In Part 1 of this four-part visit, I outlined the goal of this series on measuring your sales funnel, explained some key rules to apply to determine whether a prospect is in your sales funnel and gave you some guidelines for segmenting your sales funnel into different levels you can track.
In Part 2, I explained how to measure your actual sales funnel and how to look at your target vs. actual funnels, so you could easily determine what you should change.
In Part 3, we discussed getting inside your prospects' heads, so you can better tell where they are in their buying cycles and make smarter decisions when dealing with prospects.
In today's visit, we'll talk about relationships between sales managers and salespeople, and then tie everything together so you can make a quantum leap forward in sales success.
The Brutal Reality Of Bad Relationships
The first step to fixing anything is to understand what's broken. So I'll start this relationship subject with the bad and the ugly -- the thoughts usually left unspoken.
You know how every human has an internal voice that never shuts up? That always says what it thinks? That doesn't care about political correctness or the other person's feelings? To help you understand one another better, I'm going to share with you some internal-voice comments that have been shared with me by sales managers and salespeople.
For many people, this is not going to be enjoyable, and it is definitely not going to be warm and fuzzy.
But it will be honest.
Sales Manager's Internal Voice Venting
I'll bet that just about every sales manager managing more than five people is dealing with at least one salesperson who drives him or her nuts. If you're that one, then here is some of what your sales manager's internal voice is probably saying to or about you:
- If there is anything that will always amaze me, it's your limitless ability to blame others for your failures.
- I don't give a hoot what you think might happen with the prospects you've been trying to close for 18 months, and it is not possible for me to be more bored with your complaints about their not acting the way you think they should act.
- If you tell me once more how you can't close at this price, I swear I'm going to drop our prices for a month and then fire you when you can't close at those prices either.
- If you held a gun to my head, I would rather have you pull the trigger than listen to you complain about how the marketing material we supply is not good enough, the website we built is not supporting your selling efforts, the cell phone service we provide is cutting out, the laptops are not fast or light enough, or the customer relationship management system is too difficult to use.
- I've told you a dozen times that the prime time for contacting our prospects is 1:30 to 3 a.m. Yet, in the six months you've been here, I have yet to see you place a single call during that time frame. What, exactly, don't you get?
- If you mention once more how our top salesperson has an unfair advantage, I'm going to show you "unfair" by giving your accounts to [him or her].
- Why can't you just dial the phone and talk to people? It's not rocket science. You don't need hours of analysis to create the perfect offer, because there is no such thing as the perfect offer. Just dial the phone, say what I've taught you to say, learn from the experience and change things as you go.
- Congratulations! You've delivered 37 contracts this year! Whoop-de-frickin'-do! Do you realize that only two of them got signed? And do you have any idea how much it costs this company in man-hours to draw up one contract?
- I'm a sales manager -- not a psychic, not a statistician, not a sounding board and not your mother! In order for me to earn my paycheck, I must do one thing and one thing only -- I must make sure everyone on this team hits or exceeds certain numbers every year. And your subjective guesswork about what might happen, unfounded optimism when evaluating your sales funnel, and complete pessimism when discussing this company and its products and services are flat-out driving me nuts.
Sales Manager Helping
- Tell me you've decided to blow off a prospect who is driving you crazy, and I'll respect you for the decision to cut your losses, help you figure out how to spot the no-win prospects faster and even call that prospect's boss to see if we can circumvent the showstopper and put this one back into your win column.
- Tell me why the last 200 phone calls failed, what you learned from that failure and what you're going to change so that the next 200 phone calls don't fail. Do that, and I'll work with you on anything you need to improve.
- Buy a book on cold-letter writing, and I'll reimburse you for it. Read it and tell me what you've learned, and I'll help you craft your first letter, pay for a professional ad writer to make it rock, hire a copyeditor to perfect it technically and even help you stuff the envelopes.
- Tell me you want to record a four-hour dialing session, and I'll not only buy the recorder, I'll listen to all four hours of the session and work with you to improve your results.
- Give me the recorder and ask me to dial the phone for the same four hours so you can hear real-world examples of how I want you to talk to prospects, and I'll gladly do exactly that.
- Tell me the exact words the prospect used when he said our prices are too high, and I'll help you figure out how to change your behavior so you can close at any price we choose.
- Tell me how you changed your sales process so you can close deals without using our marketing material at all. I'd like nothing better than to have our entire team selling without marketing superfluff, because I'm not that thrilled with the material either.
- Share with me the workaround you created that lets you enter data into our computer system in half the time, and the first time you can't figure out a workaround, I'll go to bat for you to have the system changed to accommodate your needs.
Bottom Line -- Sales Manager To Salesperson: If you want to find the greatest asset you have for being successful, look in the mirror. Then after you've done that, if you want to find the second greatest asset you have, knock on my door. Together, that person in the mirror and I will help you set sales records you never imagined you could achieve.
Salesperson's Internal Voice Venting
Just as good sales managers get frustrated with bottom-tier salespeople, good salespeople get frustrated with bottom-tier sales managers. And their frustrations are usually stronger, I'm afraid, because of the power their inept managers wield.
Not that it will do much to change things, because inept sales managers tend to believe they're great, but here's what good salespeople in this unfortunate situation think about the idiots who manage them:
- How can you pretend to know more than I do about sales when you've never sold a damned thing?
- If you change compensation models again, I'm going to quit, because this company's problems have nothing whatsoever to do with our compensation model. By the way, after I quit, I'm going to violate my non-compete agreement by going to work for our biggest competitor. And when you sue me for it, I'm going to launch a nationwide public relations campaign to beat you over the head with your own stupidity!
- I know you believe there is no "I" in "team," and I know it's your job to make the sales team successful. But I don't get paid based on the team's results. So instead of wasting my time with your team-building garbage, how about letting me use that time to go sell something? Or better yet, let's use that time to get some pros in here for regular training sessions, so we can all grow as professional salespeople?
- Speaking of training, what management training have you taken? And when was the last time you bought a book on how to manage salespeople? How about practicing what you preach just once and learning something yourself?
- Stop living in a world of hype and false information. Find out what really works from successful sales people, not sales psychologists, and pass that along to me. I want to know what they do and how they do it, backed up by real statistics.
- Listen to me once in a while, because I'm out there and sometimes when I tell you the prospect absolutely will not bite at that price, it's because I know what the hell I'm talking about.
- I know the prospect is in Joe's territory, but you and I both know Joe couldn't sell water in the desert. So either turn me loose, or do something to help Joe close this deal. And, by the way, how about a referral-level commission since I produced the lead?
- Have you heard the saying "It's a flat world"? There is no such thing as geographical territory anymore. So how about dropping the false boundaries that are stopping me from selling?
- I'll make a deal with you. You let me know when you want a report on my sales funnel, and I'll let you know when I want your advice on how to sell. How's that sound?
- I'm a salesperson -- not a team catalyst, not a mentor to the people you can't manage and not your "personal project." My goal is to find prospects, build relationships and close deals, and I get paid only when I accomplish all three.
Salesperson Helping
- Start selling with us, so you get some in-the-trenches experience to back up your opinions, and not only will you learn our real-world issues, but I'll have respect for what you say.
- Bring me any idea or technique you've learned from someone on our team and I'll not only pay attention, I'll actually try it to see if it works for me too. And I'll even report my results back to you, so you can help the people who created the idea improve.
- As for your team goals, I certainly understand your job is to make everyone successful. And as a good company employee, I'm glad to offer some help. But don't expect me to sacrifice my own results to help you do your job. Look in your own mirror to find the asset you need to build this team. After that, knock on my door and let's get going.
- I firmly believe that which doesn't grow will die. So I will fully support any effort with the goal of training every person at this company to be better at his or her job. But I will not support selective training efforts designed to mask the incompetence of one person or group.
- If we must have territories, fine. But if you want this company to sell like mad, incorporate a foot-in-the-door payment structure that rewards salespeople like me who are great at finding opportunities in all territories. I'll give one-third of my sales commission to any salesperson who uncovers an opportunity in my territory and hands it to me. How about finding out whether the rest of the team will do the same thing?
- As for our computer software, it was written for managing customers, not producing them, and it slows me down beyond belief. So either come up with a new way for me to report my sales funnel, or suffer the consequences of reduced sales due to abnormal admin time.
Bottom Line -- Salesperson To Sales Manager: If you want me to hit the numbers you've set, realize that from my perspective there is no "team" in "I." And please be more efficient in the time you spend keeping me informed, and the time you make me burn keeping you informed.
Insights
In most cases, salespeople and sales managers never share their negative, internal-voice comments. But the frustration that generates those comments is real, and, unfortunately, present on most sales teams. That's why it's important to get inside the head of your counterpart -- only by walking in the other person's shoes can you glean the insights you need to improve.
So let's glean a few of those insights by looking for common ground between sales managers and salespeople:
- Both want respect.
- Both want efficiency, clarity and objectivity.
- Both want to succeed; although, they do have different goals.
- Both want help succeeding, but both seem to want to be left alone unless they ask for help.
- Both understand the need to fulfill the other's requests, even if it burns some personal time.
Bottom Line: Both want the company, the team and each other to be successful, and are willing to contribute to those successes, but not at the cost of their individuality or their focus on their personal goals.
Tying This All Together
There are a host of reasons I prefer to track and measure sales funnels the way I do (as described in this four-part series). Some of the major ones are:
- Efficiency Of Salespeople's Time: Even using a paper system to implement this sales funnel measurement process, one salesperson can track and report his or her entire sales funnel in less than three minutes per day, because the only things being tracked and reported are those the sales manager needs to know to positively effect change. Add to that the wasted time -- worry time, guesswork time, contract prep time -- that is recovered by understanding what his or her prospects really think, and you have a huge net time gain for this (and every) salesperson.
- Increased Sales: Taking off the rose-colored glasses and looking at brutal reality from your prospects' points of view will always produce more sales, because it keeps you from letting optimism cloud your judgment. And once you eliminate the tire-kickers from the mix, you'll know exactly where to spend your time on any given day.
- Better, More Prolific Management: Using this measurement process also forces sales managers to take off their own rose-colored glasses, which helps them build more solid, trust-based relationships with their team members. And they can more easily tell what's working and what isn't, so they will know what to change and how to change it. Plus, being able to tell which salespeople need help at a glance (comparing target vs. actual funnels as described in Parts One and Two) eliminates the problem of driving the good salespeople crazy with advice.
Bottom Line -- Me To You: Measuring sales funnels this way makes sales managers and the salespeople responsible for not only their own actions, but for the success of their counterparts.
If you and your team want to make a quantum leap forward in sales results, go back over this article series, do every bit of homework suggested, and implement the measurement process on paper (call me at 314-416-1440, and I'll send you a form and additional instructions that will help).
And after you've done it for a month or two, call me with any problems you're having doing it. I'll spend 30 minutes on the phone with anyone, any time, provided it's a serious discussion about making improvements to sales results.
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Gill E. Wagner, Sage of Selling
President of Honest Selling
Founder of the Yellow-Tie International Business Development Association