Selecting Salespeople From Outside Your Industry
There is an old saying in the computer world that dates back to
the days of mainframes and terminals. These early computers cost
tens of thousands of dollars and there were a handful of
competitors in that market space. The dominant player was IBM
who was often the highest priced option even though the
competitive solutions were fairly similar. IBM’s market-leading
position created a security blanket for buyers that developed
into a common phrase – “Nobody was ever fired for choosing
IBM.”
Unfortunately, this conventional wisdom permeates sales hiring
today. “Nobody is ever fired for hiring salespeople from within
their industry.” Sales is one of, if not the toughest positions
within a company to successfully fill. Many companies struggle
even with internal sales candidates. What hurdles do
salespeople present to hiring?
First, consider hiring for a different position, say a computer
programmer. The first hard skill assessment is how well the
candidate knows the programming language. The programming
language is the same (.net, java, C, etc.) no matter which
company employs the programmer. The expertise of their skill
set can be determined through a comprehensive interview.
Usually a skilled programmer will still be considered even if
they do not possess direct industry experience in the hiring
company’s market. Their computer programming skills are
transferable.
Successful salespeople have a blend of hard and soft skills
that are difficult to define and even tougher to measure.
Companies often incorporate “self-starter,” “motivated,” “team
player” and other buzzwords into their employment ads without
clearly defining what traits are most important to the
position. Many times these traits are merely window dressing as
the company naturally gravitates to candidates with direct
industry experience. The assumption is that the candidate knows
how to sell in our market so they will be easier to manage.
This is a flawed approach. No matter how intricate your market
or complex your product or service, teaching someone how to
sell is far more difficult. Companies hire salespeople to sell.
The company’s focus should be on finding specific sales talents.
--SALES PROCESS--
The method by which a salesperson maneuvers a prospect into a
customer is essentially their skills of the selling trade. This
process is far more important than their industry experience.
Experience simply shows you where they have hung their hat over
time. Sales process is the far better predictor of how they will
perform for your company.
Some process-oriented topics to pursue with sales candidates:
-Have them walk you through their standard sales process.
-What does a good prospect look like in their current role?
-At what point do they attempt to close a prospect?
-How long is one sales cycle? What do they do to try and
shorten that cycle?
Strong sales candidates are able to explain how they acquire
new leads, how they qualify them and how they close them. This
process should be wrapped around their company’s value
proposition. Pay close attention to theoretical answers as
opposed to experiential answers. Theories are for science.
Real-world skills are for sales. As long as the hiring company
has clearly defined their sale, they are able to ascertain if
the candidate’s skills are transferable to their sale. This
information is far more valuable than assuming sales skills
based on past industry experience.
--QUALIFYING--
If overall sales process is the first piece of the puzzle,
qualifying ability is second. Successful selling pivots on the
salesperson’s ability to qualify opportunities and discover the
prospect’s potential. Obviously there are other important
aspects, but none supersede the skill of efficiently
determining a prospect’s need, budget, timing, decision process
and alternatives.
The key here is to look for similarities between your typical
sale and the candidate’s abilities. Topics to address:
-What is their current company’s value proposition and how do
they put it in play?
-What is the typical buying process for their prospects? How do
they navigate through that process?
-What are the 3 most common objections they have to overcome?
How do they respond to them?
-How many competitors do they have to beat to get the deal? Who
is their toughest competitor and what adjustments do they
personally make to beat them?
Focusing on qualifying topics like these provides a fairly
detailed picture of their qualifying abilities. A sales
candidate with strong, transferable skills will clearly stand
out. At this point, we would recommend assessing the strongest
candidates to objectively measure their qualifying skills and
aptitudes including empathy, self confidence, problem solving
and listening ability. The sum of this data would identify
candidates who have the potential to exceed expectations at
your company.
--UTILITARIAN MOTIVATION--
86% of the top-performing salespeople in any market, industry
or geography share a common motivation – a desire to receive a
return on their investment of resources (money, time, effort,
etc.). These salespeople are driven to utilize resources to
accomplish results while gaining a measurable return on that
investment of resources.
Successful selling requires people who can efficiently
determine which prospects will provide the greatest return
proportionate to the effort. This utilitarian drive is ideal in
selling. A strong salesperson is constantly sorting the puzzle
pieces of information they have gathered during the selling
process and seeking out the remaining pieces to either close
the deal or find a new prospect.
Hiring salespeople who do not have the utilitarian motivation
is high risk to say the least. Other motivations include a
desire to help people, become an expert, be in a position of
power or establish rules for others to follow. All of these
motivations have a noble purpose, but they are not the primary
motivation behind the vast majority of successful salespeople.
Sales process, qualifying ability and a utilitarian motivation
are 3 fundamental aspects for which to screen salespeople from
outside of your industry. The finer points can be assessed for
overall fit once these 3 areas are identified. Candidates from
outside your industry bring different ideas and approaches
while not being constrained by stereotypical sales approaches
that can permeate a specific industry.
Clearly the ideal candidate has strong sales abilities and
direct industry experience. Yet, too often companies become
intoxicated with a marginal, but industry experienced, sales
candidate in spite of their deficiencies. There is a liability
to hiring only from your industry. Instead, hire for talent
first and avoid the experience-only trap that leads to
recycling mediocrity.
About The Author: Derrick Moe is a Managing Partner of Select
Metrix, a process-based hiring firm located in Minneapolis, MN
that specializes in sales selection services using an array of
approach & assessment techniques to find the strongest
salesperson. For more info please visit
www.selectmetrix.com, call 952-232-0900 or visit their
blog at www.thehiresense.com.
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