By JOHN KEGECHE
Most salespeople fall on the wayside and many grow into inefficiency. This is the tragedy of the sales profession.
A worrying number of experienced salespeople aren’t really
growing in experience. Their 10 years experience is in fact one year
experience ten times. It is a matter of duration not merit.
This tragedy is aggravated by the fact that the last decade has fundamentally shifted the sales landscape.
Technology is rapidly shifting what was for a long
time a one way street into a dual carriageway. Buyers have greater
access to information and options beyond the average salesperson.
What is the source of this tragedy? First, is it is
foundation – the environment that shapes our formative years.
Education, society and upbringing prepare us for a desk job.
As such, the baseline for growth in employment is
from zero because a footing exists, plus the organisation structure
supports it.
On the other hand, how many teachers, role models
or parents tell their mentees to study hard and be salespeople? Close
to nil. Many people, therefore, are not born salespeople but have it
thrust upon them. Small wonder then that only a handful achieve
greatness.
Selling, on the other hand, starts from below zero
and reaching zero is a feat in itself. To successfully reach the zero
base line, sellers must first unlearn what they learned for close to two
decades and in an environment that treats them as outcasts.
Lacking the requisite support structures (for example, a competent sales manager) makes it a losing battle for many.
Secondly, the nature of selling makes things hard.
Unlike the desk job where work comes to you, selling requires that we
are always looking for work. To thrive, the search must remain never
ending. It’s the very lifeline of the role.
Salespeople have to learn to remain afloat in the
floods of internal pressure for numbers and external rejection by
buyers. Rejection is painful and it torpedoes many sales boats. They
rapidly sink and the captain jumps ship.
Sometimes the captain stays on board because he is
seasoned in steering clear off the waters. He thus remains “experienced”
in his comfort zone. Naturally, growth is stunted.
Another reason why many salespeople grow into
inefficiency is their attitude. Having grown a year past base line, the
sales person wallows in the miasma of the progressive pats on the back
he has been receiving.
He looks around at the novices struggling to get to
zero and feels that he has arrived. He stops learning, developing and
growing. He gets sloppy and inadvertently breaks his prospecting
pattern; he wings his presentations and gets too casual with buyers.
For a moment it works; the momentum he has built in
the past year carries him forward. Soon though, he realises he has been
decelerating. What was once a steady gush is reduced to spurts. This
becomes his new normal.
It is especially difficult to get out of this
predicament if the salesperson lacks a selfish drive to keep him going;
not merely achieving targets for the sake of it (which incidentally is
unsustainable as a motivation tool) but a burning desire for, say,
recognition, helping others, getting a degree or keeping up with the
Joneses.
Interestingly, even those with desk jobs in time find it
necessary to acquire sales skills for their side hustles. Globally, even
with rapidly changing technology replacing many jobs, the one
profession that is still growing is sales. Paradoxically, the
salesperson isn’t.
Arresting this anomaly is a joint effort that pools together the salesperson’s attitude and enabling support structures.
Kageche is lead facilitator, Lend Me Your Ears, a sales training and development firm. Email:lend
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