A Standardized Sales Plan?

I came across an article today that explains how companies can successfully implement a company-mandated sales plan and be sure that all of the salespeople are following it.

I found the advice given in that article to be deeply disturbing to me, especially since it is new and not from a twenty-year-old book from the old school of selling.

The essence of the article is this: Companies that intend to implement a new sales plan must make it mandatory, must hold the salespeople accountable for following it, must let the salespeople know that managers will inspect to make sure the new plan is being followed, and that role plays should be done in training sessions to teach salespeople how to use the new sales plan.

I felt shivers down my spine when I read the part about how managers will hold salespeople accountable, and will inspect to be sure that the plan is being followed. I immediately got the picture of the stereotypical raving lunatic, “little dictator” sales manager who terrorizes his or her salespeople through micro-management and blunt orders.

Is this the kind of organization good salespeople would want to work for? I’m amazed that this kind advice is still being given in this day and age.

I also have a major problem with mandated role playing in training sessions. I hate role plays. I always have and always will. I think they’re stupid and a complete waste of time. They’re absolutely BANNED from my training programs. The biggest problem with role plays is that they’re NEVER realistic. In fact, if you train a salesperson through role plays, he will be completely blind sided and blown out when meeting with real prospects who have real problems and real objections. All of the example sales dialogues I use in my programs have come from REAL sales appointments, those carried out by either myself or other salespeople I know and trust.

When I was in sales, I was almost always a top performer. The only times I was not a top performer was while working at companies that had a mandated sales process that I was required to follow. It always baffled me as to why companies that forced us to follow their plan would hire experienced sales reps. Why not hire inexperienced people right out of college? They won’t have any pre-conceived notions of how to sell, won’t have any prior experience or training, and therefore will blindly follow the company’s system, no questions asked.

Here are a couple of realities that managers and sales directors must face up to:

1. If you want an experienced sales force with a proven track record, you must understand that they already know how to sell. How else could they possibly have a great track record? Attempting to force them to learn a new system and follow it negates their talent and experience and will immediately destroy their top producer status. Proven salespeople excel and perform at their very best when treated like independent contractors.

2. If you really want to implement and mandate a company sales plan, the only way to do that successfully and with little turnover is to hire people with no experience right out of school. And even then, you’d still be much better off with sticking to option 1.

If you want a successful organization, hire the best and place your trust in them that they know how to sell. They’ve done it before and can do it again for you. Don’t derail their performance and undermine everyone’s success by forcing something on them that is totally unnecessary.

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Comments

4 Responses to “A Standardized Sales Plan?”
  1. dustin says:

    I agree with you on this matter, but one thing I was thinking about is; what about a new college graduate starting sales and knows nothing about it. Where does he learn his new skills if being “thrown out with the wolves”. Meaning absolutely no training period. Thoughts?

  2. Howdy Frank.

    A very insightful article I must say. Good job !

    I agree with most of the points in your article. But I beg to differ that role playing does not help in sales training.

    It helps for the matter that you envision in your brain of what is going to happen and this eliminates fear.

    It helps you get more prepared for that appointment.

    Sure, the reality that any appointment would be the same as the role playing situation is of low probability, however everyone has to prepare. And until there is some Virtual Reality Machine that generates realistic human responses, then role playing would still be of importance.

    Selling is a system and not a event. No one can be prepared for everything that a prospect would throw. However one can be prepared for at least some of it. That’s where role playing helps to foresee possibilities.

    Role playing is not real but they reflect some percentages of the reality, the rest is up to the individual to absorb and apply what they learn to their own success

    Take good care
    Gerrard

    Gerrard!~ Lims last blog post..I refuse to be part of uncertainty

  3. gordana says:

    Hi Frank,
    Thank you for the great article. Agree with you 100%. I find nothing more distracting than having to prepare for these kinds of training meetings. Speaking and role playing in front of your peers can be very intimidating andtaxing on one’s frame of mind, and while one could be using that energy to be out selling and doing what one does best (with proven results), experinced sales people have to waste time to prepare for something that does not necessarily relate to them. By this I mean putting all sales people together into a training session regardless whether they have been there 20 years or just started .
    So thank you for re affirming what i already felt for a long time, but it is good to hear it from a guru like yourself.
    warm regards
    Gordana

  4. D says:

    Frank – I generally agree with your comments and opinions about selling that you have posted at various sites. – you do know what you are talking about (in my opinion).
    However, I can’t help wonder if what you are putting out is not a self serving aim at recruitng clients for your program. It is clear that you know what buttons you need to push to elicit that emotional response from the majority of sales people – those who are not successfull or struggling and find everything wrong with their sales managers and company direction. Comments such as those in the above article simply strenghten their view that everyone is wrong, except themselves.
    You are raising the people against the tryanical “goverenment” and want them to join you in rebellion.
    Sales is a systematic process and requires a game plan. Everyone needs a plan of some sorts that they can resort to when a potential client derails them. There is science to a sales call and there must be some structure, at least in their back pocket, to guide them.

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