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Articles

How to Produce Good Negotiators in Your
Sales Force
by Bob Gibson
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As someone who spends a great deal of my time observing, studying,
and teaching professional salespeople how to negotiate higher
profits, I can pass on, without reservation, certain truisms:
- Most salespeople want to do a better job of negotiating -
they want to make a significant contribution to the bottom line
of their organization.
- Very few do.
- Most sales managers would love to have their sales team negotiate
well. They understand the difference between selling and negotiating,
and that sales skills produce gross revenues, but that negotiating
skills produce profit.
- Very few understand how to bring this about.
After several years of observing a great many sales forces negotiate
very poorly, and a significantly small number negotiate well,
some simple, but profound components have emerged as to what must
take place for a sales force to negotiate well in today's market.
If salespeople are to negotiate more effectively, four areas
must be addressed. The areas are simple - easy to understand,
and yet difficult to execute. Any breakdown in the 4 or failure
to incorporate any one of the four will result in poor performance
as negotiators - and decreased profit.
1. Hire the right people!
As simple as it sounds, most salespeople are hired for the wrong
reasons - that is, if you want good negotiators. Most companies
hire to bring people on board that can "sell." On the
surface this looks and sounds good, but it leads to companies
hiring what I call "pleasers."
The pleaser's main attribute is the ability to build relationships.
It's their greatest strength and their greatest weakness. This
style lends itself to situations in which a person will do whatever
it takes to satisfy customer needs or extend good will. The pleaser
is especially adept at preserving harmony and avoiding disruption
in business situations.
The drawback, however, is that they can allow themselves to be
abused. It's hard for classic pleasers to exert themselves in
head-to-head negotiating situations, and as a result, they are
often guilty of leaving company profits "on the table."
Every sales force has a number of Joe Pleasers. Joe has been
with the company for several years, and has a solid client base.
His customers love him, because he's great at solving problems
and cultivating relationships. His repeat business is good, but
when his accounts are analyzed, the profit margin is below where
it should be. In closing situations, Joe gives up more than he
needs to. The problem is compounded by the fact that he is often
doing business with decision makers that are very competitive.
Joe (and his manager) don't understand the Golden Rule of Sales
Negotiation: Sales ability determines your gross receipts, but
negotiating ability determines your profit.
So, that's a good place to start: Hire the right people! An old
sales manager told me once: "If you hire the wrong person
- nothing you can do will save them. If you hire the right one
- nothing you do can mess them up.”
2. Train Salespeople well - be sure they
understand what to do - and how to do it.
Once again, as obvious as this sounds - it's pretty amazing how
many sales forces are poorly trained -or not trained at all. Many
sales forces (and sales managers) confuse product training with
sales training. Their salespeople can demonstrate the product,
and know a great deal about the product. But that same salesperson
is not close to professional at prospecting, or at time &
territory management, or at securing appointments, or at asking
for referrals, is not good, in fact is incredibly poor at,
closing
and is beyond poor at negotiating, which produces the margins
for the company!
Train your people. They should know what to do - and how to do
it. One reason this is difficult is that many companies promote
from within. This has many advantages, not the least of which
is the loyalty it promotes and that the manager "knows the
business." On the downside, a sales manager is a product
of the system they came from. It's the only knowledge pool he/she
can draw from. If they came from a sales force that was poorly
educated, it would be a miracle if they could ascertain and perform
the training required to bring that sales force to the professional
level required to thrive in today's highly competitive market.
Don't be afraid to bring in outside resources to help in this
area. The best sales forces in the world constantly bring in "New
blood" to assure they don't become stale and stagnant.
3. Reinforce the training!
It doesn't matter how good the training is, how quality the
seed that is planted, it has to be watered, and fertilized, and
be exposed to sunlight. As any good golfer can tell you, it doesn't
matter how good the instructor, one lesson is not enough. Sales
is no different. After the training has taken place, for it to
become internalized, to become part of the salesperson's bag of
tools, it has to be reviewed again and again and again. That's
especially true of negotiation. I tell salespeople in our seminars,
"The study of negotiation is more akin to the study of golf
or karate than any other discipline. You don't learn negotiation
by reading about it. You become a good negotiator by negotiating
- by doing it. Repetition is the mother of skill.
As part of our programs at Mentor Resources, we take the sales
manager thru a session designed specifically to educate them on
how to water and fertilize the ideas and concepts and techniques
we teach the sales force to assure that they "sink in"
- so that a year later - 18 months later - they are still at work,
and the companies are getting a great return on their investment.
4. Reward what you want done. Be sure your
compensation package rewards what you want to happen!
It's embarrassing how often I see this basic principle violated.
I recently worked with an international company with several hundred
salespeople. We designed a custom program, produced it on video/CDRom,
trained very good facilitators to deliver the roll-out and follow-up.
The negotiating training went very well - but results were below
expectations, because of a very simple fact: the compensation
plan didn't reward the changes we were trying to implement. We
were changing the culture, asking the sales force to alter the
fundamental approach to their business - going for profit instead
of just being grateful to get the business. And what happened
for those who took up the challenge, who led the charge, who went
head-to-head in confrontational situations and emerged victorious?
Nothing? The sales force was on a salary.
When you ask people to make changes, to do difficult things outside
their comfort zone, reward them for doing it. Salespeople are
smart. They can sense a flaw in a compensation package before
it hits the mail room. Be sure yours reinforces what you want
to accomplish.
So, it's really that simple. Not easy - but simple. If you want
your sales force to be good negotiators, to not just boost gross
revenues, but profits - follow these four axioms:
1. Hire the right people.
2. Teach them what to do - and how to do it.
3. Reinforce the training. One-shot training
doesn't work.
4. Reward what you want done.
Incorporate these concepts into your company and watch the profits
rise.
Bob Gibson is a negotiation strategist and the president
of San Francisco-based Negotiation Resources
He may be reached at 800-572-8005.
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