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Success as a Sales Manager

Success as a Sales Manager

By Matt Krumrie | Monster Contributing Writer

Why is moving from a job in sales to sales management so difficult? Why do some salespeople excel at selling but fail at managing sales staff? While the principles within the field are the same, the overall skills you need to succeed are very different, says Tony Alessandra, a professional speaker who wrote several books on sales management.

Alessandra explains that the organization’s top salespeople used to move up a company’s ranks by being promoted to sales manager. But that’s a bad move, he says.

“When someone is a top-notch salesperson, they typically are able to work well on their own; they’re a go-getter who can succeed independently, without direction from others,” says Alessandra. “A good sales manager is a good coach, someone who can motivate people to sell, someone who listens and puts their needs secondary to the needs of the sales staff.”

Sales Manager Skills

Good sales managers also need to work well with people, says Darin Andersen, president of Coronado, California-based Biz Dev Direct, a management-consultant firm that works with executives to build sales teams.

“The sales manager has to be able to deal with individual personalities, egos and skill levels,” he says. “They have to do this in a high-pressure environment, because the success of the sales staff is often placed on their shoulders.”

Good salespeople come from all walks of life. Some have bachelor’s or master’s degrees; others come from the school of hard knocks. Regardless of educational background, sales managers require an additional skill set to succeed. Alessandra says good sales managers must:

• Be a better listener than talker.

• Be a coach first, salesperson second. That includes creating performance appraisals/reviews that can lead to future success and generating ideas on how to better sell the product or work with certain clients.

• Have superior people, conflict-resolution and analysis skills.

• Know the individual strengths and weaknesses of every salesperson.

“Don’t be afraid to switch accounts,” advises Alessandra. “Different strategies and tactics work for different customers. Know how to match your people with your customers.”

Alessandra also says a good sales manager will sell his product in the field, for a few days or a week once a quarter, for example, to better understand what the sales staff encounters. The worst mistake a sales manager can make is coming in late on an account to close the deal, he adds.

“If they get the account or deal, then they’ve shattered the confidence of the salesperson and the confidence of the client,” Alessandra says. “If they don’t, then their reputation is hurt, and the salesperson may lose confidence in them as a mentor or leader.”

Success as a Sales Manager

Contrary to popular belief, a good sales manager doesn’t have to be an overbearing, hard-driving stickler demanding each salesperson be on the phone selling, cold calling and prospecting. “Some of the most successful sales managers are those that remember the human side of things,” says Andersen.

Salaries for sales managers vary. Oftentimes, the top members of the sales staff will have higher salaries than the sales manager. This is why many salespeople stay in sales rather than moving into management, where income is sometimes a result of the success of the sales staff they lead, with bonuses and commissions mixed in.

Successful sales managers also need to understand and know their product. If they continually come up with new leads and ideas, they will keep their staff motivated and excited, especially where rejection can be part of the job, says Andersen.

As for running ever-popular company sales contests, those are a no-win situation, says Alessandra. While these events do create competition and force people to push themselves, it’s not fair to make salespeople on different levels of skill and success compete.

Instead, create goals for each individual, and work with them to achieve those goals. “But keep them realistic,” cautions Alessandra. “Stretch them, but don’t break them. By pushing the bar higher and higher, you sometimes make things unrealistic, and frustration sets in.”

It all comes back to people, says Andersen. “Understand your product, understand your people, and continue to coach and teach,” he says. “Then you will have the numbers you are striving for.”

Not qualified for management? Consider an MBA to pump up your career.



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  • Photo_user_blank_big

    springahead

    11 days ago

    2 comments

    This is an extremely useful article for a person like me who is positioning himself to transition to a sales management role from regional/territory sales development. Will help me in my new role. Many thanks!

  • Rich_n_suzy_kirbys_max50

    rich34232

    about 1 month ago

    516 comments

    What I like about this article,it shows that one way of teaching is not the way .Each person learns a different way and you must use their way of learning in order to motivate the sales force.

  • Img00093_max50

    swethanuguru

    about 1 month ago

    6 comments

    Awesome reflections differentiating the 2 similar but different notch positions..

    Im sure this information will be helpfull to a lot of sales people around..

  • Eye_max50

    Hurricanemurph

    7 months ago

    52 comments

    Excellent reflections on the day and life of the sales manager. Know your people, and coach them. Know your product, and share your marketing ideas. Ask for a raise.

  • Dsc00156_max50

    gailharting

    8 months ago

    4 comments

    This is helpful information to use

  • Photo_user_blank_big

    rajesh8968

    8 months ago

    2 comments

    it will be very helpful to me to increase the creativity in my sales staff

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