What Makes a Great Salesperson
Even though many salespeople sell by themselves, they are really
not alone. Behind many great sales professionals are great sales
managers. A sales manager is someone who can make selling much
easier---or a whole lot harder. John Funderburgh (www.jrf.info), a
former Accenture consultant, ran an international information technology
consulting firm for 20 years. He now is a private advisor to
business owners and entrepreneurs. His sales management success can
contribute to your selling success.
Management defines the process. Too often management
expects salespeople to do the impossible. Funderburgh says, “You wouldn’t
expect someone on the assembly line to figure out how to assemble a
product. Why would you expect sales people to develop a sales
process?” Funderburgh defined the process that he wanted his
salespeople to use when they sold. The process began with outbound
calling. Rather than have salespeople prospecting, Funderburgh defined the
criteria for prospects and gave his staff the lists of prospects. This
method produced more viable prospects. Salespeople continued the process
by building the relationship with face-to-face sales calls. Generating a
proposal was the next step. Following up on the proposal to close the
business was the last step. Seems like simple steps. Funderburgh
almost made the process infallible.
Don’t kid yourself. Funderburgh learned that
successful selling is something different than hiring an extrovert who
charms customers into buying. He found that a successful salesperson
was one who could work with clearly set performance goals in a defined
process. Funderburgh hired new salespeople with the expectation of
what their activity level would be in the first 90 days. He found
that when people didn’t perform then, they never would. Finding out
about poor performers early was essential. Funderburgh says, “Having
poor performers demoralized the rest of the team.”
Let management measure it. Salespeople should be doing
what they do best. Record keeping isn’t their strong suit. Yet
both salespeople and management need to know how many calls are turning
into appointments, how many appointments are producing proposals and other
results that move the sales process forward. Funderburgh’s automated
systems captured the data that needs to be measured so action could be
taken. The number of outbound prospecting calls was automatically captured
by his system. Next, salespeople scheduled appointments that were
automatically entered into a database. The system also totaled the
number of proposals sent and closed. Funderburgh found measurement
to be essential. He says, “You have some dials to turn to fine-tune
and a yardstick to compare individuals.” He adds, “However you
get your business, you need to set goals. You can’t do it informally. I
worked with my sales staff on quantified performance. That was the secret
of my success.”
Provide help. Because Funderburgh knew what to measure
in his process and had the data to review, he could see where his staff
was having trouble. He also met daily for brief 15 to 20 minute
meetings with his staff. Funderburgh found that his internal resources
provided the solutions to his staff’s problems. He found that
typically a salesperson had a problem in just one area— perhaps getting
the appointment, and was fine in other areas. The sales manager
would enlist the help of another salesperson who was strong in that
area. Sometimes making joint sales calls with a sales manager
provided the needed help. At other times brainstorming solved the
problem.
Great management produces great selling results. Your manager
may want some additional incentive to implement these ideas. Tell your
manager that Funderburgh retired very successfully at 49. He works
for fun now.
Maura Schreier-Fleming works with
business and sales professionals on skills and strategies so they can sell
more and be more productive at work. She is the author of Real-World
Selling for Out-of-this-World Results which is available at
www.BestatSelling.com. She founded her company Best@Selling in
1997. You can reach her at 972.380.0200 or
info@Bestatsellling.com.
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