Sales Recruiting - How to Hire More Top Sales Performers
- Part 2
by Alan Rigg
Published on this site: January 25th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

Another key reason why companies suffer from 80/20 performance
is their processes for hiring, training and managing salespeople
rely almost entirely upon subjective information. Think about
it:
- What are resumes? They are an individual's subjective
portrayal of their capabilities and experiences.
- What occurs during an interview? Interviewees attempt
to package their responses to questions in a manner that
will make the best Impression. Meanwhile, interviewers are
forming Personal Opinions about candidates' qualifications
for the position.
I'm not suggesting that subjective information is useless.
Subjective information is a valid and valuable component of
any "people decision". However, if decisions based
solely upon subjective information produce an undesirable
result 80 percent of the time, doesn't it make sense to consider
making a change?
One way to introduce Objective information into the sales
recruiting process is through specialized sales assessment
tests. I'm not referring to personality or behavioral tests
like Myers-Briggs or DISC. Those types of tools can be useful
for learning how to communicate more effectively with someone.
However, I have not found them to be useful for predicting
whether someone will succeed in sales.
The specialized sales assessment tests that I'm referring
to identify an individual's strength or weakness in the following
areas:
- Sales Drive: Does the individual enjoy presenting,
persuading, negotiating, and motivating others?
- Emotional Toughness: How rapidly does the individual
rebound from rejection and sales cycle roadblocks?
- Reasoning Ability: Does the individual ask good
questions? Can they dissect answers and pick out the pieces
that will help advance the conversation toward a desired
end result?
- Service Drive: How interested is the individual
in building relationships and helping others?
- Assertiveness: How self-assured is the individual?
How effective are they at convincing others to take action?
- Attitude: Does the individual perceive a glass
to be half-empty or half-full?
- Communication Skills: How precisely does the individual
communicate, both verbally and in writing?
- Competitiveness: How competitive is the individual?
- Energy: Is the individual always "on the
go", or do they need to be prodded into action?
- Independence: How readily does the individual
accept direction from others?
- Learning Rate: How rapidly does the individual
learn new information?
- Tolerance for Administration: How willing is the
individual to perform administrative activities?
Specialized sales assessment tests can also help Existing
salespeople that are struggling. How? First, they can be used
to determine whether these individuals should be in sales.
If an individual doesn't have the talents required for sales
success, there may be other roles in your organization where
their talents and interests can be applied to mutual benefit.
If no such positions are available, the kindest thing you
can do is let them go. Why? Because it is no fun to continue
to struggle in a job that is a poor fit!
Second, specialized sales assessment tests can help identify
each salesperson's unique training needs. Here is an example:
Two salespeople, Beth and Bill, work for the same company.
Beth is weak in Sales Drive, which makes her reluctant to
ask for orders. Bill is weak in Emotional Toughness, which
makes him sensitive to rejection and limits his prospecting
effectiveness. If Beth and Bill go through the same sales
skills training course, how much improvement in performance
should their employer expect to see?
The answer is Little or None. Why? Because Beth and Bill
have completely different training needs that will not be
addressed by basic sales skills training.
Beth would benefit the most from attending an assertiveness
training class. She also needs coaching to help her recognize
that failing to ask for orders denies her customers valuable
solutions to costly business problems.
Bill needs to learn to not take rejection personally. He
could also benefit from training that teaches positive thinking
and other motivational techniques.
Unfortunately, unless each salesperson's unique training
needs are identified, and targeted training is supplied to
address those specific needs, there isn't much reason to expect
the individual's sales performance to improve.
Conclusion
Many "80/20" sales performance differences result
from relying too heavily on Subjective information when hiring
and managing salespeople. Adding objective information (gathered
by specialized sales assessment tests) to these "people
decision" processes can dramatically increase the proportion
of top performers on your sales team and improve the performance
of existing sales team members.

Sales performance expert Alan Rigg is the author of
How to Beat the 80/20 Rule in Selling: Why Most Salespeople
Don't Perform and What to Do About It. His company, MySalesTest.com,
provides specialized sales assessment tests that help business
owners, executives, and managers double sales by consistently
hiring top sales performers. For more information and a free
special report, visit http://www.mysalestest.com

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