A pretty good salesman was terminated by his company
recently. It took me by surprise.
I had met with this fellow a number of times and found him
to be friendly, knowledgeable, a good listener and a hard worker. His sales skills
were (are) top notch. He was terminated for lack of sales.If someone can’t sell and won’t make an effort to learn to sell, they probably should be doing something else for a living. On the other hand, I tend to defend those who make an effort and work to grow as a professional salesperson.
Something Doesn’t Add-up
When a consummate sales pro gets canned for lack of sales it causes me to think that something else contributed to his poor performance. There are often critical success factors that are company issues and out of the control of the sales rep that weight negatively on results. Let’s explore some of those potential job killing factors.
Factors
Bad Marketing/ImageIt is easier to open doors, book meetings and land business if the company, products and services are promoted to prospective customers. Going on sales calls stone cold is measurable harder than approaching someone who is aware of the company and is interested in learning more.
Bad Messaging
If marketing campaigns, materials and messaging are not good
they can work against salespeople in the field. If they are real good they will
help create interest. Bad messaging works against field salespeople.
Bad Products
If there is something better out there from competitors it
puts good salespeople at a disadvantage. It is an uphill battle to overcome
competitive disadvantages, particularly if the competition presents a plausible
case. Representing out dated products, technologies, services, etc. can dampen
results.
Bad Services
If the company isn’t responsive, misses key dates, ships
defective merchandise and makes other fundamental customer service mistakes it
sends a clear message to customers that the company doesn’t care about their
business. Sustaining customers under less than stellar recurring circumstances
is difficult at best for any sales professional.High Prices
No one can be proud of being consistently the lowest bidder. Selling on price is not selling. What skill is involved with giving away profit dollars and working at low margins for no good reason? That said, it is tough to prosper when your prices are always the highest. You can justify a premium price point if the value proposition is solid and substantial. If not, forget it.
Bad Company
Image, marketing, messaging, competitive products, good
service and fair pricing are all the responsibility of the company. Salespeople
fighting these and other factors have to fight extra hard to win. The truth is
that there are some pretty bad companies out there. If you represent one of them
you could be terminated for lack of sales in spite of yourself.
Conflicted Company
What seems to have happened to this skilled salesman was a
result of mergers, acquisitions and organizational dithering. Administration of
conflicting products, territories and salespeople created instability and a bad
sales environment.
The Whole Wide World – It is Still Out There
The good news for my friend is that there are a lot of
excellent companies out there who deliver quality products and services for
competitive prices. Great companies value professional sales representation. He
will find the right company to represent and be back on his feet in no time.
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