Then the meeting adjourned for the break. I can tell you that, like others around me, I needed to go to the bathroom, but I was afraid to even leave the room for fear that someone would think, “There goes one of the garbage collectors.” I was afraid to budge.
When the meeting resumed some fifteen minutes later, to my surprise and happiness, at least half of the applicants had either left or had been told to leave. I didn’t know which and I didn’t care. The more people left, the better my chances of getting one of the “couple” of open positions.
As the meeting continued, the company executive talked more about the company and the compensation package. By then I was hooked. I wanted this job and I hoped I would have the chance to prove I was the one the company should hire. However, others came to a different conclusion. One by one they got up and left the room.
At the end of the meeting, the company executive told the remaining applicants that he and other managers of the company would be available to interview each of us one-on-one after another fifteen-minute break. The successful candidates would be chosen on the basis of those interviews.
By the end of the day I had the job, along with two other applicants. And by week’s end I was the only person remaining from the original interview.
In case you are wondering about the claims the company made during their opening presentation, the ad was true. As promised, the job was to move stock from the warehouse. However, as it turned out, I didn’t move the stock the way I had imagined. I moved it when, as instructed, I knocked on doors and successfully sold a Kirby vacuum cleaner. It was a door-to-door sales position.
The company hadn’t lied about the income either. As long as I did everything they taught me to do, and did it every day, I always made more than what they had guaranteed.
I didn’t apply for a sales job; at least I hadn’t intended to. I didn’t consider myself a salesperson, born or not. If I’d known, I probably would not have answered the ad. I was tricked into applying for a sales position, and for that I thank the Kirby Company to this day.
Kirby taught me a process for selling. They told me—and I was open-minded enough to believe them—that if I followed the steps they laid out, studied and practiced my presentation, and knocked on enough doors, I would succeed. If you divided the world into two groups, they said, one would be more or less inclined to buy anything you asked them to buy. The other group wouldn’t buy anything you asked them to buy. The secret was to ask enough people to buy your product and you would, at the very least, stumble onto the group that would buy. You just had to keep asking, keep knocking, keep believing, and keep smiling.
Since then my career has soared, and I continue to enjoy the fruits of my success. I have also had the pleasure of sharing the skills I developed in sales with thousands of other salespeople and watching as their careers blossomed.
I know many companies that only use door-to-door methods to sell their wares. They find the method to be a quicker, more efficient way to reach a potential buyer, and they have grown their businesses dramatically as a result.
There is a saying that good things come to those who wait. But I believe that in sales, the only thing that comes to those who wait is whatever is left behind by those who hustle. The door-to-door salesperson will almost always out-produce and out-earn the salesperson who waits patiently for leads to come in, regardless of where those leads come from.
Selling is a process that you or anyone else can learn. And if you practice, study, and use a scripted presentation designed to achieve results, you too will be highly successful.
In the next few chapters I will lay out the process for sales management success in an easy-to-learn and easy-to-follow way. If you follow the steps and practice them diligently, you will see your sales department—and your income—grow. I guarantee it.
2. The Professional Salesperson
Are your salespeople professional salespeople? How does one qualify as a professional salesperson? How can you prove someone is a professional salesperson? What observable qualities do professional salespeople posses? What does a professional salesperson know?
I had a discussion recently with a director of training for a national security alarm company. We were discussing statistics he should gather about sales performance in order to better help his company’s sales force. Directors of sales teams, sales managers, and team leaders regularly face the challenge of analyzing members of their sales team to determine training requirements, field support, or counseling, or to decide when it is time to cut losses and terminate a salesperson. I told him that from my experience the best approach was to start with the desired results and work backwards. I went on to explain what I meant.
I believe all professional salespeople should know to a decimal point what their performance statistics are, and therefore what they must do to achieve their desired income. Unfortunately, newer salespeople likely do not know their statistics, and thus need help and training to learn how to measure their own performance. As managers, I explained, we should know the statistics for each of our salespeople so we can help them become successful.
Compare sales with other professions and you will notice similarities. For example, baseball players know within a decimal point what their batting average is, and they track that average on a monthly basis. They know that their average most often dictates their earning ability. The higher the average the more they can negotiate for when it is time to renew their contract.
Basketball players, tennis pros, and volleyball players are acutely aware of how their statistics determine their incomes. Salespeople should also be acutely aware of the statistics that drive their success, and their managers must be aware too. When sales pros know the equivalent of their batting averages, they possess an important piece of their income forecast model. They know what they have to do to achieve their financial goals. Not knowing your closing ratio makes income forecasting near impossible.
Let’s say that a salesperson—we’ll call her Sarah—has joined my company. As her manager, shortly after hiring her, regardless of her level of experience, I will ask how much money she wanted to earn in total compensation that year. Will she know the answer to that question? We all have a desired income level, but often the less experienced sales people don’t sit down and say out loud to themselves, their spouses, their friends, or their relatives what that goal is. If they did, they might hold themselves responsible to hit that target.
So let’s say that Sarah tells me she wants to earn $90,000 over the next twelve months. If she were a professional salesperson who knew her statistics, she would be able to work backwards to determine the daily activity needed to achieve this objective. However, Sarah is new to sales, and nobody taught her how to forecast her financial year, so she doesn’t know how to plan her day-to-day activities. As the company sales manager or training manager, I should know what the overall performance averages in my company are, and by using that knowledge I should help Sarah plan her activities so she can achieve her goal. Over time I should be able to determine Sarah’s personal averages, and with that knowledge we’ll be able to fine-tune her financial planner.
Let’s say that at my company, people who sell the products and or services Sarah will be selling earn on average $400 per sale. My first step, then, is to divide the earning goal of $90,000 per year by our company average, $400 per sale, to determine how many average sales she needs to make by year end to achieve her financial goal. Next,