Hiring
a great salesperson is one thing. Keeping him or her
on the team is another.
Often
the manager or boss is too busy scrutinizing and measuring
the salesperson's performance, and ignoring their own
part of the partnership. The part necessary to support,
build and keep a great team.
What
are you doing to keep your salespeople? Here's a list
of 24.5 elements to build and grow a stellar sales team:
1.
Structure a fair compensation package that is commission
based...the more they sell, the more they earn.
People get into sales because it's got the potential
for great financial rewards. Create an attractive package.
2.
Give them the tools to sell with. Invest in the
best support tools money can buy. They help salespeople
sell, and they're a reflection of the quality of your
business in the mind of the prospect.
3.
Equip them with 21st century technology. Or they
will die at the hands of the competitor who is equipped.
Alpha pager, cellular phone, laptop computer at a minimum.
4.
Have the best company in the world. Someplace with
a great reputation where they're proud to work.
5.
Have an inside team of people that does not fight with,
or resent salespeople. Sales wars (battles between
sales and production, administration and credit) end
up killing the customer.
6.
Be the best boss in the world. Have the same consistent
positive attitude you expect of your people.
7.
Have a manager who is a better salesperson than anyone
on your team. Otherwise the respect factor, and
the pull-the-wool-over-the-eyes factor increases.
8.
Reward sales with money. Nothing happens until a
sale is made. Have a generous compensation package that
rewards success. If they succeed, pay them well.
9.
Acknowledge achievement. Have award certificates
(not just for sales) to show employees they have achieved
excellence or exceeded a goal.
10.
Recognize in front of others. Have victory celebrations.
Ring a big bell when a sale is made. Instill pride for
sales.
11.
Have incentives and contests to keep it competitive.
Dangle the carrot, whet the appetite -- get them to
go for the brass ring. The bigger the prize, the bigger
the effort.
12.
Reward repeat business. If a customer reorders,
it means they were satisfied with the way they were
sold and served. Pay a larger incentive the second time.
13.
Reward referrals. When one customer refers another,
it's the most profitable sale. Referrals are hard to
get (earn). But once you do, it's the easiest sale to
make -- pay handsomely -- someone has earned it.
14.
Reward business taken from others (accounts from
the competition). Taking business away from the competition
is a big event that should be celebrated, rewarded --
and dissected to see how to repeat it.
15.
Reward testimonial letters received. Testimonial
letters are the only proof you've got. Pay a big reward
for the letters that overcome objections.
16.
Have regular sales meetings. Air out the field or
phone problems, let salespeople have a chance to discuss
their challenges and successes. They will learn from
the leader and each other. Have an agenda and follow
it.
17.
Have regular sales training. A weekly sales
meeting should include 15 minutes of training. Weekly
meetings, a quarterly 1-day training, and an annual
2-day retreat, are minimum standards for sales growth.
18.
Have regular personal development training.
Your team must grow personally in order to achieve sales
growth. Train in attitude, goals, responsibility, listening,
pride, communication and change -- growth elements fundamental
for success.
19.
Set realistic and achievable goals. Work on sales
goals with the sales force. Get them to agree that they're
realistic and achievable -- then get them to write a
plan for their achievement.
20.
Every six months ask your sales team what you need to
do to help them make more sales. Get them to write
a blind (no name) report about situations and needs.
Act on them.
21.
Have them fill out (print out with laptop technology)
sales reports every week by prospect status. Don't
track sales people by time (what they did on Tuesday).
Track them by account. Look at the sales cycle and the
follow-up activity. If you have laptops and contact
management software, a sales report is a one button
act.
22.
Don't talk trash behind their back. Don't grumble
about their poor performance, Help them or fire them.
23.
Reprimand in private. No one likes (or deserves)
to be ridiculed in front of others. The best way to
reprimand is over a meal -- and have a game plan for
improvement.
24.
Encourage them. Banners, letters, posters, words
and phrases of "you can do it" go a long way towards
getting it done.
24.5
Don't let them run you. Tell them what you expect,
and follow through to be sure it's done. Salespeople
have all the power you need to achieve your success
-- if you harness it.
This
list is by no means complete, but it's a solid foundation
to keep your team at peak performance. To ensure the
success of your sales team -- measure performance two
ways -- theirs and yours.
There
is also a huge side benefit. When you have a great,
productive, high earning team -- the word gets out.
The "law of attraction" kicks in. Good salespeople will
call and want to work for you. What a great dilemma
to have.
Jeffrey
Gitomer is the author of The Sales Bible,
Knock Your Socks Off Selling and Customer
Satisfaction is Worthless; Customer Loyalty is Priceless.
To order Jeffrey's many books and/or audios and videos,
go to www.yoursuccessstore.com. (c)
1999 All Rights Reserved. |