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Train a Winning Sales Team: Rounding Third and Heading for Home

By: Sally Bacchetta

Article Word Count: 1161 words  [Comments (0)]
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Although I never met the man, I imagine Lou Boudreau would have

made one heck of a field sales trainer. In 1942 the 24-year old

Cleveland Indians shortstop was promoted to player/manager of

his team, and for the next eight years Boudreau did what we, as

trainers, are called upon to do every day: demonstrate success,

inspire success and cultivate success. Think of it as the triple

play of sales training.



DEMONSTRATE



A seven-time All-Star shortstop, Boudreau was only the second

manager to take the Indians to a World Series Championship, and

no one has done so since. Clearly, he was a man who demonstrated

success. As field sales trainers we must similarly make success

a habit. A field contact with a trainer may be the first “in

situ” opportunity a new rep has to test their impressions of the

company, and possibly selling in general.



Is what we say consistent with the corporate sales direction? Is

what we do consistent with what we say? Most importantly, are we

successful at gaining customer commitment and moving the sales

process forward?



Inexperienced reps may need guidance on effective territory

management and specific techniques for gaining access to

prospects. Experienced reps are more familiar with the demands

of the position, so their concerns are usually more

territory-specific. Their willingness to accept us as role

models may depend on how well we demonstrate successful

resolution of field challenges: “The key thought leader in my

area is on the speaker’s bureau for Competitor X. How can I

compete with that?” “Most of my key decision makers won’t see

reps. What can I do to impact their decision making process?”

Established reps need to know that we have successfully overcome

similar challenges and can give them strategies to do the same.



Demonstrating success is also vital because as field sales

trainers we hold a uniquely dual role in the sales organization.

In addition to the time we spend training and coaching sales

reps, most of us are responsible for increasing sales and

growing market share in our assigned territories. Our ability to

manage our time and territory productively is vital in order to

reach our own performance goals.



INSPIRE



Selling is fun when sales are good, but experienced reps know

that’s not always the case. Without any warning you run smack

into a competitor’s newly expanded sales force. Your blockbuster

technology launches with software challenges. You spent your

weekend studying a new clinical reprint, but every doctor you

see wants to talk about last night’s exposé on the cost of

prescription drugs.



Inspiration is our second wind. It keeps us focused on the big

picture when our progress temporarily stalls. It’s a safe bet

that all sales reps want to succeed… a good trainer will inspire

them to succeed. The wanting gives us aim, but it is the

inspiration that makes us reach.



Hall of Fame pitcher Bob Feller understood the power of

inspiration to drive performance: “I remember in 1948... I was

having a rough season, and instead of replacing me Lou

(Boudreau) said ‘We’re going to sink or swim with Feller’. After

he said that I won 10 of my last 12 games. He instilled a

confidence in his players they never forgot.”



In the final analysis inspiration is unique to the individual,

so figuring out how to inspire our sales reps may be the most

challenging aspect of being a trainer. It can also be the most

rewarding.



One way to inspire success is to celebrate its many forms.

Baseball fans illustrate this perfectly. Do they wait

soundlessly for the final out in the bottom of the ninth? Of

course not! They cheer every solid crack of the bat… every

difficult catch… every stolen base, because they recognize that

each of these small successes brings them closer to their

ultimate goal. The more skillful the play the more fervent the

cheer, which motivates the athletes to stretch their abilities

to achieve even more.



I think the single most inspiring thing you can do is to pay

attention to your reps. Don’t wait until the bottom of the ninth

to commend their progress. Make a point to notice their

incremental gains and celebrate their success!



CULTIVATE



When I first started in sales I thought I should be just like

Gregg, the most successful member of my team. I stifled my own

personality and conducted my sales presentations as if I were

Gregg, copying his voice inflections, the rhythm of his speech,

and even some of his jokes. It wasn’t long before I began to

suspect that his achievement was more a matter of luck than

skill, because clearly, this selling approach was a failure!



In truth, the failure was mine. By rejecting my personal style

I had violated one of the fundamental principles in cultivating

success: respect individuality. Gregg’s approach worked for him

because it was his. When I rediscovered my style and trusted my

own instinct, that’s when I developed success. When Boudreau was

promoted to player/manager his team was made up of more than

just shortstops. He led his team to victory by relying on each

player’s unique strengths to overcome the challenges of their

position. Whether we are working with new or veteran reps, we

must respect that their individual traits and talents have

gotten them this far. Our job is to expect more.



How can we help our reps progress from expecting more to

achieving more? By encouraging risk taking and new behaviors.

Too conservative a team culture makes it difficult to raise the

bar; few are willing to reach higher, for fear of falling short.

As trainers we should be first at bat, risking innovative

approaches and new ideas. Boudreau wasn’t afraid to think

differently. He recognized that teammate Bob Lemon was misplaced

as an infielder, so he reassigned him to pitcher, liberating

Lemon from mediocrity and helping him achieve MVP/All Star

status.



BATTER UP!



Just as a coach can’t swing the bat for the player at the

plate, we can’t be with our teams every play of the game. We

must share our best techniques for sales success, so that when

split-second adjustments need to be made, they have the skills

to make the right ones.



“I can’t be with you every day” has become something of a team

slogan; a reminder that ultimately we each bear responsibility

for creating our own success. As trainers our mission is to

teach the art of unflinching self-assessment. Perhaps the most

important thing we can give our reps is the ability to evaluate

themselves honestly and specifically. Once they master that

skill set they will be rounding third and heading for home!



Copyright ©2004 by Sally Bacchetta. All rights reserved.

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