Sunday, May 25, 2008

THE TWO CRITICAL INGREDIENTS FOR A SALES PERFORMANCE TURNAROUND

In today's tough economy, sales managers who take over struggling sales organizations are under enormous pressure to perform. Those who don't make visible progress toward a turnaround – and make it quickly – are likely to find themselves looking for another job. Yet despite the intensity of this environment, many managers do succeed – and some do so spectacularly. How? To answer this question, two Bain & Company partners conducted an extensive study of what successful managers do right - and what some do wrong.... For More See:

Five Questions Every Sales Manager Should Be Able to Answer

Every sales manager knows the basics about his or her sales team and selling process – which reps are the A, B, and C performers; the length of the sales cycle; the dollar amount of the average deal, and so on. However, successful management requires much more in-depth awareness of what's going on in a sales organization. For instance, do you know the common stalling points in your sales process? Or which competitors you lose the most business to and why? Find the answers in Selling Power's Sales Management Newsletter
You will need to sign up to read the rest of the article, but it's FREE

Friday, May 09, 2008

Why Good Salespeople Often Turn into Mediocre Sales Managers

A topic dear to my own heart, turning your best sales person into a mediocre sales manager! Check out this article:

Why Good Salespeople Often Turn into Mediocre Sales Managers by Dave Kahle

We've all done it. Promoted a good salesperson, often our best, to sales manager. My files are full of cases where the results were below expectations for everyone involved. Principals and CSOs are often disappointed in the lack of results, and the sales managers are confused and frustrated with the lack of achievement of their teams.

A variation on this theme usually produces even more angst. A good salesperson, without any real management experience, is hired from outside the company to fill a sales manager position. When these decisions go bad, the hurt feelings, negative attitudes and difficult situations which result can be ugly.

Not that this is always the case. Many CSOs and executives rose through the ranks in just this fashion, contributing exceptionally at every stage. But, these cases are generally the exception, not the rule.

The rule is that few good salespeople make good sales managers.

Why is that?

Consider the unique blend of strengths and aptitudes that often mark the character of an exceptional salesperson. Exceptional salespeople often have very high standards for themselves and everyone around them. They are highly focused on the customer, often to the determent of their relationships with their colleagues. It's not unusual for your star salesperson to irritate and frustrate the people in the operational side of the business, with a brusque and demanding attitude. After all, they think, I'm extending myself to take care of my customers, why shouldn't I expect everyone else to do so also?

When they become sales managers, they expect all of their salespeople to be just as hard driving and achievement oriented as they were. Unfortunately the reality is that most of their salespeople don't share the same degree of drive and perfectionism that they had. If they did, they would have been promoted to sales manager.

That means that the sales manager often is frustrated with the performance and attitudes of his charges, and confused as to how to change them.

The exceptional salesperson is often an independent character, who thrives in a climate where he can make his own decisions, determine his own call patterns, and spend time by himself.

Alas, he loses almost all of that when he is promoted to sales manager. He's expected to work a consistent, well defined work week, to spend a certain number of hours in the office, and to fulfill certain administrative functions. The freedom to make his own decisions, to determine his own days, is gone. So, he often struggles with how to adjust to this new work environment and still be productive.
read the rest of this article here