Profiling the Successful Salesperson: Myths, Folklore and Progress
By James H. Killian, Ph,D,
With the world economy now in an uptick, many sales
leaders are coming out of the slump with a newly invigorated sense of sales
force management and a commitment to ensuring the right talent is on board and
in the right roles going forward.
As of late, a theme among blogs, newsletters and clients
seems to be a movement of "getting back to basics." However, in good times and
bad - the concept of basic solutions for specific problems is destined to be a
failed one because of its one-size-fits-all approach.
Getting specific is absolutely critical to hiring and
developing the right sales talent for the right sales roles. As the old saying
goes, the devil is in the details.
A recent article, published by the Sales Executive
Council (SEC) entitled "The New High Performer," challenges the concept of
basic sales approaches and sales rep "types" - and Chally agrees with them. In
this article, the SEC surveyed about 450 sales managers and asked them to rate
top performers and core performers across a number of characteristics, in an
attempt to identify trends in performance relative to sales types (i.e.,
specific profiles).
What is appealing about the SEC's approach and results is
that no single sales profile emerged. In fact, the results from the study
identified five different types of sales profiles that emerged from the survey
analyses. As an example, having an outstanding track record of selling snow
tires does not mean the same person will be effective at selling a
sophisticated telecommunications system to a Fortune 500 company. Our research
and common sense dictate that there are significantly different skill sets
involved.
While the SEC's recent article deserves merit, we also
believe that several concepts critical to salesperson performance were neglected
in this research. First, they compared the performance of High Performers to
Core Performers, and the concept of "Core Performer" did not appear to have
been clearly articulated. But based on the presentation of the data, it appears
comparison between sales superstars (the New High Performer) and everyone else
on the team was the method. Chally research has documented that salesperson
performance can be mapped to an almost normal curve, meaning there are fewer
exceptional (unfortunately) performers and an abundance of more average players
on most sales teams. Hence, simply focusing on selecting or developing one
"type" of salesperson (i.e., the coveted superstar) equates to lost effort for
recruiters and hiring managers - and ultimately suppresses overall sales
success. A good analogy is a sports team - take basketball. Michael Jordan was
arguably the best player in the history of the sport, so why didn't Chicago
Bulls Coach Phil Jackson build a team full of Michael Jordans if he was the
best? The answer is simple: there were not enough Michael Jordans from which to
choose. But one can still build a high performing team that is focused on
winning, if a slight change in method and philosophy is taken.
Neglected by most sales managers, industrial psychologists,
human resources managers and researchers is the fact that there is more to a
high-performance sales team than selecting the next Michael Jordan - it is also
about eliminating the players that cost the company money, are difficult to
manage and don't deliver results. It is largely about not hiring the
salespeople who are below average. Ask any sales manager where he or she is
spending most of their time -the majority is dealing with poor performance
issues. Thus, while the aspiration in selection and development efforts is
about hiring/coaching the high-potential salesperson, in practice it's much
more about not hiring the problem employees.
Second, hiring the right salesperson is dependent upon
far more than just whether the person is a debater, relationship-builder, knows
the customer's business and is willing to push people out of their comfort
zones. These descriptive behaviors are certainly useful for development, but
this general and broad approach to predicting whether someone will be
successful or unsuccessful in a specific sales role has proven to be
ineffective. These constructs do a sufficient job of describing someone's
tendencies and are therefore useful for self-awareness and on-boarding new
employees, but they do not identify the specific competencies and behaviors
that someone will need to be a strong performer in a specific sales role.
The crux of the argument is that someone who scores as a
particular sales "type" may be a very good performer, but mostly for a specific
type of sales role. Chally has identified 14 different sales-related profiles,
and while our research concludes that 65% of people who are failing in one role
can be successful in another role, the probability of success depends largely
on whether someone is moving from one specific sales role into another for
which they naturally demonstrate capability.
In fact, our research has demonstrated that those who
have the capability to be a top 20% hunter-type seller demonstrate a diminished
(less than 10%) capacity for being in the top 20% of farming sales roles (e.g.,
account management). This is because there are very specific things that a top
hunter does to make him or her successful that would generally be
counterproductive in another role.
Historically, applied research has shown substantial
differences between skill sets of generalists versus specialists. Recent
research focusing specifically on sales roles suggests differences among
salespeople will dictate whether they are successful in one sales role versus
another (low vs. high complexity). There are very few hybrid sales roles (e.g.,
a hunter and farmer together) that are practical or useful, as a salesperson
very rarely demonstrates exceptional performance in such different sales
disciplines.
Chally believes companies who want to succeed in a
competitive market need to begin with the end in mind and gather thorough
information about the sales position(s) under consideration. An understanding
of exactly what is being sold, to whom it is being sold, sales cycle length,
and how many stakeholders need to be involved is just a surface level synopsis
of the key decision criteria that need to be addressed to specify exactly the
salesperson specialization (and subsequent critical competencies) needed to
ensure success in that specific sales role.
From there, it is vital to select, onboard, develop, plan
and measure those same critical competencies throughout the employee lifecycle
to ensure consistency in methods and measurement. This consistency will go to
ensuring that companies leverage a system that distinguishes strong from poor
performers for a specific role and keep them focused on those things that
reliably predict sustainable results.
Chally is a leading
global provider of Sales and Leadership Talent Management services. On average,
they generate a 30% reduction in turnover, and an increase of 35% in individual productivity
for their clients.