NZ Sales Manager - Issue 93

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NZSALES APRIL | ISSUE 93

Hiring Your Next Superstar Getting the most out of the interview and selection process Page 6

NZ’S E-MAG FOR SALES LEADERS | WWW.NZSALESMANAGER.CO.NZ


From the Editor H

ow to identify and recruit sales people who will be successful is one of the toughest challenges for sales managers. It is tough for many reasons, not least of which is that if you are new to sales management you will probably have no recruitment experience. I’ve yet to see an induction manual with a section on how to recruit sales people either. (Let me know if you have!). A successful sales team requires the sales manager to recruit the

right people. It is possibly the most important job for the sales manager or business owner to get right. In this issue, in the first of a series of two articles, talent development specialist Steve Evans explains three steps to take to reduce the risk of making a poor recruitment decision.

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ABOUT Short and sharp, New Zealand Sales Manager is a free e-magazine delivering thought provoking and enlightening articles, and industry news and information to forward-thinking sales managers, business owners and sales professionals. 02 |

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ISSN 2230-4762 EDITOR Paul Newsom GROUP EDITOR Richard Liew

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contents

APRIL

THIS MONTH'S MUST READ...............................................................................................................6 HIRING YOUR NEXT SUPERSTAR

10 TIPS TO IMPROVE TELEPHONE SALES TECHNIQUE..................................................12 DEVELOP A BETTER WORK/LIFE BALANCE.............................................................................16

TWO MINUTE TOP-UP.......................................................................................................................18 WHY SALES TRAINING DOESN’T WORK

QUICK FIX..........................................................................................................................................20 It’s not what you sell, it’s how you sell

BOOK REVIEW...................................................................................................................................22 As You Think by James Allen

CALENDAR.......................................................................................................................23 THE CLOSE........................................................................................................................................24

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MUSTREAD

Hiring Your Next Superstar Getting the most out of the interview and selection process Words by Steve Evans

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B

efore we get into the prickly subject of teasing out the sales superstars from the ‘also-rans’, we need to understand that the main tool that we use to select staff is, at best, going to give a seasoned interviewer a one in four chance of getting it right. In the hands of an untrained or inexperienced interviewer, it will be little better than putting on a blindfold and picking a CV from the pile in determining whether a candidate is going to perform in the job. It has been common knowledge for decades that the selection interview is a very poor predictor of whether a candidate is going to perform in any job. When it comes to sales jobs, the interview becomes even less effective. Most sales candidates can present themselves well at interview and are adept at brushing over the areas they would rather you didn’t explore and usually arrive with glowing references. While some recruiting managers may see these factors as evidence of sales skills, most will grimace with pain in recalling occasions of hiring staff that were good at interviews but precious little else.

It has been common knowledge for decades that the selection interview is a very poor predictor of whether a candidate is going to perform in any job. When it comes to sales jobs, the interview becomes even less effective.

When you look at the bottom-line of the revenue generated by a sales person hitting one hundred percent of their targets, as opposed to someone hitting just forty percent, then the need to make the most from the imperfect art of staff selection becomes clear. There are three practical steps that any sales manager can take to reduce the risks of making poor selection decisions at a time when strong sales performance is more important than ever. www.nzsalesmanager.co.nz |

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1

Know what you are looking for

Going into the interview process without having clear goals on what you want to measure is as ineffective as selling without clear goals for prospecting, call cycles or sales plans. How will you select the right candidate if you don’t know what you are looking for? The reliability of the selection interview rises dramatically when the interviewer has a clear picture of the behaviours, skills and competencies associated with success in the job. For those of you with a strong HR function in your business, your first port of call should be the job description and competencies for the specific vacancy. For those without on-tap HR support, we take a look at the core sales competencies and interview questions in the next issue of NZ Sales Manager. 08 | www.nzsalesmanager.co.nz

2

Raise your game in interviewing

The next step to increase the effectiveness of interviews is to ensure they are conducted by someone who knows how to do it. Interviewing is a bit like driving a car in that you hardly ever meet someone prepared to admit they aren’t very good at it. It seems to suggest that we are not a good judge of character, or our interpersonal skills are somehow incomplete; both of which are admissions few sales managers would feel comfortable making. The reality is that selection interviewing is a prized skill developed through practice and training in effective interviewing methods, most notably behavioural or competency based interviews. If you don’t interview very often or are untrained, then bring in a seasoned and trained interviewer to help you reduce the risk of making a poor selection decision. If interviews are likely to become a significant part of your job, then get trained in Competency Based Interviewing.

The reliability of the selection interview rises dramatically when the interviewer has a clear picture of the behaviours, skills and competencies associated with success in the job


3

Back up your selection decision with reliable supporting information

The greatest improvement that can be made to the process of selecting the right candidate is to add other criteria to back up your decision. Most recruiters make superficial in-roads here, usually in checking references, but few take sufficient steps to make a strong selection decision. We already know that there is no perfect correlation between the selection method used and performance in the job. But the more steps we take to assess the candidate, the more we reduce the risk of getting it wrong. www.nzsalesmanager.co.nz

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References are as notorious as interviews when it comes to making selection decisions. How many of you have been on the brink of firing a useless sales person when they flounce into your office and announce they are leaving? What kind of reference are you going to give them to help them on their way? Also, remember that many separation packages reached outside of employment tribunals include ‘a good reference’. I’m not suggesting that recruiting managers should stop checking references. But I would advise that they use the same diligence as they apply to the selection interview by asking the same competency based questions and insisting on specific examples. References should always be checked by phoning the referee as people will tell you much more than they are prepared to write down. In sales, it also pays to get a reference from a key client of the candidate as well as the employer to get a sense of how their customers see the candidate. Sales Aptitude/Psychometric Tests bring objective, independent and unbiased information into making the selection decision. They will help identify sales superstars, people unlikely to cut it in sales environments and the personal development plans required to get a good candidate to be a great performer before the Employment Agreement gets signed. Just ensure the test you use is from a reliable test publisher; something that a freebie downloaded from the internet is unlikely to deliver. Sales simulations and role plays are little used in New Zealand but can bring valuable additional information to the selection process on how the candidate is likely to perform in the job. Choosing simulated role plays that have been tried and tested to ensure they measure what they claim to measure is the first step to ensure you don’t fall

 www.peoplecentral.co.nz

into the trap of choosing a tool that won’t do the job. Secondly, ensure that the role play fits the sales job you are assessing. A relationship sales role, where long term business is generated through sales presentations to panels of decision makers, requires a different role play to one-off high volume retail sales. Following these three steps isn’t a quick or easy process, but the time and financial investment in getting a clear picture of the person you want to recruit, acquiring the skills to interview effectively and backing up the shortcomings of the selection interview with additional measures of candidates effectiveness will reap huge dividends in increased sales volumes by effective sales people. In Part 2 of this article in the next issue of NZSM, Steve explores the core sales competencies and suggests interview questions to evaluate them.

Steve Evans of People Central helps businesses to attract, recruit, retain and develop talented individuals and teams. Visit Steve’s website at www.peoplecentral.co.nz 010 |

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10 Tips to Improve Telephone Sales Technique Increase Your Sales Words by Matthew Mewse

1 Call Preparation Make sure you know what you’re going to say, when and why! The last thing you want is to be on a call to a client and not know what’s going to fall out of your lips next. Make sure you create at least a short guide so you can map your way through to a successful call.

2 Call Review This is where we learn what works! Try and review your good calls. Forget the bad ones or what didn’t do well and focus on what we did do well. Was there a phrase you used that your prospect or client liked? Did the timing and pace of delivery go as planned? What could you do better? Then you can incorporate these points into the next call. Develop and evolve what works for you. 012 | www.nzsalesmanager.co.nz


3

5

Introductions

Call disciplines

Don’t mess about!

Manage time and continuity for better success.

On a business to business call don’t ask if they have a couple of minutes, they answered the phone so they must have. Secondly try not to ask how they are today. You need to get to the

If you have several or many calls of a similar type to make, keep focused. Try not to make one call, have a break or do something else in between. Also, where possible keep similar types of calls together. This helps your flow. Start and finish the calling session in one go. You’ll get continuity, warmed up for calling and more confident as you push on. Plus, you get through what must be done!

point and not sound like a run-ofthe-mill telemarketer.

4

Use a successful formula for your introduction Tell them who you are, where you’re from, and the reason for the call and then ask a 'hotbutton' question. The great Alan Pease explains a hot-button when pressed should make a good prospect or client interested in what you have to say. Create your own hot-buttons and use them during the call.

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Have you seen our website? It's www… Instead of just blurting out a web address or even a contact point you might want someone to call, ask them, “Have you got a pen handy?”. Most people scramble around and find one or just say, “Yes”. Guess what they do now when you tell them your web or number? Yup, they write it down!

7

There’s a problem About service, product, money or there's an objection. Use two of the most powerful words you can ever say on the phone. If you are faced with conflict, pricing problems, complaints or any time there is an uncomfortable issue, just say “I understand”. Do you know how difficult it can be to argue or even get cross with someone who understands?

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How to soften your qualifying and questioning Sometimes we need to qualify a prospect or just ask a customer a question about their needs, maybe even about our own delivery of service. Try to bridge with phrases like, “And we wondered John…if you ever felt…”. Or you can use third-party examples like; “I was speaking to a business owner the other day, and he said to me, “Matthew, we turnover more than $800,000 a year”, would you say your company was similar John?”.

9

Be prepared for all the objections You know you’ll get a few and, after all, haven’t you heard them all before? Even though they are said in a different way, most are familiar. Too busy, no budget. Whatever they are and whichever you face in your business, be ready and have a quality response. Nothing works all the time, but handling objections effectively will always increase your sales.

10

Just before you pick up that phone Imagine! As you punch in the number to call your prospect or client, ask yourself this: 'What would it be like to receive a call from me? How do I sound to others? Do I sound the way the prospect expects to hear me? Is my tone okay and not too selling? Am I too fast usually or too slow?' Imagine, and then you’ll hear yourself on a call.

Please visit the Resources page at www.supersizeyoursales.com for more telephone sales help. • ●

 www.supersizeyoursales.com For more telephone sales help, visit www.supersizeyoursales.com

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Develop a Better Work/life Balance Words by Tom O'Neil

E

arlier this year, Yahoo's CEO Marissa Mayer instituted a 'work from home' ban for all her employees. Despite this, and other employers similar policies, the consensus among employers and employees is that finding a healthy work/life balance is good for staff and profits.

Happy people are more fun to be around, have better relationships and are more engaged at work. In short, a happy employee is more useful than someone who is stressed. No one has ever said on their death bed: "I wish I had spent more time at the office". However, many people live as if this was true, spending time off answering phone calls and checking emails, not detaching from work entirely. Long-term, this can lead to issues such as excessive tiredness, lack of productivity and disconnection from people.

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The ways an employer can improve work/life balance for employees include Flexi hours, compressed work weeks, job-sharing, telecommuting and child-care support. These options allow employees to have more control over their lives, enabling them to be more productive. Tips to develop a better work-life balance

Ways employers can assist Employers need to understand a mentally and physically healthy person is a good employee. Making team members work extra hours only builds resentment over the long term. My wife left her specialised role as a quality controller because her employer wouldn't let her have two weeks' holiday to go to a wedding in the UK. She had worked for the company for four years, had given it six months' notice of the trip and had three weeks' holiday owing.

• Leaving work at work. Turn off your cell phone, shut down your laptop and set a clear boundary between work and home. Ask your family to make you accountable to ensure you don't slip back into old habits.

The ways an employer can improve work/life balance for employees include Flexi hours, compressed work weeks, jobsharing, telecommuting and childcare support. These options allow employees to have more control over their lives, enabling them to be more productive.

• Saying no to stressful things that will only cause conflict later on. This allows you to focus on the parts of your life you really care about and give them 100 percent of your attention.

Finding a quality work/life balance that suits you is important over your long-term career.

• Managing your time effectively by putting family events in a shared calendar and keeping a daily to-do list. Make sure you complete the important things and don't worry about the rest.

Put good plans in place now to ensure you will still be enjoying your career for many years to come. •

To ensure you make the best of your time at work and home, good ideas include: • Analysing the use of your time and deciding what's important. Set up a new daily regime ensuring the main things remain the main things.

 www.tomoneil.com

Tom O'Neil is an internationally best selling business author, award winning motivational speaker and NZ Herald business columnist. You can contact Tom to speak at your conference by visiting his website - www.tomoneil.com www.nzsalesmanager.co.nz

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TWOMINUTETOPUP

Why Sales Training Doesn’t Work

Words by Steve Bambury

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M

y journey as the prospective new customer has not been as easy as it ought to be so I thought I would share some of the obstacles I have come across that many of us including myself may be guilty of, probably without even realising it. Here are five simple tips to consider that can make all the difference and ensure that you don’t make the same mistakes that so many companies do when it comes to developing and growing your sales. 1. In an attempt to save money from the start, some companies simply choose off-the-shelf, generic training programmes that typically have little or no relevance to the needs of your team – avoid these at all costs!

Failure to assess the needs of your team and clearly define the outcomes required will likely lead to a generic training programme that either has content that’s not required, leaves out relevant and important content that is actually needed or, worse still, a combination of both!

Whatever the case, if you don’t evaluate and assess your team 2. Take the time to evaluate the needs of your team before you and clearly define the objectives prescribe a training solution. Clearly identify where your team is now and desired outcomes the result is and where you need them to be to deliver the results you desire. all too often a training programme 3. Ask the tough questions – do I have the right people in the right with little or no relevance to what’s roles to take us on the journey. Find an assessment tool that truly needed to support your will answer these questions, preferably one that also shows you team in the field and a Return on their growth potential. See here for an example https://www. Investment that won’t delight your objectivemanagement.com/assess-your-candidates.aspx key stakeholders. 4. Define what success looks like. It sounds pretty simple, but it is often overlooked. Take the time to describe the outcomes you want to achieve and share them with both your team and the training provider. 5. Measure your performance against your goals. Establish key metrics that clearly show your progress and provide both transparency and a framework of accountability for all involved.

To understand why sales training doesn’t work plus other key common mistakes that are easily avoided simply download the free whitepaper ‘Why Sales Training Does NOT Work’. • ●

 www.salesstar.com

Steve Bambury is a Sales Development Specialist with Sales Star. To find out more visit www.salesstar.com www.nzsalesmanager.co.nz

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QUICKFIX

Finding Your Way to the Decision Makers

W

e know how important it is for sales people to be talking with the

or ‘who will make the decision’, can be awkward and may either hit your prospects self esteem, or make you look stupid if you have misread the situation.

decision makers. But how do we

A better way is to ask ‘who, as well as yourself, will be making a decision on this?’ This assumption that your prospect is to be included in the decision will protect their self esteem, and the assumption that someone else might be, will open the way to identifying who else you need to talking with. ●

find out who they are? The best way is to ask. Asking ‘are you the decision maker’,

020 | www.nzsalesmanager.co.nz 020 | www.nzsalesmanager.co.nz


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RESOURCECORNER

As You Think I

n 1904, a little-known Englishman named James Allen wrote a small book called As a Man Thinketh. A hundred years later, this book has become a self-empowerment classic. New World Library author and publisher Marc Allen updated this timeless gem, recasting obsolete language and polishing the author's message to highlight the universal principles of the original. James Allen's message has now reached a whole new generation of readers with As You Think. Great truths are simple and easy to express, and James Allen's insights into self-empowerment are just that: Personal power lies within the mind. Once awakened, there are no limits to what one can imagine and then achieve with the power of thought.

 022 |

The author shares deep insights into the essential relationship of a person's thoughts to personal character, life circumstances, physical health, life purpose, achievement, and personal serenity. As You Think is a simple yet powerful reminder that "all we achieve and all that we fail to achieve is the direct result of our own thoughts." We are the masters of our destinies. â—?

Available from Amazon

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By James Allen


EVENTSCALENDAR

DATE

NAME

PLACE

COMPANY

14 April

Sales Seminar

Christchurch

Top Achievers

15-16 April

Essential Marketing Boot Camp

Auckland

The Marketing Company

16 April

Cold Calling and Prospecting

Auckland

Top Achievers

20-22 April

Sales Performer

Auckland

David Forman

21 April

Sales Basics

Auckland

Geewiz

22 April

Customer Service

Auckland

Geewiz

22 April

Key Account Management

Wellington

NZIM

23 -24 April

First Line Leadership

Auckland

David Forman

28 April

Sales Management

Auckland

Top Achievers

29 April

Create a Marketing Plan

Wellington

Geewiz

29-30 April

Essential Marketing Boot Camp

Christchurch

The Marketing Company

7 May

Sales Training Seminar

Hamilton

Top Achievers

8 May

Key Account Management

Auckland

NZIM

12 May

Sales Performer

Auckland

David Forman

13-14 May

Persuasive Selling Bootcamp

Christchurch

The Marketing Company

19 May

Sales Basics

Auckland

Geewiz

19 May

Cold Calling and Prospecting

Auckland

Top Achievers

20 May

Sales Management

Auckland

Geewiz

27 May

Advanced Serious Selling

Auckland

Geewiz

29 May

Sales Management

Auckland

Top Achievers

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THECLOSE

"I can't change the direction of the wind, but I can adjust my sails to always reach my destination." - Jimmy Dean

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