Finding Sales Candidates
with the RIGHT Talent
How many times has this
scenario played out in a company? The candidate’s resume indicated that
he had extensive success in our market and had progressed in each of his
positions. When we brought him in for an interview, he was a good
communicator, likeable, well-groomed and focused on our industry. We
hired him and he was an absolute stiff. He wouldn’t call leads, he
couldn’t qualify prospects and he never closed a significant deal. We
fired him 12 months later. The only reason why we waited so long was
because his forecast was loaded with large opportunities that were
perpetually 45 days away from closing.
This expensive scenario
is all-too-common in corporate America today. Yet, companies continue
to follow the same hiring process when looking for solid salespeople.
To quote Albert Einstein, “Insanity:
doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different
results.”
Successful sales hiring
requires 3 main focal points for success – work experience, objective
assessment and in-person abilities. I would rank them all at 30%
importance and leave 10% to other “fit” factors (compensation, writing
ability, travel, etc.).
The focus of this
article is the objective assessment portion of the decision and,
specifically an item that is often presumed – talent.
Talent is a fuzzy
word. What that means is that you could ask 10 different people to
define it and you would receive 10 different answers. In the context of
this article, let’s define talent as a person’s natural aptitude – a
characteristic feature of their abilities. To be clear, talent is
different than skill.
Our hiring process
allows us to measure a candidate’s talents and compare those talents to
the position’s requirements. This gap analysis provides insights into a
candidate’s abilities that no interviewer could ascertain even after
hours of interviews. Talent is deep seated and in conducting these
assessments, we consistently encounter 3 levels of talent.
Wrong Talent.
This sounds simple; the candidate simply
does not fit the position since they lack specific talents. No, “wrong”
in this context refers to a misalignment between the talents of the
sales candidate and the requirements of the position.
The most frequent
example we encounter involves a candidate’s empathy. A sales position
for a quick, 1 or 2 call close sale typically requires a candidate with
lower empathy aptitudes. The salesperson needs to be quick, concise and
dispassionate. The salesperson will have a short window to qualify a
prospect before closing them or moving on to the next prospect.
Conversely, a
relationship sale, with an extended sales cycle, requires a candidate
with more developed empathy aptitudes. This sale requires rapport, even
a friendship-building talent that will steadily move the prospect
through the sales cycle to a successful conclusion.
If you hire the
salesperson with less empathetic aptitude and place him in the
relationship sale, you will see him cover much ground but close few
deals. Typically, these salespeople attempt to push the prospect faster
than their decision process will allow. This approach has an
unsophisticated clumsiness to it when viewed firsthand.
Salespeople with strong
empathy talents rarely succeed in the quick-close sales role. They
over-empathize with their prospects and tend to draw out the sales cycle
well beyond two calls. This approach has a slow softness to it that
leads to few closed deals.
Abundant Talent.
This level of talent is the most difficult
to comprehend. Essentially, an abundance of talent will often lead to a
short tenure for the salesperson. An abundance of talent means the
salesperson has many natural aptitudes and is searching for a position
in which to apply these many talents. These salespeople can grow weary
of a position even when they are excelling in it.
Their preference is for
a position in which most of their talents are engaged. This desire
manifests itself in their activities involving more than simple
selling. They may become interested in marketing plans, product
development, customer service and so forth. These broad interests and
activities will dilute their sales effectiveness since they end up
spending time on non-sales activities.
The mitigating factor
here is whether there is a skills path for the salesperson to follow
within the company. If the salesperson is provided an ascending path
with a reasonable time window, they will often grow into a larger
position of responsibility within the company. Unfortunately, this path
is not always available within the hiring company.
If the abundantly
talented salesperson is not rewarded by the material trappings of
success, and the position rewards them materially, they will seek out a
new opportunity which requires a broader talent set. Hence, hiring
these sales candidates into a misaligned position may lead to short-term
success but is often doomed by a short-term tenure.
Right Talent.
The Holy Grail of hiring is finding the
right talent for the position. Most companies approach this goal
with a belief in hiring the salesperson with extensive experience in
their industry and an abundance of talent. Experiential hiring is an
entire article unto itself. But the right talent is the target and
finding it requires an often overlooked step – profiling the sale.
Profiling the sale
involves defining the parameters of one typical sale. Some
criteria to consider:
-
How many initial
contacts are needed to eventually close one sale?
-
What is the
monetary size of an average order?
-
How much time is
spent selling new accounts vs. existing accounts?
-
How long is one
typical sales cycle?
These are just a
handful of questions that paint the picture of what talents are most
effective within the requirements of the position. The important point
is to first understand what is needed before trying to tackle what
talent is available. The key point in this process is simple – you
cannot ask a new salesperson to do something 10, 20 or 50 times (closed
deals) if you cannot define for them how to do it once.
The right talent
requires strength in the specific areas defined by profiling the sale.
Yet, there is a follow up piece to this information that has to be
pursued – how does the candidate use the talent? An attribute of the
right talent is the ability to effectively apply that talent. We often
state that just because a candidate has a talent, it does not mean that
they use it. The application of their talent can only be discerned by
asking specific questions during the interview portion of the hiring
process.
Selecting a salesperson
with the wrong talent will lead to the quickest exit of any newly-hired
salesperson. This salesperson may attempt to prolong the inevitable,
but their misaligned talents will force a separation.
Selecting a salesperson
with an abundance of talent may work in the long run as long as the
salesperson is challenged in multiple areas. The end result in this
situation most likely will be the salesperson moving on – either into a
greater position within your company or to another company which offers
a greater challenge.
Selecting a salesperson
with the right talent requires a detailed profile of your sale. That
profile becomes the blueprint which is then used to define the
candidates with the right blend of talents for success in the position.
This analysis can only occur with a combination of objective talent
assessment followed by an interview to pursue the findings of the
assessment.
If you define the
specific talents your sale requires, your search for the right talent
will lead to the strongest sales candidates.
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