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The Top Six Reasons Why Sales Managers Fail Their Teams

I’ve mentioned this many times. The job of a sales manager is one of the toughest occupations in the world. Just as with any job, part of success is skill and knowledge and part of it is the internal components of the individual.

Sales managers fail for many different reasons, and if you are a sales manager or VP, ask yourself if any of these issues have ever caused problems for you or others you know.

Failure #1—The Sales manager is not wired for the job. As you will find in Blueprint of a Sales Champion, there is a formula for determining a salesperson’s capacity to perform.

There’s no difference with sales managers. Many ineffective sales managers come from the ranks of the sales team. Often, they were excellent salespeople who were moved up based on the presumption that if they were good at sales, they’ll be good at sales management. Not so.

The skill sets and internal wiring are completely different for the two professions. When a sales manager doesn’t have the capacity to perform in that role, he will fail (and many times bring the organization down with him.)

Failure #2—A good candidate for a sales management position rarely gets the chance. Poor performance in a sales role becomes a stumbling block for advancement.

Unfortunately, many of the best sales managers were, at best, mediocre salespeople. Consider some of the most successful NFL coaches. Many of them were very marginal players or never played the game at all.

They had a greater capacity to coach, communicate their vision, and lead the team than to participate on the field as a star player. Any sales organization that hires a sales manager largely on past performance in sales may miss out on a great sales leader.

Failure #3—The sales manager lacks training. Place anyone in any position and give them no training, and what do you have? You get an employee who stays in a constant state of frustration.

Sales managers don’t instinctively know how to fulfill the role. They must be given the training and resources to understand and recognize what each individual salesperson needs to help them be successful.

A sales manager who has very little dedicated training will significantly hamper the ability of the salespeople to do their jobs and reduce the organization’s competitive edge.

Failure #4 – Lack of an effective selling system.

Football teams don’t go out on the field without a clearly designed play to run. Without a selling system every salesperson knows and follows, the salespeople will make it up as they attempt to move through the sales process. There’s no repeatable formula for success. Sometimes they get the sale, sometimes they don’t. Unfortunately, there’s no way to determine why they did or didn’t get the sale – and then coaching becomes a difficult task.

When the sales manager doesn’t provide the sales team with a clearly defined selling system, the players will squander opportunities your competitors will get.

Failure #5 – Lack of an effective hiring process. Gut feelings and speculation in the selection process will limit your ability to make the right choice. Just like having a selling system for your sales team to follow is important, so is utilizing an effective hiring system.

We provide in-depth assessment tools and experienced analysis of the results to help you acquire the best sales talent possible.

Remember, it’s the sales managers responsibility to make the right judgments about hiring new salespeople. And without a defined process utilizing objective measurements, hiring decisions can end up being a toss-up.

Failure #6 - Lack the understanding of the concept of coaching. If a sales manager sees himself as a “manager,” he can easily be driven by the administrative functions of the job: administration, spreadsheets, operational issues, etc.

A “coach,” on the other hand, works with the salespeople to develop them in individual areas, strategizes with them on difficult deals, holds them accountable for their results, provides feedback on performance issues, as well as course corrects before the month is over to help prevent sales failure.

I’ll say it again. Sales management is a tough job. Invest the time and energy in sales management training and reap the rewards of a successful sales team.

If you are a sales manager struggling to find answers about your sales team, or you’re a VP of Sales frustrated with the direction your sales managers are going, contact us at 336.665.0506.

About the Author

Barrett Riddleberger is an internationally recognized leader in the practice of sales assessment, sales training, sales recruitment and retention. His new book, “Blueprint of a Sales Champion,” details how organizations can find, train and retain top performing salespeople even in a highly competitive market. An accomplished lecturer, Riddleberger is also highly in demand as a business development and motivational speaker for organizations seeking to inspire their sales force. For more info go to www.ResolutionSystemsInc.com or www.BlueprintOfASalesChampion.com or call 336.665.0506

 
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Resolution Systems, Inc. provides highly effective sales training and sales assessment tools, including custom sales training solutions,
resources for hiring salespeople, as well as sales management training and sales consulting services. From new
sales team training programs to evaluating your current sales team, sales assessments and ability tests from Resolution Systems, Inc.
are research-based, results-driven and most importantly, proven.