|
Baditude!
By
Virden J. Thornton
As a group of sales trainees took a break
from our workshop on selling, the distress
they were feeling, was clearly manifest in
their intense discussions. It was obvious
from their unrestrained conversations that
the software being installed to track their
sales performance was the reason for their
anxiety. It was also evident from their
negative comments, that many of these
trainees had already given up on selling
their company’s services and that no
amount of sales training could help them
sell their firm’s services. Our client, a
large Midwestern service firm, was willing
to pay generous incentives for their
customer service staff to up sell additional
services. Yet, most participants in this
training session felt, for a variety of
reasons, that obtaining additional sales was
impossible.
Jenny, a customer service representative
from one of the inner-city offices of the
firm was typical in her feelings about being
asked to sell. She talked about how
difficult it was to achieve sales success
because of her location and the unique
customer base she worked with daily. She
said it would be impossible to achieve the
sales success of coworkers in the more
wealthy suburban locations—“so why even
try?”
Jenny specifically talked about a coworker
by the name of Arlene who had been
exceptionally productive in producing sales
over the last three months. Arlene worked at
a branch in an upper middle class suburb.
She had earned over half the incentive pool
for her sales success, doubling her income.
Jenny told the group, that she was sure she
could do the same thing, if she could work
in the suburbs like Arlene.
On meeting Arlene for the first time, you
might surmise that her warm and friendly
disposition produced her ongoing sales
success. She has a great personality. As
Jenny inferred, you might also feel, after
visiting her office, that her location
assisted in her phenomenal sales success.
Her customers certainly have the money to
invest in her products and services.
However, to learn exactly what was behind
Arlene’s success, the firm’s regional
sales manager had her “shopped,” (had
someone act like a customer to check her
performance). They also had her local
manager observe her work for a few days to
see if they could learn more about her
success. On closer scrutiny, the sales
manager learned that Arlene consistently
used the selling process The $elling Edge®,
Inc. had taught her in our workshops and our
Self-Directed Learning reinforcement series.
Along with Arlene's warmth, friendly
personality and favorable location, it
appeared that using our “selling
process” was the major factor in her
consistent sales success.
Because there were so many complaints about
the unfair incentive and tracking system
being implemented by the firm, the regional
sales manager decided to run a test on his
staff. He wanted to see if Jenny was correct
in her assessment. Did the location of a
branch dramatically impact an employee’s
ability to sell and earn additional income?
Was it true that location alone determined
the amount of incentive bonuses paid out?
Overnight, this manager reassigned Arlene to
Jenny’s inner-city location. Jenny then
took Arlene’s place in the suburbs.
The first week after the transfer,
Arlene’s sales plummeted, possibly giving
some credence to Jenny’s theory. What few
sales Jenny had been making also declined
her first week in the suburbs. Since neither
employee was familiar with their new
customer base, these reductions in sales
seemed in order. However, on checking the
two representative's sales success on a
weekly basis, the sales manager soon learned
that location had little to do with sales or
lack of success. As the weeks progressed,
Arlene’s sales began to steadily climb.
After a month and a half in the inner-city
location, her level of sales success was
right back up to her production levels
before her move to the inner-city. Jenny, on
the other hand, over the test period, was
never able to move her sales beyond what she
had been doing before her move. Of course,
she had an excuse for not performing well.
Jenny told everyone that her sales were low
because she had not had the time to get to
know the customers in her new location.
Although Jenny had a pleasant personality
and seemed to get along well with people,
her new manager observed that she seemed
unwilling to learn and then use any of the
sales techniques taught in our workshops.
When she was “shopped” during the test
period, it was obvious that Jenny tried to
use her personality to persuade her
customers to buy from her. Not once did she
move out from behind her desk to greet
customers, nor did she shake their hand. She
immediately got down to business, and failed
to build rapport with the people she served.
She preferred to be efficient and in turn
was not at all effective in selling her
firm’s products and services. In short,
Jenny did none of the things that would help
her build the kind of customer relationships
that regularly produced additional sales.
As the manager evaluated the results of the
test, it became clear that Jenny’s bad
attitude about selling was at the heart of
her poor sales record. Also, not learning
and using the sales tools she had been given
was the deciding factor in her lack of sales
success. Arlene, on the other hand, had
proven that an office location was not a
major factor in the sales process for this
firm.
On closer scrutiny, the regional sales
manager found that a bad attitude about
sales permeated the entire inner-city staff.
To a person, they felt that they could not
sell the customers they served, so they quit
trying. While at the suburban location,
everyone was upbeat about the new sales
skills they had acquired from our workshop
and used the methods to consistently sell
their customers and earn more money while
they generated more business for the firm.
As the regional sales manager looked into
this attitude problem further, it became
clear that the contrast in staff feelings
about the consultative sales process they
had been taught, primarily emanated from
their respective managers. For the most
part, Jenny only parroted back what she had
heard her inner-city manager say about the
selling process. On the other hand,
Arlene’s attitude about selling simply
mirrored what flowed daily from her suburban
manager.
As you lead your sales team, what messages
are you sending to them about the selling
process? Do they know that you believe in
and personally use the sales tools that they
must master to succeed? Are they able to use
your example as a springboard to staff sales
success? It really is your extended shadow
that controls how well your staff performs
their sales duties. As the research into the
selling process outlined in this lesson
clearly shows, sales success, truly lies in
the extended shadow of the sales manager or
supervisor. Check out our personal sales
coaching training at:
http://TheSellingEdge.com/personalCoaching.htm
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 expan- ded biography
at http://www.TheSellingEdge.com/bio.htm.
All
of our training guides are
copyrighted. However, you have
permission to reprint the training
ideas on this site on a non-exclusive
basis providing the following two
conditions are met.
The
copyright symbol and the byline in full
must be printed along with the article,
and Author's name and contact
information must be included.
If
an article is to be republished on an
electronic web site, the copyright
symbol and the byline in full must be
included including the author's name and
contact information and the www address
linked to this website.
|