As hard as I try, I just can’t avoid sports analogies when I
talk about business. Since I’m such a big baseball fan, those metaphors tend to
be based upon actions on the diamond.
Every spring I head to Florida to catch some sun, a few
beers and as many spring training baseball games I can squeeze in over a few
days off. This year I also had the opportunity to catch a practice session of
my favorite team, the Boston Red Sox.
I watched multi-million dollar players working on their
assigned drills. These highly developed, skilled professionals spent hours
working on fundamentals. Their time was spent on details of their swing, how to
run the bases and throw the baseball properly. High level, detailed strategy is
no doubt also discussed but clearly the focus on their training was on the
basics.
This is a lesson we can and put in place for our sales
teams. It is a good investment to discuss high level marketing strategy with
your sales team, but don’t forget to stress the basics. As much as you (and
surely your staff) hate to do roll-plays of a sales call, those basics are
necessary to your team’s success in the field. I would much prefer that the Red
Sox make their mistakes in Florida at spring training than when they are back
in Boston and playing games that count during the regular season.
Isn’t that also the case for your sales team? Better to make
those mistakes in the sales meeting on Monday than in front of an account that
you were hoping to gain $20,000 in new business.
Sales meetings are often overlooked parts of our lives. I’m
just as guilty as the next person, but short of field time with your reps this
might be the most important part of the work week. If you are walking into the
meeting and “winging it” then perhaps it is time to reconsider things.
Have an agenda. I personally never shared the agenda with my
team, but I created one for me to follow so that I didn’t forget things. And I
didn’t work on it in the minutes leading up to the meeting or the night before.
It was a document I kept on my desktop that I added to as the week went along.
Some things stayed on the agenda, the additions I added throughout the week
helped keep things fresh. By adding
things throughout the week, the items covered were more complete and didn’t
really add additional time to prepare for the meeting.
Have a training element. It can be a product introduction if
you’re launching something new. But I like the idea of including those role
plays to keep people sharp. Make things fun as you’re training. People learn
more and retain better if they are also entertained a little too. There are
tons of books and countless websites that can help you in this area.
Creating a culture of learning and fun is very important. I’m
currently reading a book that addresses this head on, and I highly recommend it
for you if you’re working on building your team and culture. "You Win In The Locker Room First: The 7 C's To Build A Winning Team In Business, Sports And Life” is written by former NFL coach Mike Smith
and Jon Gordon. They go in-depth on the importance of culture for successful
teams.
They suggest that every successful team is built on these
seven basic principles:
--Have fun,
work hard, and enjoy the journey.
--Show respect
to all associated with your business
--Put the team
first
--Do your job
but be prepared for it to change
--Be the same
person every day. Do not get too high in victory or too low in defeat.
--Understand
that all organizational decisions aim to make the team better
--Have a
positive attitude
Developing your team and your culture is one of the keys for
long term success. Getting the right people doing the right thing and the right
time, and then making them feel good about who they are doing it for will help
create a stable, winning sales team for your organization.
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