
    • If you have not yet found and fine tuned a lead source for your business that produces 50+ leads per week, then you don’t have what you need to hire a sales person.
    • When you rely on new sales people to generate their lead list and sell you are expecting too much.  Only one person out of every thousand can do that successfully.  Lead generation IS NOT sales.  It’s a different department.  Don’t fool yourself.
  • I Didn’t Train Them
    • When you don’t require thorough and appropriate training for new sales people you are setting them up to fail. Two days hanging out with the boss is not training.  Please don’t let yourself think something so foolish.
    • Training has to be documented and tested.  It takes hours of thought, writing, and preparation.  It also takes time from someone who doesn’t have 30 other objectives in the day.  If you are as busy as I am then you don’t have any business training your new sales people.
  • I Thought They Could Close Like Me
    • I don’t know where this ludicrous idea came from, but I used to think that I could bring someone in, have them hang out with me for a few days, and then send them out to close millions of dollars in new sales.  Wow, that has to be one of the stupidest thoughts I’ve ever had.
    • How can you expect a new sales person to step out and have the years of experience, the drive, and the tools that you do to close?  You know the rules, they don’t.  You know the tactics that help you close, they don’t.  You are confident and comfortable, they are not.

Turn Around Your Sales Team

2. Fix the Problem and Build a Winning Sales Team Today

I could go on for days about the stupid mistakes I made when I first hired in sales people, but that won’t make you or I any more money.  Let’s focus on what can make you more sales and more money today.  If you take action and apply these steps I can personally guarantee that you’ll see results much faster.

  • Give Your Sales People Fresh Leads
    • Instead of thinking that it’s reasonable for a new sales person to call through the phone book, google search for leads, or walk around and canvas, give your people fresh new inbound leads.
    • In order to do this you’ll need to find a new lead source and fine tune and adjust it to meet your needs.  Realize that it’s normal to pay anywhere from $25.00 up to $100.00 for a new lead.  Find a source that gives you ample leads in a steady manner.
    • You’ll need to study and update your prospecting approach as well so you that you get high quality leads consistently.
    • Once you’ve located a fresh steady stream of leads, decide who in your company should handle the pre-sales department.  This person never has to talk to customers, they just need to keep your inbound lead list well groomed and flowing steadily.
  • Queue Up Each Day’s Work
    • If you have technicians doing work for you then you know that you have to write up agendas, queue jobs up properly, and hand them a weekly agenda of some sort.  Why would it be any different for the sales department?
    • Write an agenda of who they should call, and what tasks to accomplish each day.  Don’t leave anything to chance.  Give them the agenda and the tools to succeed.
    • In my case my internal sales people are responsible to call and email our new leads.  Each day they have a list to work through, and they understand what to do with extra time.  They are self motivated and achieve great results because of the fact that I’ve properly structured their days.
  • Give It Time and Measure the Results
    • At a minimum I believe you’ll need to put this system in place for at least 90 days and after 90 days measure and review the results.  It’s never reasonable to expect instant results from any new plan.  Dedicate yourself to consistent actions and then look for results.
    • Every single marketing and sales initiative that you do as a small business should have a time frame and be measured.  If something isn’t working then stop.
    • How do you measure what’s going on?  You need to have a good CRM to track your results.  I use an amazing software called Infusionsoft that can intelligently make decisions and update my email marketing and team based on how my prospect interacts with the information that I give them.
  • Adjust Your Course as Necessary
    • No matter what you’ll need to make adjustments in how you approach your sales team’s work.  The important thing you have to remember is that you need to constantly monitor results.  Not just on Friday before you hand out another paycheck.  Throughout the week keep a close eye on what’s going on so you can help make adjustments to the process.
    • Listen in on phone calls, read through emails sent out, and give both positive and constructive feedback on a daily basis.  The more you’re involved with your sale people the better results you’ll get.
    • I also find it incredibly important to listen to what they have to say about the direction that you are taking.  Even if they’ve never sold your product or service before they may have a better approach than you do.  Listen to their ideas and be humble and open to new ideas.
  • You Are the Closer
    • Faulty thinking is probably the number one thing I look for in myself and in others, it’s the first thing that causes trouble for me in business and in life.  One erroneous thought that I used to have was that my new sales people could close as much as I could on a consistent basis.  This is foolish for the reasons I noted earlier in the post and it’s something you have to put out of your mind if you want to get results from your sales team.
    • Setup up a consistent system that ultimately puts you in front of the new customer for the final close.  Because you have the highest level of skill and experience as the owner, it’s most likely that you’ll be the best closer.  There are exceptions to this rule, but in most cases when I meet the small business owner who has succeeded in growing their company it is because they can effectively sell to their customers.
    • Let your sales people know that you are closer.  Compensate them fairly for the work they do to queue up the opportunity for you, and give commissions or bonuses for each successful face to face or phone meeting that they create for you.  Just imagine what it would be like to have 2-3 brand new client meetings a week.  If you can put this method into practice with your sales people then that is what you’ll have in short order.
  • Grow Your Own Closer In-House
    • As you grow in your new sales approach and your team fills in around you you will eventually need another closer besides yourself.  I believe that this position is most frequently going to succeed when you take a skilled individual from within the company to fulfill this role.
    • Internal people have already invested time and are genuinely interested in the company’s success and also have heard a lot about or interacted heavily with your customers.  They undersand you and your customer.  That is the closer you want to represent you.
    • Train them extensively outside the company.  You’ll need them to be professionally equipped to do their job.  Just like an electrician needs certain training and certifications to properly install a circuit, you should properly train your new closer.  Ask around, find the best sales academy for them, and send them there.  Your in house person will appreciate the opportunity and work hard to deliver you results.  If things don’t work out, give them the opportunity to return to their old position in the company.

Define the Position for Your Sales People

3. Positions You Need to Create Internally for Your New Sales Team

We’ve covered a lot of ground here, so I’d like to boil it down into a few simple steps, and positions that you’ll need to create in order for this new sales approach to succeed.

Pre-Sales:

Your pre-sales team member should be in charge of building lists from the lead source that YOU have carefully and personally refined the first few times.  Don’t ever rely on someone else to define your ideal customer.

Pre-sales should then hand this list of to:

Outbound Sales:

Outbound sales people should then work through this list by calling, emailing, and visiting in person based on how your killer marketing approach is supposed to work.

Your sales people are supposed to focus on giving the closers meetings with the decision makers.  Right now that closer is probably you.  Ultimately the closer may also be another team member, but for now refine the system and focus on closing each deal yourself.

Closers:

Closers simply have to show up to the meeting with the new customer, with the lead information, sales person’s notes, and meet the customers needs with the right solution.  Try for one meeting closes, but if you can’t close in the first meeting, be CERTAIN to schedule the next meeting before you leave.

Kick anything back to sales that you need handled before the next meeting.  Then walk in and close.  It’s that simple.

Here is what the whole process looks like:

A Winning Sales Process For New Sales People

Put this plan into action to achieve steady growth and results.  If you need help, contact me.  I’ve helped others implement it before and I’d be happy to help you succeed in your sales efforts.

Two sure ways to fail-

Think and never do or do and never think.

-Zig Ziglar

EvernoteDiggStumbleUponShare

Balancing Care With Candor – From John Maxwell

EvernoteDiggStumbleUponShare

Over the years I’ve found John Maxwell to be an incredible inspiration to me.  His words of encouragement to me as a leader have a lasting impact.  I don’t usually repost, but I feel like this message needs to be shared anywhere possible.  Here is an excerpt.  You can read more at his blog.

Every person makes mistakes at some time in the workplace. Everyone needs someone to come alongside them to help them improve. If you’re a leader, it is your responsibility and your privilege to be the person who helps them get better. That often begins with a candid conversation. But before you have it, it helps to ask yourself what the nature of the problem might be.

My friend Sam Chand says that when he is having difficulty with a person he asks himself one simple question, “Is this person a can’t or a won’t? Can’t is about abilities. We can help these kinds of people in most cases—not in all cases, but in most. But won’t is about attitude. If the issue is attitude, the time to let that person know there is a problem is now, because here is the deal: we hire people for what they know and fire them for who they are.”

I believe that people can improve their attitudes and their abilities. And because I do, I talk to them about where they’re coming up short. If you’re a leader and you want to help people, you need to be willing to have those tough conversations. So how does a leader handle being relational while still trying to move people forward? By balancing care and candor.

Care without candor creates dysfunctional relationships.

Candor without care creates distant relationships.

But care balanced with candor creates developing relationships.

Here is how care and candor work together in leadership:

Caring Values The Person While Candor Values The Person’s Potential

To lead successfully, it is important for you to value people. That is foundational to solid relationships. Caring for others demonstrates that you value them. However, if you want to help them get better, you have to be honest about where they need to improve. That shows that you value the person’s potential, and requires candor.

Read more..

EvernoteDiggStumbleUponShare

Wrapping Up The 30 Days

EvernoteDiggStumbleUponShare

I finally completed the series “How To Grow Your Business In 30 Days”.  It ended up being a lot more work than I expected, but it was really enjoyable overall.  I learned a lot.  I’ll share some of the lessons I learned during the 30 days in future posts.  Here I’ve summarized the Grow Your Business In 30 Days using the original outline I created so that you have one easy place to review them and find each post.

  1. Find someone to hold you accountable: Day One
    1. Business coach
    2. Spouse
    3. Friend/mentor
  2. Get control of your finances – expenses: Day Two
    1. Do you know what you cost each minute, hour, day, week, month, year?
    2. Cut out the fat
    3. Do more with less
  3. Get control of your finances – Accounts Receivable
    1. It’s OK to lose 20% to get 80%
    2. Build a system that improves speed of payments
    3. Automate monthly fees
  4. Get back on track – pickup the phone and call vendors
    1. Thank your vendors
    2. Tell them what you are up to
    3. Ask them what they need from you
  5. Get back on track – pickup the phone and call old customers
    1. Keep your name fresh in their mind
    2. Ask them how you can help
    3. Be willing to face old problems
  6. Find a new lead source
    1. Start somewhere fresh
    2. Measure the quality and cost of the leads
  7. Adjust the lead source to meet YOUR needs
    1. Is it your exact market?
    2. Does it apply to the product or service you sell?
    3. How can you swing the bat more often?
  8. Fine tune your prospecting approach
    1. Write a thesis statement that explains your approach
    2. Draw out each step sequentially and study it
    3. Ask your peers and mentors how the think you should do it
  9. Review your successes – magnify them
    1. What worked?
    2. Why did it work?
    3. How can you replicate that?
  10. Review your failures – minimize them
    1. Where did it fall apart?
    2. How can you prevent this from happening again?
    3. What did you learn from your mistake?
  11. Improve your sales process – what works?
    1. Do you understand your open, middle, and closing steps?
    2. Study good sales behaviors
    3. Persistence is the key factor
  12. Improve your sales process – automate it and refine it.
    1. Write it once, and re-use it
    2. Get a direct line
    3. Get in the solutions business
  13. Practice honesty
    1. With yourself
    2. With your customers
    3. With your team
  14. Build a strong team
    1. Outsource effectively
    2. Hire in temp to full time
    3. Learn to give consistent effective feedback
  15. Build strong partners
    1. Groom your vendors
    2. Set expectations
    3. Prepare plan B and C and D
  16. Put killer marketing in place
    1. Email marketing
    2. Person to person marketing
    3. The I need you, Do you need me? Approach
  17. Be available
    1. Open your schedule for your customers
    2. Expect an appointment
    3. Explain the use of your communication channels
  18. Write an FAQ
    1. Save yourself time and read through the FAQ’s you receive
    2. Write an FAQ and provide it automatically
    3. Ask your customers to provide input
  19. Provide a support portal
    1. Queue and handle requests
    2. Automate responses and include your FAQ and tools to download
    3. Remember that every time you reach a customer it’s an opportunity to build value
  20. Don’t focus on today’s dollars – look long term
    1. Monthly services are relationship builders
    2. Learn to provide solutions to problems
    3. Help others succeed and the money will follow
  21. Schedule your way to success
    1. Build your to do into your calendar
    2. Make sure you are meeting someone to accomplish the to do list
    3. Never leave a meeting without scheduling the next
  22. Put A Project Management System in Place
    1. Tag and prioritize products
    2. Mark the date the project entered your system
    3. Daily choose to update and manage the system
  23. Take time to relax and think
    1. Lay on your back and wonder
    2. Don’t be afraid to consider change
    3. Stop doing things you don’t enjoy
  24. Ask for feedback
    1. From your Team
    2. From your Customers
    3. From your Vendors
  25. Have Fun
    1. Enjoy the challenges
    2. Express your excitement
    3. Don’t take it too seriously
  26. Examine your model
    1. What is your model?
    2. Does it work well?
    3. How soon will you have to adjust your model?
  27. Invest in good technology
    1. What really improves work-flow?
    2. What can save you time?
    3. What can save you money?
  28. Learn faster than everyone else
    1. Read constantly
    2. Listen to pod-casts
    3. Ask the right questions
  29. Serve those around you
    1. Do what is right for your team
    2. Lead from your heart
    3. Communicate that you care
  30. Consider vertical and horizontal growth
    1. How can you grow your business larger? (vertical)
    2. How can you expand into new sectors (horizontal)
    3. How fast should you grow?

Now with everything in one place here in this post you can simply review the general thought process I had behind the 30 days or you can read each post at your convenience.  I’m sure that this doesn’t cover everything that you’ll encounter over the years in business, but I have tried to give you some tools that will make a difference in the short term.

How can I help you?  Please feel free to ask me any questions in the comments or by contacting me.  Here’s to your increased growth and success in 2011!

Entrepreneurs and their small enterprises are responsible for almost all the economic growth in the United States. ~ Ronald Reagan

EvernoteDiggStumbleUponShare

Serve Those Around You – Day Twenty-Nine

EvernoteDiggStumbleUponShare

Serve Those Around YouOne of the quotes that has stuck with me over the years and helped me focus my priorities is:

You can have everything in life that you want if you will just help enough other people get what they want. ~ Zig Ziglar

Looking back at the times that I’ve felt the most successful I believe that it’s been when I have focused on serving those around me instead of focusing on my own needs or wants.  Day twenty-nine is about doing something that truly matters by helping those around you.

Serve Those Around You

Often we start our day by looking at what we need to accomplish, what we want to do, where we want to go.  That’s not a good habit to get into.  If we are only focused on our own wants and needs we’ll miss what the world has to offer.  A life worth living is about giving to others and making a difference.

1. Do What Is Right For Your Team

Start by focusing on the things will move your team forward.  What will ultimately grow them the most and meet their needs?  When you focus on what matters for your staff, your family, your customers, and even your vendors you’ll soon find that the work you are doing is more rewarding than ever.  Don’t allow your own desires to cloud your judgement and cause you to lose focus on serving others.

2. Lead From Your Heart

When you focus on the needs of others your team will see that you do truly care about their well being.  Leading with an open heart is the difference maker when it comes to being able to influence others in a positive direction.  Don’t be afraid to share how you feel.  If it’s something you haven’t done before it will take time but I promise you it’s worth doing.

Last week I was in one of my favorite music stores with my brother and I took the opportunity to ask the shop owner what his one piece of advice would be to a young business owner like myself.  He answered “Be as honest as possible”.  That really hit home with me.  I think it rings true for all situations.  When dealing with your team, be honest, lead from your heart.  If you are gentle, kind, and honest you’ll see that you’ll gain the heart of your team in no time.

3. Communicate That You Care

Leading from your heart gives you the opportunity to show that you care.  You also need to verbally communicate that you care.  Let others know that you care about their well being and success.  It’s amazing to me how many times we choose not to say that kind of thing to those around us even if we feel it inside.  Break that habit and say that you care out loud.  Don’t be afraid of what others thing.  Be honest about the fact that you do care about them.

Serving others is the most rewarding thing that I have the privilege to be apart of.  If you are having a tough time, step back and change your perpective.  Choose to serve others.

EvernoteDiggStumbleUponShare

Proudly powered by WordPress
and tEkk3