Strong Words and a Simple Framework for Senior Executives, Entrepreneurs and Sales Leaders
Mike Weinberg
Lover of Sales | Helping Sellers, Sales Leaders, & Sales Teams WIN MORE NEW SALES | Author of 4 Amazon #1 Bestsellers | #SalesTruth
I didn't want to write Sales Management. Simplified. I was compelled to write it because of what I was observing in company after company with less than optimal sales results: frustrated executives, overwhelmed, overworked sales managers, and underperforming, confused, poorly led salespeople - many of whom working in anti-sales cultures.
To say that I'm glad I wrote it and that we're thrilled with the response to the book would be a major understatement. The sales results and reviews blow my mind. In its first year on the market, Sales Management. Simplified. will become the most reviewed sales management book on Amazon. I'm humbled (and sobered) by the interview requests, the accolades from other sales improvement experts and authors, and the almost daily notes from executives thanking me for sharing such blunt truth and offering a simple framework for sales leadership.
Why such a response? And why is Harvard Business Review having me conduct a one-hour webinar next week to unpack highlights from the book for their audience? The best I can tell, there are two reasons:
1. There is a ton of pain out there. The picture painted in the opening paragraph above is, unfortunately, an accurate description of many organizations when it comes to sales and sales leadership: Frustration. Confusion. Anger. Lack of clarity. Underperformance. Complacency. Micromanagement. Anti-Sales cultures. Faux leadership via email. CRM addiction. Desk jockey sales management. Painful and pathetic sales team meetings. Misaligned talent with zookeeper salespeople being asked to hunt for new business while top hunters get tasked with admin and project management responsibilities. Goofy compensation plans that create complacency, overpay under-performers, under-reward top-producers, and for some inexplicable reason pay the same commission for babysitting existing accounts sold years ago as they do for acquiring net new pieces of business. A lack of mentoring and coaching that's creating a generation of amateur salespeople who get treated like nothing more than vendors and commodity sellers even though they represent highly differentiated, value-creating companies and solutions. I could go on, but the point has been made. There is a lot of pain.
2. In more cases than not, the "sales problem" in many organizations turns out to be a leadership, culture, and talent management "problem" more than a true sales problem. Am I saying that the salespeople cannot improve? Nope. Not for a second. Absolutely, the sales team can do better -- better proactively targeting strategic accounts, better at getting meetings with key prospects, better at structuring and conducting consultative sales calls, better presenting, proposing, following-up, managing the pipeline and owning their calendars and activity metrics. There's plenty of room for sales team to improve. And no one loves to help with those issues more than I do. However, and this is a big however, what I typically observe is that the bigger issues hindering long-term sales performance improvement lie with the executives and managers over the sales organization, the sales culture they're creating, and how the team is being led. Ouch.
Are these strong words? Am I taking a risk by holding up a mirror uncomfortably close to the very people who engage me to help improve their sales results? Do I realize that the vast majority of my revenue comes from speaking to and training salespeople? The answer to all of those questions is yes. I get the risk and understand that this message may offend. So be it. To transform sales team performance, we must tackle these issues!
If this intrigues or angers you, or maybe you would just like to hear more, please join me next Wednesday, April 20th at Noon Eastern, 11:00am Central (where the cool kids live) for the HBR Webinar sponsored by Citrix.
Here's my promise: I won't bore you and I will not be pitching anything. I will not hold back or mince words. You will hear true stories about real executives in real companies and blunt truth about the sales leadership dysfunction that is so prevalent today. And I will offer practical help and a very simple framework for getting the most from your sales team. All in one hour and all free (thank you, again, to Citrix). Click here for more info and to register.
General Manger Switzerland
5 年Love this book. Highly recommended.
Director of Operations at City Hire
8 年Mike, this is a truly amazing practical book. I've now read it twice lid to lid and there is always something new to get from it... follow this and your team will be led correctly... the bit that sticks with me everyday is your statement 'As go the leader, so goes the Team' ... So we want better results... its simple, start to lead better!
I Clean, Solve Problems, and Take Out the Trash
8 年Mike, this is an awesome book. I was on page 71 and was shocked. What you wrote about sales on page 71 and 72 can (based on my humble experience) apply almost word for word if you replace sales with after sales as in my case, an automotive company's revenues come primarily from new vehicle sales, parts sales and labour hours sold. Great book. Can't wait to finish reading it! Thank you.
Chief Customer Officer @ System1A: Increase Cashflow, Automate AR/AP workflows, Boost Collections ??
8 年Love it Mike - this is a book that gives Sales managers a framework and base to work from. The key for me is accountability on the part each sales team member.
Export Marketing Representative in the USA for select Niagara Wine Country Wines & Southern Europe Winery. Founder of WineVirgin.ca, WineVirgin.com website portals.
8 年Intriguing Mike, must look into it next webinar!