Commitment: By Dave Kurlan, Understanding the Sales Force, Via Smart Brief on Sales; SmartBrief.com
Dave Kurlan is a top-rated speaker, best-selling author, sales thought leader and highly regarded sales development expert.
When a sales force evaluation shows that a salesperson lacks commitment, the most likely remark we hear from management is usually, “but he has such a good work ethic!” Â When we ask what they mean by “work ethic”, management often say things like:
- very loyal
- works long hours
- long-time employee
- very responsive to requests
“Works long hours” is obviously the one most consistent with “good work ethic” but the others? Â Not so much. Â Most important to note is that none of the four responses has anything to do with Commitment.
Sales Commitment is about a salesperson’s willingness to do whatever is necessary in order to succeed. Â Those necessary things usually don’t occur in the office, but in the sales cycle, including:
- Making calls they might not be comfortable making
- Asking questions they might not be comfortable asking
- Pushing back when they might not be comfortable pushing back
- Having a conversation about money when they aren’t comfortable talking about money
- Saying ‘no’ to an inappropriate presentation request when it’s not comfortable to say ‘no’
- Learning to sell the new way when they might not be comfortable with change
- Being proactive when their default is to be reactive
- Hunting for new business when they are most comfortable managing existing accounts
Let’s look at the 2011 Boston Red Sox historic collapse which concluded last night with a dramatic and stunning 9th inning loss to the lowly Baltimore Orioles. Moments later the Tampa Bay Rays beat the 1st place New York Yankees in extra innings when they overcame a 7-0 deficit to tie the Yankees in the last half of the 9th. Â The Red Sox, who also own the record for the greatest comeback in sports history (2004), had a 9.5 game lead over the Rays on September 1.
Was it lack of commitment or work ethic that fueled their collapse?
I would say it was both. Â Some guys couldn’t perform in the clutch – nothing to do with how many hours they practiced or worked out or how hard they worked out. Â Mental toughness is a commitment issue. Â Some guys were out of shape and either too tired or too sore to perform to expectations. Â That is a work ethic problem.
In sales, unlike sports, work ethic is nice, but given a choice between strong work ethic OR strong commitment, I’ll take the salesperson with strong commitment.
http://www.omghub.com/salesdevelopmentblog/tabid/5809/bid/68177/The-Difference-Between-Sales-Commitment-and-Work-Ethic.aspx
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