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![]() The Personality Of A Top SalespersonA unique combination separates the wheat from the chaff.By Herbert Greenberg, Ph.D. |
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How do you identify people who have what it takes to become the top producers in your sales force? What do the top 20 percent of salespeople have that the rest can only dream of? How do the true professionals make selling seem so natural? Why is it that most salespeople, regardless of how hard they work, simply cannot make the grade? Smart hiring decisions can make the difference between profit and loss in your company, and can turn a marginal sales force into a team of superstars. Learning how to find the right people for your team should be the first step towards building a successful sales force. Who are the right people? How can you identify people who are natural, the top 20 percent, and have what it takes to sell for your company? Why does it seem so difficult to predict whether an individual has what it takes to sell successfully? The problem isn't a lack of people who have the inherent talent and potential to make it in sales. Quite the contrary. Our studies show that virtually one out of every four people in the general population has far better ability to sell than most people currently in the sales profession. The difficulty lies in trying to guess which one. Why is this? It takes a very special person to understand a prospect's needs, come up with appropriate solutions, be able to ask for an order assertively, service an account once it is brought on board and take the inevitable amount of rejection involved. Salesmanship, after all, is not order-taking. Salesmanship involves being on the line. What kinds of persons are motivated to face the challenge and, more often than not, the rejection that salespeople must endure to make a living? Most of the very best salespeople possess four fundamental personality qualities: empathy, ego drive, ego strength and service motivation. They are the ones who will not only succeed in sales, but become your top producers. Without these qualities, sales is an extremely hard road. Empathy The salesperson with poor empathy aims at the target as best he or she can, but lacks the guidance mechanism to hone in on the bull's-eye. The one with excellent empathy is not hemmed in by prepared sales tracts but can sense prospects' reactions and make the creative modifications necessary. Ego Drive For the real sales pro, that satisfaction comes from the successful one-on-one persuasion of another person. The ego-driven individual feels nine feet tall when the prospect finally says, I'll take it. It must be recognized that although empathy and ego drive are separate characteristics, they are inseparable when it comes to sales ability. Ego drive is the motive force launching the salesperson toward the potential customer. Empathy is the guidance mechanism that allows the salesperson to follow the prospect through the typical evasions and objections until the prospect's real needs are targeted and the sale is closed. The individual with a great deal of ego drive and not much empathy will win over a certain number of customers through sheer drive, but one sidestep by a prospect will result in the salesperson's running into the outfield fence. On the other hand, the seller with a great deal of empathy and not much ego drive is probably a nice person and will even get a few orders because of that. But the seller will lose too many sales because he or she is lacking the real motivation to close. Ego Strength Service Motivation Other Qualities Depending on the sales situation, other qualities may be required for success, such as the ability to make decisions and judgments quickly, or the ability to negotiate and to prospect persistently. As stated above, there are situations where somewhat less strength in one area can be compensated for by the other key qualities. The overall challenge in selecting and developing successful salespeople is to thoroughly understand the requirements of the specific sales job, then to seek individuals who possess the requisite personality strengths. |
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Welding & Gases Today Summer 2004 Volume 3, No. 3 Entire contents are Copyright © Data Key Communications, Inc. All rights reserved. Nothing may be reproduced in whole or part without written permission of the publisher.