Hiring
salespeople is a daunting task in that they are good actors with the
ability to project more skills than they actually possess. Bad
salespeople can masquerade long enough to get through the hiring
process and onto your payroll. Selecting strong salespeople
requires certain disciplines.
Most
sales managers were hired to grow profitable revenue at their
company. Hiring new salespeople is an ancillary task they complete
as needed (which hopefully is not often). This infrequency means
that these sales managers are not well-schooled in the art of sales
interviewing. Consequently, mediocre or weak salespeople are hired
as a result of the sales manager’s bad hiring habits. There are 3
common habits that cause company’s to lose strong sales candidates.
Divining
Resumes are a difficult topic to discuss in that they are needed in
the sales hiring process, but often times they are grossly
overvalued within that process. A candidate’s resume reveals his or
her previous positions and little more than that.
Resumes are embellished. It is fair to say that most hiring
managers have encountered this truth. Therefore, any stated
successes have to be taken with a grain of salt. Sales successes
should be recorded on the resume in data-driven statements (top 5%
of the company, 125% of quota, etc.). Yet those data-driven
statements still need to be qualified for context to understand them
fully. This qualifying occurs only talking to the candidate.
The
other issue is a less detailed resume. The fact that a candidate
has not created a 4 page work history is not grounds for
disqualification. Although a detailed resume often is more
desirable than a minimalist resume, candidates should not be sorted
on this criteria.
Hiring
managers get caught in this trap and attempt to divine more
information than is contained in the resume. The resume does not
tell the entire story. In fact, it only tells a small part of the
story. Granted, some resumes will provide enough information to
reject a completely misaligned candidate. However, no resume
provides enough information to finely filter a candidate’s
abilities.
Dominating
Face-to-face interviews are the backbone of most hiring processes
even though vast majorities of hiring managers have never been
trained to run an effective sales interview. Just imagine, the
pivot point of their process relies upon an unrefined manager’s
skill. This reason explains why so many sales hires are based on a
manager’s “gut” or intuition regarding the candidate.
This
inherent weakness is exacerbated by a hiring manager who covers his
or her abilities by dominating the conversation. The interview
deteriorates into a data dump where the hiring manager talks for
>75% of the interview. This percentage does not allow the hiring
manager to see the sales candidate in action. Many times the
candidate has done an excellent job in using questions to control
the discussion and learn important information about the company.
This is also known as qualifying and many hiring managers miss it
because they were too busy talking about tangential topics.
One
subtle facet of dominating is the assumption that this opportunity
is the candidate’s best, or only, option. A manager who has
invested his or her time in talking through most of the interview
often deems that time as influential. Perhaps, but the larger risk
is the lack of knowledge about the sales candidate’s abilities, fit
to the position and interest in continuing the process. Remember,
hiring is a two-way street. The candidate is interviewing the
company simultaneously.
Delaying
Hiring the right salesperson is a critical decision for any company
so it is a decision not to be taken lightly. Yet, delaying is the
most detrimental error a hiring company can make. An inordinate
delay produces two unintentional negative effects.
First,
the candidate often has an initial energy that occurs when he or she
first discusses the position with the potential employer. There is
excitement in the opportunity and the candidate, if interested,
wants to maintain that level.
The
quickest way to suck the life out of the interaction is to delay
your hiring process. The candidate typically assumes that he or she
is not the top candidate. Once they reach that point, they tend to
look for another employment opportunity. If they find one, the
excitement of that new possibility will displace the delayed
opportunity. The candidate now becomes far more difficult to hire.
Second, you present an image, accurate or not, of a company that
struggles with decisions. In sales this can be fatal. Closing a
complex or customized sale requires many decisions made at the
appropriate time to keep the sales cycle moving.
Companies that take an inordinate amount of time to move through a
hiring process (i.e. make decisions) cast a long shadow of doubt in
the candidate’s eyes. If the company appears tentative in the
hiring process, the candidate extends that trait to the culture. If
the culture isn’t conducive to timely selling, the sales candidate
will become cautious about the company. It is at this point that
the candidate will attempt to delay the process which is a red flag
to the hiring company.
Divining, dominating and delaying are 3 of the most costly errors a
company can commit in attempting to hire strong salespeople. Each
one derails an effective hiring process by removing objectivity,
reducing information and creating doubt. Avoid these pitfalls and
you will vastly improve your company’s ability to hire strong
salespeople.
Every time.
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