19
Way Fourteen Sales Lessons Learned The Hard

Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Fourteen lessons new sales managers can learn to make their job a lot easier.

Citation preview

Page 1: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

Way

Fourteen Sales Lessons Learned The Hard

Page 2: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

Learning from other's mistakes and failures is a good way to speed up sales management success.

Page 3: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

When I asked seasoned sales managers what they learned the hard way, and I got these fourteen lessons.

Page 4: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

New sales managers can learn to make their job a lot easier using these fourteen lessons.

Page 5: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way
Page 6: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

2. Firing an underperforming salesperson is usually a relief for both parties involved. Failing is not fun but it can be the wake-up call needed to re-energize a sales career or choose another career.

Page 7: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

3. Salespeople always rebel against "the boss." Telling people what to do is not leadership. Asking questions and listening resolves many sales management dilemmas.

Page 8: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

4. Share control and let salespeople buy in. Sales representatives who run passionately with their own ideas they usually are more successful.

Page 9: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

5. Salespeople will have problems that paralyze them, and a sales manager will hear about them. Sales people bring their personal problems to work and eventually these can interfere with their performance. As a manager it is

important to know the difference between counseling someone on a personal problem and coaching them with a sales problem.

Page 10: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

6. It is helpful to become conscious of leadership style early . Being a leader means knowing when to be autocratic, democratic, or a delegator. There is a spectrum of

leadership styles and a sales manager will choose all three options at some point.

Page 11: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

7. Salespeople want to please their sales manager and will often tell them whatever they think they want to hear. A manager's reaction to lost sales and mistakes determine how open and honest sales representatives will be with their boss.

Page 12: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

8. Salespeople may not want to hear what their prospects really think so they do not ask.

Page 13: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way
Page 14: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way
Page 15: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

11. A sales manager can be an umpire or a referee. Disciplining salespeople is a duty of the sales manager's job. The upside of correcting

someone is that it can save them from failure.

Page 16: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

12. Sales managers are in the belief business. First, find out what salespeople believe. In order to influence the salesperson's beliefs in a productive way take the time to ask questions and listen to what they

believe about their accounts and level of success.

Page 17: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

13. The top producer may not be the top performer and customers buy in spite of salespeople. The sales manager's responsibility is to monitor salespeople's meetings,

calls, and make certain their performance is based on standards, not on luck.

Page 18: Sales Lessons Learned The Hard Way

14. Salespeople often do their best selling in the office. This happens when salespeople think the prices are too high for the products they are trying to sell so they try and convince management to lower prices to make their jobs easier in the

field with customers. The sales manager needs to instill in their salespeople a sense of pride and appreciation for the product or service they are trying to sell.