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When the Selling Process Doesn't Support Sales Competencies

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I was at the Deli counter yesterday and I couldn't help but notice a few things.

There was the veteran Deli guy - short fast strokes on the machine and quick results to go with them.

There was the stoic lady - she didn't really use her arms as much as she just rocked her entire body back and forth to slice the meat. It took her longer, she repeatedly put her meats on the scale and continued to be under weight and she had the most waste. However, it seemed like very moving experience for her.

There was the new girl - she fumbled everything she touched and it was clear she hadn't developed her own way yet.  She was able to wrap and unwrap, place the meat in the slicer with direction, but her slicing was inconsistent.

And there was the older lady - she was all arms and had to stop periodically to rest them. Despite her experience, her long arm strokes were not efficient, she took a long time but she got the best physical workout.

So, of course, here's the question that relates to the sales force.

Do your salespeople sound like these folks working the deli counter? Three of the four had some kind of process, but are the processes effective?

  • Do they consistently get the desired results? (desired weight to the customer in as little time as possible)
  • Are they efficient? (delays from selecting the wrong meat for slicing?)
  • Are they all doing it the same way? (transferrable and repeatable?)
  • Do they know where they are in the process? (how close to the desired weight are they?)
  • Does the process allow them to upsell? (premium cut for just 20 cents more?)
  • Are they able to cross-sell? (would you like cheese with your turkey?)

You get the picture. If an efficiency expert was there when I was there he would have been horrified in much the same way I am when I uncover how ineffectively a sales force is using a process for selling.

It should come as no surprise that I use the Baseline Selling process with my clients and combine it with their steps, to-do's and milestones.   This integrated process is then used in the sales cycle, Workstyle Management or CRM, in the staged, Visual Pipeline, and as a timeline and as an opportunity confidence rater.  An effective, formal, structured sales process is designed to achieve consistent, predictable results while providing salespeople with feedback relative to where they are in the process and what they must do next to succeed.

(c) Copyright 2009 Dave Kurlan

Posted by Dave Kurlan on Mon, Apr 06, 2009 @ 05:36 PM

COMMENTS

Having a CRM management tool in plqce is a great tool especially the Avidian model. You should contact Yellow Book USA They do every thing by paper very ineffective - the left hand doesn't know what the right hand is doing.

posted on Monday, April 06, 2009 at 6:14 PM by Shirley Schmaltz


The world is so full of examples, both good and bad. It is always fun to break down what you see, have an internal discussion of how it might be improved....then turn it all back on yourself and your company to see how your thoughts might apply. Great observations.....Thank you!!

posted on Monday, April 06, 2009 at 6:17 PM by Frank Wilson


Dave, 
 
What a great analogy! And you make a great point. This is what is wrong with most sales organizations today. The reality is very much like the Deli - you have a mix of people with varying degrees of skill. While there is a lot of focus on managing and tracking 'activity' there is very little effort spent on sharing best practices and ensuring the entire team is able to follow these consistently. This is why <a herf="http://www.landslide.com">Landslide and Baseline Selling are such a good fit.  
 

posted on Tuesday, April 07, 2009 at 7:46 AM by Saman Haqqi


I had an almost identical experience, not at a deli, but at a Subways. Four employees present. The owner was at the end of the line collecting the money. In line, making sandwiches was a diminuative middle aged Hispanic lady who literally "lapped" the two other sandwich makers ... "Subway Artists" ... TWICE. Each time she did this, she was making more sandwiches than either the high-school aged young man who fumbled through each step of the process, and the "Working Mom" who clarified the customers order at least three times per sandwich. I think that at the heart of being effective ... at ANYTHING ... is first a solid work ethic, second a desire to accomplish and last but not least important - self awareness. Put them together in a reasonable environment and the right things will happen.

posted on Tuesday, April 07, 2009 at 8:11 AM by Roger


its a shame when people confuse blogging with advertising.

posted on Wednesday, April 08, 2009 at 4:26 AM by Max Rosenthal


@ Shirley - thanks for the lead! 
@ Frank - I wish everyone was as introspective as you! 
@Saman - yes, Landslide is the perfect tool for reinforcing and guiding the sales team through the sales process - once there is an optimized sales process in place. 
@Roger - great example! 
@ Max - huh?

posted on Wednesday, April 08, 2009 at 7:37 AM by Dave Kurlan


Who goes into a Deli these days .... maybe hittting the gym would be a wiser choice!

posted on Wednesday, April 08, 2009 at 1:46 PM by Chubby Davis


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