"Studies have shown that 90% of error in thinking is due to error in perception. If you can change your perception, you can change your emotion and this can lead to new ideas. Logic will never change emotion or perception." - Edward de Bono
via jenalynalbia
Salespeople are born, not made.
We are all natural-born salespeople.
Which is it?
I fall firmly in the everyone is a salesperson camp. So much so that easily half of my business is helping very smart people release their natural-born inner-salespeople.
Besides the occasional debate this point of view has some real world implications. I am on a call with the leadership of a fast-growth company and talk turns to the scaling up sales. The CFO is surprised when I suggest investment in a couple new sales enablement technologies. He says, "The only thing that works is adding more feet on the street. We need to double the size of our workforce." Implied is my suggestion to invest in the current sales team isn't the best use of funds.
The VP of Sales is on my side and the CEO is undecided. The rapid expansion of their sales force has led to impressive growth, but over half the sales team is missing their individual quota and a small percentage is on corrective plan, one foot out the door. To me, assuming future revenue is equal, the effort and expense involved in continuing to hire will be much greater than my inside out approach.
As we explain our points of view something becomes clear. The CFO believes salespeople are born, not made. If this is your bias, hiring and firing is the right path to take. Put the feet on the street, throw a lot of stuff at the wall, and some of it will stick. Get enough to stick, find enough natural salespeople, and you hit your target. In my experience, it's an approach which works when the market is huge and the opportunity is fleeting, but it's rough on the customers over the long term.
This is another example of perception influencing real decisions. The CFO and I see things differently, and it makes communication difficult until we can get on the same page.
As with everything else in life, this question of natural-born or man-made is not a black or white issue, it's gray. A natural-born salesperson with no interest in selling will do a bad job, while an analytics wizard with a desire to learn persuasion will do a good job. People are complicated.
As I've said before, "cada cabeza es un mundo," in each head, a world, and this was another good reminder. Good communication depends on getting curious about what others think. Once I understand where the CFO is coming from, I can meet him there and make progress.
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