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Hiring--A
Vital Key In Sales Management Success
By
Virden J. Thornton
Recently, I was asked to spend some time
on the telephone, coaching a client’s
administrative assistant on how to check out
an employment candidate’s references.
After each in-person or telephone
conference, I complete a brief written
report going over the information discussed.
The information that I gave this worker was
so vital to the company’s overall sales
management success that I felt impelled to
share the report in my periodic client
e-mailings, feeling that it might be of
value to others that I serve. The
information is so vital to the management
process, I decided to reproduce it here as
well.
After over 24 years of advising managers,
I’m convinced that the hiring process is
the primary key to management success. If
you hire right, your job of managing staff
is made much easier. Here are the
suggestions I made along these lines:
Julie:
It was good to talk to you yesterday.
we discussed, the assignment you've
been given by management to call each sales
support candidate's references, is vital to
the company's future sales success. As I
teach in my coaching workshop, if you work
hard at the hiring process, it makes
managing staff members much easier over the
long term.
You were right when you commented that
calling references "is not that
easy." I agree that there is resistance
by many business owners and managers to
giving out information in today's litigious
business environment. However, the process
we discussed can help you overcome this
refusal to help you complete this important
assignment.
The Steps To Checking References:
1. You need to obtain from three to five
business references from each of the
candidates approved by management.
2. Call the candidate's references and
use the following script in your own words
to obtain the information needed to make an
informed decision in hiring a given
candidate:
"We plan on giving (candidate first
name) extensive training to help her (him)
to be successful in this new position. Could
you please help me with several suggestions
on areas we need to train (candidate) so she
(he) can make a smooth transition?"
3. Next, ask the reference to give you
two or three names of other managers or
co-workers who could give you insight into
helping the candidate make the transition.
4. Then, call the reference's references
and use the same script outlined in step two
above to elicit additional information about
the candidate.
It’s so easy to make a couple of calls
and then give up on finding information. You
really need to work hard at this process to
help management make sound decisions about
the top candidates for a given position.
This assignment is vital to producing
consistent sales success.
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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 Wal-Mart
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.
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