|
The
"Hire Someone With Product
Knowledge" Myth
By
Virden J. Thornton
Hiring
a candidate for your sales position who has
“product knowledge” seems on the surface
to be a smart move. Don’t believe it!
Product knowledge is highly overrated by
most sales manager and has little to do with
a representative’s ability to close sales.
Even though most of the sales training
conducted today centers on learning the
nuances of an organization’s products or
services, the emphasis on products knowledge
is nothing more than a waste of training
time. If you want to hire “order takers”
and not sales professionals, place an
emphasis on finding candidates with industry
experience and product knowledge.
I was sitting in a meeting with a bank
president and several vice presidents
attempting to sell them on a sales training
package for their customer service
representatives; when, in answer to one of
my questions, the the training manager said
that the bank would not even consider my
training program unless I had some way of
measuring its effectiveness with their CSRs.
The day before this sales meeting, The
$elling Edge, Inc. had been awarded the
distributorship for a unique bank tracking
software package, that would effectively
measure CSR cross-sales ratios. I knew what
the software was supposed to do, but had no
way to demonstrate its benefits, because all
the sales literature and demo disks were in
the mail. Nevertheless, before leaving the
meeting that day, the controller of the bank
cut a cashiers check for $8795 for the
tracking software and the bank committed to
one year’s training for their CSRs and
tellers. Knowing how to sell gave my firm
our first software package sale. Product
Knowledge played no role in the process at
all.
Two weeks after joining the sales staff of a
large oil and gas tax shelter firm, I was
asked to meet my boss at the Merrill Lynch
office in Indianapolis to observe my first
formal presentation of the tax shelter
products. Twenty minutes before the
presentation was to begin, I received a call
from my boss whose plane had been delayed
and was told I’d have to conduct the
demonstration to 40 seasoned stock brokers
alone. I knew nothing about the oil and gas
industry and was scheduled for training
about how hydrocarbons were produced the
week after the Indiana meetings. I wasn’t
quite sure how the “preference
treatment” worked in the tax shelters, nor
did I understand all the nuances of the
products, yet when I finished my
presentation, several of the brokers
commented that it was the best demonstration
they had ever had on the subject. I
succeeded with the group because I knew how
to sell--not because of a working knowledge
of oil and gas tax shelters.
Hire candidates who can sell. It doesn’t
matter if they know anything about your
industry or your products or services.
Product knowledge is overrated in the hiring
process and selling skills seem to be
underrated by many managers today. If your
candidates can sell, learning what they need
to know about what it is you sell can be
accomplished in quickly.
Check out our sales management self-directed
learning manual at: http://TheSellingEdge.com/team.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.
|