Sales Leadership Training 

Gold Medal Top Sales & Marketing Blog 2011 Silver Medal Top Sales & Marketing Blog Post  2011 Finalist Top Sales & Marketing Thought Leader 2011 Finalist Top Sales & Marketing Thought Leader 2011

Your email:

Google

salesachievementgrader

          Baseline Selling 

Great Sites


topsalesworld
Sales Pro Central

Understanding the Sales Force

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

The Sales Force with Over Achievers That Don't

  
  
  

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

Huh?

That's right. Today I heard about a CEO who told one of my colleagues that all of his salespeople over achieve.  In the same phone conversation he mentioned that sales are down 20%.  Can you imagine where sales would be if his salespeople under achieved?  

I think that many CEO's are in a time warp.

Despite the struggles of their sales force in this economy, they still view the sales force as they remember them when times were good. 

The problem with this is that even the good times did not accurately define these salespeople.  Salespeople who succeed when times are good but struggle when times get tough are not over achievers.  They are mediocre salespeople who simply don't get in their own way.  Over achievers find ways to succeed in all conditions, good and bad.

I think that many CEO's are in denial.

Despite the struggles of their sales force, they continue to look at the pipeline and say to themselves, we'll be okay as soon as these deals close.  But the deals aren't closing and with each passing day companies are less okay then they were the day before.

I think that many CEO's are scared shitless (the only truly accurate word I could type there).

Because of the struggles of their sales force, they look at the numbers, down 90%, down 75%, down 50%, down 25% and wonder how they can turn it around.  It can be turned around but they have to be proactive, not reactive.  They have to be aggressive, not passive.  They have to work on the right end of the problem - revenue - not just costs.

Truth is, our data shows that only 6% of all salespeople over achieve.  And another 20% can become over achievers.  Who do you want on your sales force and what are you willing to do to develop them or recruit them?

(c) Copyright 2009 Dave Kurlan


 



whitepaper-banner2

Posted by Dave Kurlan on Wed, Mar 25, 2009 @ 09:19 PM

COMMENTS

Dave, you have hit the nail on the head. We are living in a fear based society right now and fear is making us look through the wrong end of the telescope. 
 
 
 
While government is spending at a pace never seen before, businesses are cutting costs. Now is not the time to reduce your marketing budget. Now is not the time to stop thinking about how you can make your sales team more productive. 
 
 
 
Taking a fresh look at what and how you sell will remove the fear. Go out to the market and ask them what they think about your people, process, product and pricing (and yes we offer this service). The market will tell you what you need to know about how to move your company forward. Don't just sit in your office with a red pen staring at a spreadsheet and crossing out expense lines - that is myopic! 
 
 
 
Just MHO.

posted on Thursday, March 26, 2009 at 7:19 AM by trish bertuzzi


There is always a pitch. It must be adapted. As the variables in the market place change so must your pitch and when you decided to ask that tough question. 
 
 
 
All in all there are those who believe they can do something are probably right and so are those who believe they can't! 
 

posted on Thursday, March 26, 2009 at 9:53 AM by Penny


Dave, 
 
 
 
To many are not only sitting back waiting for things to change. They go as far as agreeing with their sales people that the economy is bad. By doing this you enable your salespeople to except the fact that you are letting them off the hook. 
 
 
 
Focus on the objections, get collaboration from your sales people on how to overcome them and never allow the economic situation dictate your imediate future. In my world that is not exceptable, how about yours? Have your sales people practice. Your best will teach the rest.

posted on Thursday, March 26, 2009 at 10:17 AM by Mark Pritt


I have recently taken to asking some of our prospects - all VPs of Sales - what they have done differently since the economy turned sour. Except for lay-offs and discounts, I have not heard of one change in selling practices or how teams sell to cater to the chnages environment. Incorporating best practices in selling is always important, it is critical in today's environment. Check out some of the posts at our blog at <a>http://blog.landslide.com <a>on this topic.  
 

posted on Thursday, March 26, 2009 at 2:25 PM by Saman


 
 
 
 
 
 
CEO says all his salespeople over achive but sales are down 20%... 
 
 
 
Story from the 19th. hole! 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

posted on Thursday, March 26, 2009 at 3:08 PM by Chubby Davis


@Trish - Amen. 
 
@Saman - Isn't it awful how little people are doing about this - how they feel like victims? 
 
@Mark - I hope you meant acceptable, not exceptable and I hope you meant objectives rather than objections... 
 
@Chubby - huh? 
 
@Penny - Excellent points.

posted on Thursday, March 26, 2009 at 6:34 PM by Dave Kurlan


Dave, 
 
 
 
...and everyone else. The window of opportunity is now srinking! While there is no fluff to cover weakness, there is opportunity to beat the competition! Can we apply Darwin's Theory to Sales? You bet!  
 
 
 
My dad always said when you hit someone, don't ever let them get up! With a name like Rocky...you gotta know my dad was a boxer! 
 
 
 
The window of opportunity is closing... soon there will be fluff to cover the weak!  
 
 
 
What are you doing to take advantage of the times!

posted on Friday, April 03, 2009 at 6:37 PM by Rocky LaGrone


Dave, 
 
Thank you very much for that article! 
That is exactly what I see happening. My last two projects as a sales trainer and consultant go with companies from the automotive and financial industries - the others seems to be still far from hitting the 'trouble zone' - the zone where they may have no more illusions that things need to change.  
 
CEOs believe in numbers, successful practices and market analysis. There are two explanations for waiting and postponing I've heard mostly: 
1/The downsizing of revenue is relevant to the downsizing of the market, so we are still in good position; 
2/We have trained our people well, they know how to act, so just need a little pushing on the market to keep things going; 
 
And they wait for the real hard times.

posted on Tuesday, April 21, 2009 at 12:45 PM by Teddy


Comments have been closed for this article.