Hi!
My name is c.j., and
here's the October 2007 issue of Psyche-Selling
TM
eNewsletter, and be sure to get some complimentary sales management tools as you read on.
As the old
adage says, "Tell me and I forget, teach me and I remember, involve me
and I learn", if you are the type that learns best by doing, pls. check
out our upcoming business simulation event:
http://www.trainershubcn.com/eflyer.php?fid=9 If you want
further information on what's the current fuss about business
simulation, check out
http://www.gamesolution.ch/index.php/option/en/item/254 and click
the PDF download at the bottom-left corner.
BTW, if you are a trainer/ speaker (aspiring or experienced), and
would like to know how you can promote your training/ speaking business
better, pls. join us for this Professional Speakers' Association of
China chapter meeting:
http://www.psycheselling.com/PSAC-151007.htm
This issue's main article is on "If
You Want to Improve Sales and Profits, Stop Your Sales Training Now?!", and it
definitely means much more than what this title suggests.
In brief:
-
While sales training is indeed important to develop the right
skill-sets that lead to more sales, having a customer-centric
corporate culture is the pre-requisite that needs to be in place
first;
-
Since not every person can
be trained to perform well in your kind of sales environment, hiring
someone with the right attitude, mindset and cultural fit will
generate much better results out of your training;
-
As most trainees forget up
to 90% of what is taught the moment they leave the classroom, having
good sales managers in place is critical to make sure your sales
staff practiced what was preached.
To read the rest of this
newsletter, pls. click
here (http://www.psycheselling.com/page4.html).
If You Want to Improve
Sales and Profits, Stop Your Sales Training Now?!
by c.j. Ng
About
as recent as 5 years ago, sales training wasn't
a typically hot topic amongst companies in
China. Most foreign corporations were merely
setting up manufacturing bases here, and sales was conducted overseas.
As domestic demand for products and services was
so high, sellers were able to sell just about
anything, and the domestic market just
bought them
all.
Fast forward to the market place today. What we
see now is very intense competition between
sellers. Buyers, on the other hand, have been
pampered by growing choices of different
buyers. It is now a buyers' market, and sellers
would have to do something different to win over
buyers.
Hence,
the current high demand for sales training.
Many companies, whether foreign or
locally owned, are engaging trainers (externally
or in-house) to train their sales force to cope
with increased competition, and as well as
increasingly sophisticated buyers.
However, few companies can actually claim that
their sales performances improved as a result of
having sales training. In fact, there are some
who claimed that after spending lots of time and
money (esp. if they go for the premium brands of
sales training), they don't see any significant
changes in their sales people, and as such, no
significant improvements in sales and profits
either.
So,
what else can be done to help sales people
increase sales (and margins)?
In the
2007 World Class Sales Excellence Research
Report conducted by
HR Chally Group, the top 3 benchmarks used
by world class sales teams are:
-
Creating a Customer-Driven Culture;
-
Recruiting and Selecting the Right Sales Talent;
and
-
Training and Developing for the Right Set of
Skills
Creating a Customer-Driven Culture
Although there is another old adage that
says, "The business of business is to create a
customer", many companies don't really behave
the same way. There are companies that:
-
Focus
on coming up with new technological
applications;
-
Will
sacrifice anything to drive up share prices; or
-
Simply push what has been produced to customers,
regardless if there is a need or not
In
other words, such companies are either too
self-absorbed in their own world and forgot who
actually pays their bills (i.e. the customer);
or that they are more concerned about getting a
good "valuation" so as to fatten their pay
packages without providing anything of real
value to customers.
If
you were to out a sales person with the skills
and attitudes to understand customers' needs and
put together a solution that will deliver what
customers' want into any of these companies,
that sales person won't last very long.
Although many of such companies recognise the
importance of being customer-centric as a
sustainable long-term strategy, they are not
able, or are unwilling, to make the change.
Here are some reasons why the inertia:
When a colleague and I were talking to the
Chinese JV partner of a prominent German
automobile manufacturer, we faced the following
concern. They were looking for consultants to
help their sales force improve sales at their
showroom, especially when they believe they can
do much better with their current market share.
At some point in our discussion, the client told
us that they need to work with consultants with
car sales experience, as they have a good
understanding of cars.
What we replied was that we will observe and
conduct research on how their prospects and
customers want their sales people to behave, and
then help their sales people get the right
behaviours that fit the needs of customers.
However, the ensuing reply was that they would
want consultants who understand cars
(not customers) to conduct such a
research. The reason is simply that the client
perceived he will have a much easier time
explaining to his bosses if the consultants he
engaged know cars.
I
have seen similar cases happened many times, and
in most cases the client cancelled the project
to improve sales team performance, as they were
unwilling to risk (their careers) to bring about
positive changes in their companies.
In
other cases, foreign companies who are
customer-centric in their home countries may
find it difficult to implement a
customer-centric culture in China, because they
may have a management team who are not
customer-centric. This could be attributed that
the concept of serving customers is rather new
to China. The other possible reason could be
that most of the management staff have risen
through the ranks when the China operations were
very production-oriented, and hence have limited
exposure towards serving customers.
Anyway, adapting one's corporate culture to suit
the needs of the market has been a major
challenge for most companies, and is certainly
NOT an area that training can solve. Still,
other challenges lie ahead which need to be
resolved.
Recruiting and Selecting the Right Sales
Talent
When you are identifying the right sales talent,
be it Hunter or Farmer, there is something even
more fundamental than a person's aptitude, past
experiences or even personality. It has to do
with the person's value system.
In
short, anyone who wants to work in a
customer-facing position must want to
"pro-actively help others getting from where
they are to where they want to be, and be justly
rewarded for it". That, I believe, will be the
most fundamental requirement.
Unfortunately, most sales people in China fall
under one of these two types:
-
People
who will get money from customers, by fair means
or foul; OR
-
People
who will stoop down low and be a doormat to
customers, as long as the customers give them
the business
Either type is not healthy, and chances are that
there will be problems in customer retention and
in generating a reasonable profit margin from
each sale.
Worse still, most sales people are in a sales
job largely because they couldn't get any other
job. Not that sales is such a bad job, but many
Chinese perceive serving customers as something
serfs do, and don't hold it in high regard. The
lack of a proper sales force development process
in most companies make such perception a
self-fulfilling prophecy.
As part of the whole complicated story, the cost
of replacing one sales person (whether the
departure is voluntary or otherwise) is at least
6 times the
what you are
paying him/ her each month, as you will need to
search, orientate and train the new staff before
he/ she can be effective. If you were to
add the opportunity costs of lost sales due to
poor hiring, your losses can be even much
higher.
Hence, while selling
skills can be trained, a person's value system
is very much entrenched, and is unlikely to be
changed in a short period of time. The good
news is that there are still people with more
positive values that make great sales
potential. The key is simply how you can
identify one and you see one. e-Mail
info@psycheselling.com to get some simple
yet effective interview guides on how you can
identify get great sales potentials working for
you.
Training and Developing for the Right
Set of Skills
Finally, about training sales people.
Just to set the record straight, sales training
by an external trainer is likely to give
disappointing results, if the training is not
supported by sales managers. By supporting the
training, I mean that sales managers work with
the external trainer to gather the areas of
improvement, as well as structure post-training
monitoring and coaching so that trainees
practiced what was taught.
In
fact, in HR
Chally's 2007 World Class Sales
Excellence Research Report, it was stated that
"sales people who get at least one half day a
week, one-on-one, with their managers are twice
as productive than other sales people".
Hence, before you start training your sales
people in selling skills, ask yourself have you
prepared your sales managers to be one-on-one
coaches with their team members, and if they are
equipped with the right attitude and skills to
lead their sales teams?
If
you aren't so sure about the answer, perhaps you
should stop your sales training now, and start
looking at developing your sales managers to be
good leaders and coaches.
If you
are absolutely lost as to what you should do with
regards to getting better sales results, simply
e-mail
info@psycheselling.com
or call +86-13671902505 or MSN:
cydj@cydj.biz and
arrange to buy me coffee.
Rest assured that we shall uncover things that
simply cannot be changed, and as such, we shall
focus on those areas that we can. All information shall be kept in confidence
Practical Tips:
How to Identify Sales
Training Needs in Simple and Effective Ways
by c.j. Ng
With all the discussion about
how sales training may not necessarily contribute to sales success, many
training managers will still have to implement sales training, simply
because it will be very difficult to explain to management why sales
training as been taken out.
However, management will also
want to find out how "Return on Investment" they are getting from their
sales training, and will want training managers to address specific areas of
improvements for their sales people. Hence, I get a lot of
training managers telling me that they would like to help their sales
people be more "professional" when selling.
When I asked then them how do
they mean by "professional", they couldn't give an answer.
Well, to help training
managers, and even senior management define what is meant by
"professional" sales behaviour, here are some attributes provided by
HR
Chally
after decades of research worldwide.
If you want to train Hunters
to be better Hunters, you may want to focus on one or more of the
following attributes:
-
Effective networking
(and being resourceful to source for qualified leads)
-
Qualifies prospects with
standard probes (rather than chase after leads with low chances
of materialising) -
Closes through logical,
incremental steps (questioning, understanding customers' decision
making processes and requirements etc.) -
Problem-solving (for
customers) -
Opportunistic (able to
seize and create sales opportunities when there are none)
-
Commits time and effort to
ensure success
On the other hand, if
you want to train Farmers to be better in what hey are doing, here are
some other areas of consideration:
-
Optimises results by
increasing sales to existing accounts -
Promotes customer
relations by soliciting feedback (and able to act on any negative
feedback received) -
Educates customers through
structured training -
Maximizes results by
systematically managing an account plan (the key word here is
"plan") -
Works the system for the
customer (making sure customers' needs are fulfilled)
-
Responds at any hour
As you can see from the above
attributes, most sales training are centered on cultivating Hunting
skills, and Farming skills are by far rather neglected. Hence, if
you have sales people whose job is to generate more sales from existing
customers, you may want to focus more on the latter attributes.
There are also different
attributes available for staff who handles Strategic Accounts, leads and
manages sales people, and even for senior management. Contact me
info@psycheselling.com
if you need any of these.
Last but not the least, you
will have to remember that not everybody can be trained in a specific
attribute within a reasonable amount of time. Hence, when
implementing sales training, be realistic in what you want to achieve,
and monitor the results. When in doubt, call me @ +86-13671902505.
About PsycheSelling.com
As you might have heard of them,
the most common
challenges faced by sales people in any country, and across
nearly every industry, are as follow:
-
Unable to qualify for the
right customers;
-
Unable to generate interest
through the telephone;
-
Unable to get to the right
people (who may or may not be whom you think);
-
Unable to define the
decision making structure of customers;
-
Unable to get customers
interested and excited about what you have to offer;
-
Unable to sustain customers’
interest through the sales cycle;
-
Unable to get past clients’
objections and close the sale
-
Spending too much time with
proposals that seem to go nowhere
-
Unable to sell deeper to the
same customers
Having these concerns in mind,
the Psyche-Selling
TM
is created
as a result of 1-to-1 coaching with sales people from a variety of
industries across 13 cities in Asia.
Psyche-Selling TM
is currently a co-affiliate of the
HR Chally Group, together with
Shi Bisset & Associates,
to help you identify gaps in your current sales force, and then
formulate ways to help you get better results.
The HR Chally Group is a talent management, leadership
development, and sales improvement corporation providing personnel
assessment and research services for over 33 years. Chally is
recognised as an international technology leader in scientific
assessment and prediction for selection, job alignment and leadership
development, and for management assessment. For more information
about implementing Total Quality Sales Management in your company, pls.
log on to
http://www.psycheselling.com/TQSM-ExecBrief_email.pdf to get more
insights.
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