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How Can Strong Salespeople Lack Desire for Success?

  
  
  

Dave Kurlan is a top-rated speaker, best-selling author, sales thought leader and highly regarded sales development expert.

franconaThis question is kind of funny to me.

Using Objective Management Group's Sales Candidate Assessment, a company could assess 1,000 salespeople, understand that Lack of Desire for Success in Sales causes an automatic "Not Recommended", and not be tempted to interview a single candidate who lacks Desire.  That is until they introduce a sales candidate that they "know" into the mix.  When they introduce a known candidate, it is usually someone with a good track record or a well-liked salesperson with whom they are familiar.  When the known candidate lacks Desire, everything changes.  "How could it be?"  "Is it validated?"  "There must be something wrong with the test!"
  "Have you checked this problem out?" "Can you walk me through how you could have come up with such a finding?"  

We have assessed more than 500,000 salespeople and we have the strongest predictive validity in the business so it's a lot like the old Smuckers tag line - "it just has to be good".  So why the contradiction?

We think we know people.  We've had a drink, heard about them, received referrals, gotten to know them, we like them, they have good industry experience, they were the salespeople of record on those huge accounts, so how could they lack Desire?

Think in terms of a before and after picture.  Everything you know about that person is the before.  The assessment findings are the after.  Instead of questioning the assessment, which on matters of Desire is always correct, why not ask yourself, "I wonder what changed?"  or "Could I really have known how little Desire he had?"

I can name a few strong, talented individuals who at a particular point in time lacked Desire.

I am writing this on October 20, 2011 so the first two names are timely as of this writing.

Terry Francona recently stepped down as Manager of the Boston Red Sox.  He was very strong but I'll guarantee that at the end, he lacked the Desire to continue - at least with the Red Sox.

Steve Jobs recently passed away.  No one was stronger than he was but I'm sure at the end of his battle with Cancer he lost the Desire to continue innovating.

These aren't sales examples and you don't know these people personally so they should be examples that are easier to understand.

I have observed many very strong salespeople - they had both sales skills and sales DNA - for whom sales success was no longer the most important thing to them.  And when Desire goes, the incentive to do what is difficult, time consuming, painful, scary, or disinteresting goes along with it.  That includes doing it your way, development, being receptive of coaching, being resilient, tackling the biggest challenges and the list goes on and on.

So next time, instead of questioning the assessment, simply ask how well you really know this person and whether you really know what makes this person tick when it comes to their will to sell.



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Posted by Dave Kurlan on Thu, Oct 20, 2011 @ 05:19 AM

COMMENTS

Dave, Good points you bring up but I respectfully disagree with you re: assessment tests as I've had the exact opposite experience with the majority of them. The fact is that most 'seasoned' salespeople now know how to beat those tests and answer in a way to get high scores. I do agree with you about Desire being a key factor in hiring and firing. I would much rather have a salesperson who bombed the sales assessment test but has a highly incredible desire to succeed. In fact, those are the kinds of salespeople I prefer to coach, train and mentor because that Desire is contagious and begins to pervade throughout the organization. As you point out, sometimes a great salesperson who loses that Desire can have a tremendous negative impact on the organization and makes the less experienced salespeople say, "God, I hope I don't end up like that guy in 20-30 years..." That's why it's important for sales managers and the management team as a whole to continue to foster a rewarding environment that continues to motivate the entire sales team to keep that level of Desire up. As in sports, sales is all about momentum and the team that is fired up before the game is usually the one that wins.

posted on Thursday, October 20, 2011 at 8:13 AM by Marc Palombo


@Marc - thanks for adding to the conversation.  
 
You make the mistake that many people make - using personal experience as a substitute for science. While there are many assessments - think personality and behavioral styles - that people know how to beat, ours isn't one of them and the science behind it is extremely strong. 
 
Bottom line - the science says that lack of desire leads to lack of results. 
 
If those are the people you want to work with, it's fine - if they already work for you. BUt if you have the choice of selecting a candidate with versus without desire, and the science says 75% of the candidates without desire will fail within 6 months, then how smart would you be to go up against those odds?

posted on Thursday, October 20, 2011 at 9:28 AM by Dave Kurlan


My experience has been the Desire finding is vey accurate.  
 
The unskilled salesperson who has the Desire needs a coach. The highly-seasoned, skilled salesperson with no desire needs a COUCH! 
 
Helping someone who wants to learn, be the best and earn substantially is a manager's and CEO's dream. Helping someone who who's lost their fire and is trying to make sense of their once-succesful sales career is a therapist's dream.

posted on Thursday, October 20, 2011 at 11:56 AM by Dave Mantel


@Dave - I love the coach/couch comparison!!! 
 
Love the CEO/Therapist Dream too but not quite as much as the first one.

posted on Thursday, October 20, 2011 at 2:41 PM by Dave Kurlan


I follow the wise advise of a man named Mark Trinkle who sings your praises. The test is not as tainted as I am.

posted on Friday, October 21, 2011 at 9:07 AM by Mike Iverson


Dave, I recently had the same challenge with commitment from my clients. Is the response similar or is there a subtle difference. Clients who have their present sale team question the commitment score. Can you answer that or put in a blog soon?

posted on Sunday, October 23, 2011 at 12:05 PM by Doug Wick


@Doug - strong salespeople who lack commitment may have been committed once upon a time - even recently - but it's gone. Or, they have great customers - with renewals or ongoing orders - and they don't have to do the difficult parts of selling that require commitment.

posted on Sunday, October 23, 2011 at 9:06 PM by Dave Kurlan


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