Avoid These Rookie Mistakes When Hiring Your Sales Team
Brad Terry
Founder- CrossVine Recruiting ??Medical, Surgical, and Biotech Recruiting
New sales managers often find that interviewing is harder than it looks. A seasoned leader will tell you that hiring the right reps is the most important decision you will make as a manager. Take the process seriously and Make it a PRIORITY! Don't let the chaos of running your region or overseeing your current reps hijack your priorities.
Hire like a True Leader and Avoid These Traps...
Trying to hire a carbon copy of YOU is flawed thinking. There can be tremendous benefit to differing backgrounds and profiles on a sales team. Adding someone to a territory with a slightly different selling style or skillset can uncover opportunities that were previously missed.
Hiring solely based on past relationships usually leads to a mediocre sales team. A stronger manager realizes that “knowing the customers” can be beneficial for a quarter or two, but true sales acumen and hard work are the equalizers. Eventually, the cream rises to the top and talent wins out. Hiring an inferior candidate because of a rolodex is a short-term strategy.
Situations can also arise with co-workers playing favorites based on ulterior motives. Earlier this year, we had a circumstance where a seasoned local rep was casting doubt on a very strong candidate. As things played out, it became clear that the rep was more concerned about how her relationships might impact his territory than about the overall business.
Several years ago, we had a brand-new manager who devised a 7-step interview process that included cold calling on customers (prior to being hired). This was awkward and unreasonable for everyone involved. Rather than hiring the best person, this manager usually ended up hiring the person that was "left standing". While this appealed to his ego, he was not hiring the best reps. His justification was always the same… they were the most dedicated.
In addition, there can be repercussions involving other customers in the territory who don’t want a rep who is “besties” with a competitive doctor. Making one doctor happy and a dozen other doctors suspicious is a recipe for disaster.
If you find a tiny flaw or weakness in someone during the interview process, do not “knock them out" of the process. Instead, ask yourself if you can coach them up or work with them to smooth out this rough edge. Part of the manager’s job is providing leadership, development, and coaching. Embrace this challenge!
Grow the Vine!
Chief Operating Officer @ OneDirect Health Network where we empower people to take charge of the rehab journey by offering innovative products and next level customer service.
2 个月Brad, thanks for sharing! How are you?
Senior Director, National Accounts at Pacira BioSciences, Inc.
3 个月Brad this is so right. As a manager I’ve made the Rolodex mistake, and always cautioned against the “trying to hire yourself” mistake. I’ll expand that one to a post-hire mistake, trying to coach people to be you, with the exact same rationale in your article. Well done!
Executive Sales Recruiter and Owner | Medical Sales Recruiting
3 个月Spot on Brad!
District Sales Manager, Abbott Nutrition
3 个月“The Relationships Fallacy” is my favorite on this list and fully agree ????
Sales Recruiter at Crossvine Recruiting ? Specializing in Medical, Surgical, and Biotech Recruiting
3 个月Well said Brad. A lot of truth included in your post!