In most organizations, sales managers are the essential bridge between the company’s sales goals and the realization of those goals. The gritty day-to-day interactions between the sales people and their customers are frequently filtered through the perspective of the sales manager on their way up the ladder. And the aspirations and strategies of the company’s management must be imprinted by the realism of the sales manager as they come down from above.
Sales managers are the conductors who carefully orchestrate the tentative entanglement of the sales people with their management.
It’s an incredibly important and difficult job. Unfortunately, it is often the most under-trained job in the entire organization. Instead of providing information on the best practices and processes of the job, most companies hope that their sales managers will have learned enough during their days as a field salesperson to provide some roadmap as to how to do this job well.
Alas, only a small percentage of untrained sales managers ever really figure it out, arriving by trial and error and after hours of study at the best practices of an effective sales manager. The overwhelming majority find themselves caught up in the urgencies of the moment, the tempting details of all the transactions, and the continuing onslaught of crises and are never able to set in place a systematic blueprint for their success.
The net result? Few sales people are effectively managed. All parties — executive management, sales manager and sales people — bounce from one frustration to another. Company objectives are met frequently by happenstance, sales people are not developed to their fullest potential and sales managers lurch from one crisis to another.
Certain common mistakes often arise out of this unhealthy situation. As a long-time consultant and educator of sales people and sales managers, I frequently see these three most common maladies suffered by sales managers.
1. Lack of a focused
sales structure.
This is such a foreign concept to many companies that the term itself is unfamiliar. The structure of a sales force consists of all the articulated and unspoken rules, policies and procedures that shape the behavior of the salesperson. It consists of such things as:
- the way sales territories are defined
- the way sales people go about their jobs
- the way markets and customers are targeted
- the way sales people are compensated
- the methods the manager uses to communicate with the sales people
- the expectations for the sales force
- the training and development system of the company
- the expectation for information collecting by the sales people
- the frequency and agenda for sales meetings
- the sales tools used by the sales people
- and countless other such things
A highly focused, well-designed sales structure can be one of your company’s greatest assets because it ultimately shapes the behavior of the sales force.
Most sales structures, however, haven’t come under the critical review of the company’s management. Typically, the structure slowly takes shape over time. Decisions are often made with heavy input from the sales people, almost always in response to a single event. These decisions slowly become codified into the company’s written and unwritten structure.
As a result, many sales structures are vestiges of years gone by, the legacy of sales people who may not even be with the company today.
Why do you have the sales compensation plan that you have, for example? Is it because you crafted a strategic plan that directly compensates the sales force for achieving the company’s objective? Or, is it because it’s the plan you inherited?
Why is it that some of your sales people are highly organized, with well-designed file systems and effective ways to track their interactions with their customers, while others continue to get by with scraps of paper and yellow pads? Is it because you have invested in a system that helps them become well-organized and information-savvy? Or, is it because that’s just how it’s worked out?
Can you see the point? Many of these structural issues — spoken and unspoken rules about how the salesperson does the job — have evolved by the sales people in response to their own specific situations. And most sales managers are oblivious to the impact of these decisions on the productivity and effectiveness of the salesperson.
I recently had lunch with a friend — an entrepreneur who had successfully started and run a number of businesses. As we were discussing the pros and cons of organizing a sales force for his latest venture, he remarked that he has learned how easy it is to gradually cede control of the company to the sales force. One decision at a time, made in response to the passionate plea of an individual salesperson, would form, over time, the structure that governed the sales side of the business.
I was impressed with his insight. That very observation described the Number One mistake that sales mangers make — they accept the historically evolved status quo for the structure, and don’t invest time in focusing it to provide the environment for sales success.
2. Lack of regular and systematic direction and feedback for the sales people.
The relentless attraction of the urgent and the demanding shouts of the transaction have a tendency to overwhelm the time and attention of most sales managers.
Sales managers often have the best of intentions. For example, they may need to do a set of performance reviews by the end of the year. But there is this big presentation in one account to attend. And another account wants to complain about some issue to the sales manager. Yet another needs the manager’s touch to smooth some feathers, etc. And they really do need to spend some time in the field with the new salesperson. And, and, and...the demands of the urgent once again force regular face-to-face discussions about expectations and results to the bottom of the "to do" list.
As a result, most sales people are left directionless and provided with little feedback on how they are doing. Of course, we publish sales numbers, but there are lots of reasons why a set of numbers can be up, down or sideways above and beyond the impact of the salesperson.
What do you expect of this particular salesperson? And how well is he/she doing? In most surveys of what sales people really want from their managers, "direction and feedback" are often at the very top of the list. It’s one thing to talk about some account or some deal, it’s quite another to speak to the core issues of "my performance."
Sales is an isolated job. It is not unusual for a salesperson to spend as much as 70 percent of the work week by himself. All that isolation often leads to anxiety and self-doubt which often expresses itself through complaints and finding fault with the company. All this negative energy can be prevented by providing the salesperson with regular direction, specific expectations, and regular feedback.
The old saying, "Out of sight, out of mind," is too often the operational description of the typical sales manager. The sales people are out there somewhere, doing their thing, while the tyranny of the urgent often occupy the manager’s time. As a result, sales people are not nearly as focused as they could be; they default to unhealthy thoughts; and they spend too much time expressing negative energy.
3. Lack of an organized training and
development system.
No profession in the world expects the serious practitioners of that profession to figure it out by themselves — quite the contrary. Every profession has determined some minimal acceptable course of study, and typically has some event which signals the entry into that profession. It is for this reason that teachers, emergency medical technicians, and ministers are licensed; that attorneys must pass the bar exam; that accountants must pass their certification exam, etc.
Unfortunately, that is rarely true of sales people. In only the leading companies is there some required course of study for entry-level sales people, and some event which signifies the successful completion of that study and their entry into the profession.
To even think this way is so outside of the reality of most sales managers that I can almost hear half of the readers of this article snickering over their coffee. "Some standard for allowing people into the job?" Incredible thought. But if you don’t insist on it, you’ll continue to labor with a hit or miss sales force where every hire is ultimately a shot in the dark.
No profession in the world expects that once someone has become qualified to enter the profession, they then no longer need to invest in their own development. And every profession has expectations of the practitioners’ regular need to systematically improve himself or herself. Can you imagine a teacher who never attends an in-service training? A nurse who never invests in continuing development? A minister who never goes back to school? A doctor who never attends a conference?
Even if such lackadaisical professionals could keep their jobs, you’d not want them to have anything to do with your family. You’d never put your health in the hands of a doctor who hadn’t updated himself since med school. You’d not want your children taught by the teacher who hadn’t learned anything since graduation. You’d never put your lawsuit in the hands of an attorney who had never bothered to keep current.
The examples can go on and on. But you get the idea. The professional who doesn’t regularly invest in his own continuous development is relegated to the dregs of the market.
So, why is it that the overwhelming majority of sales managers do not require regular and systematic involvement in continuous development events for their charges? It may be that they don’t see their sales people (or themselves) as professionals. Or, it may be that they have never thought about it that way.
Regardless of the reason, the reality of this malady is that the quality of the sales force is not nearly what it could be, if only the sales managers required some minimum standard for their entry-level people, and then regular and continuous development of those who were on the inside. The wise sales manager will assemble a system for the education and development of his sales people.
CONCLUSION. While there are as many other management miscues as there are sales managers, these three are the most common. Address them, and you’ll be well on your way to outstanding success in sales management.
This article is copyrighted by Dave Kahle and was reprinted here with permission. Visit his website at www.davekahle.com for more information about Kahle and his firm.
*****
Self Assessment
Respond to each statement, and then reply by putting a number in the space which corresponds to each of the following replies:
You’re kidding. What’s that? = -2
We’re thinking about it. = 0
We’ve looked at it. No action yet. = 2
Yes, we’re in good shape. = 6
1. ______ We have strategically reviewed the way sales territories are defined.
2. ______ We have strategically designed the way markets and customers are targeted.
3. ______ We have strategically designed the way sales people are compensated.
4. ______ We have strategically designed the methods the manager uses to communicate with the sales people.
5. ______ We have a specific set of expectations for each salesperson.
6. ______ We regularly and systematically communicate those expectations with each individual salesperson.
7. ______ We regularly and systematically provide feedback to each individual salesperson on how well they are meeting our expectations.
8. ______ We have a minimal set of qualifications that an entry-level salesperson must meet in order to be allowed to represent our company.
9. ______ We have a process to evaluate the entry-level salesperson’s skills.
10. ______ We regularly inject our sales people into learning events, and expect that they will continually improve themselves.
Your Total (add each of the numbers above) = ______
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