Hiring Outstanding
Sales Executives – Steps to Take and Traps to Avoid
by Robert M. Moliski, 11 June 2003
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Bringing the right sales person into your organization
can have a tremendous impact on your company’s success. Recruiting
sales professionals should be an easy task. After all, given the
tough economic times, many outstanding sales professionals are out
of work, accomplishments in sales are easy to quantify, and sales
people are an easy and pleasant group with which to work. And yet,
time and time again we see sales people and sales managers fail;
that is, performance is not up to expectation, personalities conflict,
or successful sales people may leave just as they are hitting their
stride. What is going on here?
In most cases, the problem comes down to issues of
fit – fit with the role, fit with the organization, and fit
with the compensation structure. With so many capable sales professionals
available, the challenge is not so much finding candidates with
the innate ability to sell, the issue is finding the right mix of
technical skills, motivation, and personality that fit with your
organization and the role. So, what steps can you take to enhance
the likelihood that you will bring the right person into your organization?
Here are some common traps as well as strategy for avoiding problems
with fit.
Trap to avoid: poor fit with the role. No person is
right for every sales job. An outstanding consultative sales professional
may fail miserably in a more transactional sales environment, while
a fantastic individual sales person may struggle in a sales management
role.
Steps to take. During the interview process, use your questions
to probe the candidate’s accomplishments as listed on the
resume. Get the candidate to tell stories by using open-ended questions
and let them talk. Include questions such as, “What accomplishments
are you most proud of? How did you make it happen? What were the
hurdles you had to overcome? What is your favorite part of the job?
What frustrates you?” This line of questioning can help you
determine the candidate’s style and can give you some insight
into how he operates. One can typically draw connections between
what a candidate portends to enjoy doing and what he/she does well.
Therefore, if the candidate waxes on about how he saved the day
without the help of anyone else, you may have a conflict with the
role if it calls for managing others.
Trap to avoid: poor fit with the organization. While
technical competence is very important, one survey of terminated
employees found that only 28% of those who terminated the employee
reported that technical incompetence was the primary reason. Most
dismissals were a result of mismatch with the company environment
or poor interpersonal skills. This problem can be compounded in
the realm of sales as many are willing to overlook poor organizational
adapting skills in exchange for strong sales skills.
Steps to take. Vary the environment in which interviews are staged.
Rather than relying on in-office one-on-one approach, include dinners
out, golf, events including spouses. Take candidates on sales calls
and observe their comments. Include people at all levels of the
organization in the interview process. Invest the time in extensive
reference checking.
Trap to avoid: poor fit with the compensation structure.
Compensation is too important to leave to compensation specialists.
Rather it should be linked to your company’s strategy to avoid
the “folly of demanding A and rewarding B”. Will a high
base and low bonus provide the carrot that many sales people need
to deliver top performance? Will a low base and high commission
be appropriate to motivate a sales manager to develop subordinates?
Steps to take. Use these discussions to gather more insight into
what motivates the candidate. What was the candidate’s compensation
history? Was he satisfied with that structure? What was his total
compensation and how high was that relative to his peers? Rather
than waiting until the end of the process, compensation negotiations
should be used as a measure of fit. Money is one of the few hard
measures in the recruiting business. Are the candidate’s answers
in this area consistent with what he claims are his strengths?
Finally, when to seek outside assistance. In an upcoming
article, we will explore when it makes sense to turn to the help
of a specialist, how to choose an executive search consultant, and
the most effective way to work with them.
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Robert M. Moliski is a Principal at Meder & Associates, a retained
executive search firm. Meder & Associates goal is to identify
and attract new leaders who significantly improve, change, and grow
their client’s organizations. (847) 615-8798
http://www.venturemarketing.com/portfolio/meder/index.htm
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