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Your
Extended Shadow And Successful Sales
Management
By
Virden J. Thornton
In a small Midwestern
town, the local
high school of 878 students recently
produced its first state championship
basketball team
in over 90 years. The community has had an
organized city
basketball
league for its younger boys for many years.
But, this league, designed
to spot talent
early and then feed the high school
basketball program, did nothing to
produce the state
title. There is also an open gym at the high
school every Tuesday and Thursday night to
encourage the young men in the community to
play basketball. But like the city league,
this open gym contributed nothing to the
team in its championship bid.
A local banker, a former college all-star,
has volunteered his services for one dollar
a year to assist the high school's coaching
staff. The boy’s varsity basketball
program also has an able assistant coach.
But these two accomplished assistant
coaches, like the city league and the open
gym, were of no value in helping the boy’s
varsity team win the state title. The reason
these community programs and an extra coach
had little effect in producing the state
title, was that the state championship was
won by the high school's girls varsity
basketball team.
Everyone in town, with the exception of the
school’s administration, can see that the
failure of the boy’s varsity basketball
program lies with the head coach. The
girl’s coach is a woman who is tough but
fair, a coach who works hard to build
self-esteem and confidence in each member of
her squad. She teaches the fundamentals,
drills her team for skill and then empowers
her players to make decisions on the court
that will get the job done. The confidence
she has developed in each member of the team
gave the girl’s team the ability, under
extreme pressure, to put up the winning shot
at the final buzzer, to take the state
championship.
On the other hand, the boy’s varsity head
coach is a tyrant who literally destroys his
players by trying to mold them into an
antiquated system that fails to capitalize
on each boy’s strengths. He makes all the
decisions and directs the team from the
sidelines. As a result, the boy’s team
rarely lives up to its potential or the
investment in time, talent, and money the
community has made in the boy’s basketball
program.
Ralph Waldo Emerson has written that an
organization “is the extended shadow of
one man.” As this example of the two high
school basketball coaches illustrates, it is
the extended shadow of the coach that makes
a winning or a losing basketball team. At
the supervisory level in your company or
firm, it is the extended shadow of the
manager, more than any other single element
that is the key to developing a sales
culture and consistently achieving sales
success.
To learn more about how to cast a positive
shadow check out The $elling Edge, Inc.
Coaching & Team Development
self-directed learning manual at http://TheSellingEdge.com/team.htm
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VIRDEN
THORNTON is the founder and President of
The
$elling Edge®, Inc.
a firm
specializing in sales, customer relations,
and management training and development.
Clients have included Sears Optical, Eastman
Kodak, IBM, Deloitte & Touché, Bank
One, Jefferson Pilot, and WalHMart
to name a few. Virden is the author of Prospecting:
The Key To Sales Success and the
best selling Building
& Closing the Sale, Fifty-Minute
series books and Close
That Sale, a video/audio tape
series published by Crisp Publications, Inc.
Menlo Park, California. He has also authored
a Self-Directed Learning series of sales,
coaching & team development,
telemarketing, and personal productivity
training guides. To obtain a substantial
discount on two of Virden's new manuals, 101
Sales Myths and Organizing
For Sales Success, just click on
either of the titles above.
Note:
You
can contact Virden at virden@TheSellingEdge.com.
You can also see an expanded biography at http://www.TheSellingEdge.com/bio.htm.
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