Informative practical answers to tough sales questions - sound advise and tips to help you win more sales!

Every month I receive a variety of questions from salespeople and their managers. These come from a variety of sources - my live seminars, the monthly phone seminars, questions that are sent into my newsletter, and issues that arise in the course of my consulting work. Out of all of these, I select those that I think have the most universal application, and respond to them here.


Transforming Your Sales Force

Transforming Your Sales Force for the 21st Century
The book, written for sales managers and executives in the distribution industry, provides a blue print for executives to transform their sales forces into highly directable, effective, focused performers.
more info

How to Creat a Win/Win Sales Compensation Plan

How to Create a Win/Win Sales Compensation Plan
Make use of this program to guide you through the process of creating a winning sales compensation plan, reduce your risks, and ensure that you make the best decisions. Let Dave show you how to create a win/win formula.
more info

 

 

 

How can I help an experienced salesperson regain his interest in the job?

It sounds like you have someone who is just going through the motions. That can be deadly for the career of a sales person, as well as detrimental to the company.

One of the unique challenges of a career in sales arises out of one of the unique fringe benefits of being a salesperson. That is that salespeople have the opportunity to decide what they do with almost every minute of every day. Freedom!
FREE 30-page "Handling Objections" workbook. Just join Dave's information packed "Thinking About Sales" ezine, also FREE!

Email Address: First Name: Choose the list you wish to join.

Ezine for Managers
Ezine for Salespeople

Dave Kahle Phone Seminars
However, with that freedom comes a great responsibility to make good decisions. It's one of the biggest, if not the biggest, challenges to the job of the salesperson. That's why so many sales managers concern themselves with "motivating" sales people. If the salesperson isn't motivated to do as well as he/she can, then he naturally defaults to an uninspired, reactive mode of decision-making. And that brings us to the question at hand. If a salesperson has lost interest, he/she is not motivated, and that means that he'll default to reactive, "fill-in-the-day with unimportant stuff" mode. And that means reduced sales production for the sales person and for the company.

Here are some options for you to consider.

  • It may be that the salesperson is experiencing some adversity in his personal life that has caused him to lose interest in the job. If that's the case, then you'll need to help him to realize that, and develop a plan to rectify it. Have lunch with him, probe into the issues, and see if you can uncover the cause of the problem.

  • It may be that the challenge has gone out of the job. So, put some challenge back into it. Sit down with the salesperson and create a set of performance goals that will stretch the salesperson and cause him to push beyond his comfort zones to attain them. Set some motivating rewards for the attainment of those goals.

    Another way to put some challenge back into the job is to make a significant change in the accounts for which he is responsible. Trade half his accounts with another territory, thereby forcing him to learn the new customers and stretching him out of his comfort zones.

  • Another approach is to find some responsibilities for this salesperson above and beyond just selling to his customers. You may want to bring him into decisions about new products, or have him second interview prospective salespeople, or solicit his opinion on key moves that the company is considering. If you can find some contribution he can make to the company above and beyond the sales dollars, you'll make him feel like a more valuable part of the company.

  • Finally, it may be the salesperson doesn't realize the extent nor the seriousness of his problem. Have a heart-to-heart conversation with him. Clearly identify the problem and the consequences of it for him and the company. Then work with him to develop a specific plan to resolve the issue. Finally, meet regularly with him to assess his progress and to hold him accountable.
Which of these approaches works best for you depends on your knowledge of this person. Choose the approach that feels best. Good luck.

-  *  -  *  -  *  -  *  -  *  -  *  -  *  -  *  -  *  -  *  -  *  -

If you have any comments or questions, email them to me. I do, of course, reserve the right to edit

.

Here are a few articles by Dave
that you might be interested in reading:

  • What's the Best Way to Find a Good Salesperson... Good question! It seems that everyone has a favorite response. Some people only use recruiters, and others swear by networking. But classified ads continue to be the most common choice. Almost everyone who hires salespeople will, at some time, search for prospects via the "help wanted" section.... {Read More}

  • Is it Time to Revise Your Sales Compensation Plan?... If you're paying your sales reps straight commission, you're using an obsolete formula. If you're paying your sales reps a straight salary, you're also using an obsolete formula. Read this article to find out a much more effective way to compensate your sales staff.... {Read More}

  • How to Deal with the Salesperson Who Has Leveled Off... Every manager has, or will, confront this troublesome issue. Itīs arisen in every workshop for sales managers or branch managers Iīve done. One or more of your salespeople has leveled off. Their performance hasnīt improved much in the last few years. Where before you were able to count on significant increases each year, now you can not. You know that these experienced salespeople can do better, but they seem unable or unwilling to break out of a certain level of performance. You are scratching your head, frustrated, and loosing sleep at night wondering how to improve the situation. What do you do?... {Read More}
There are also many other action-packed articles for sales professionals that offer how-to solutions to every day sales problems that you can read online at www.davekahle.com/article.htm.